The mouth, metonymy of the Cosmos: Intelligence and necessity in Timaeus. Intermediary figures in Platonic philosophy
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Keywords

metaxý
body
soul
intelligent cause
wandering cause
necessity

How to Cite

Lanza González, H. (2022). The mouth, metonymy of the Cosmos: Intelligence and necessity in Timaeus. Intermediary figures in Platonic philosophy. Diálogos, 53(110), 53–76. Retrieved from https://revistas.upr.edu/index.php/dialogos/article/view/19678

Abstract

In Timaeus the mouth is the meeting place of the necessary and the best. I will take this as a starting point to reflect on the entities that exercise an intermediary (metaxý ) function in Platonic thought. To do so, I will resort to analogy as defined by Aristotle in Nicomachean Ethics and Poetics. The aim is to show the importance of these mediating figures in the unitary conception of the human being and of the healthy political community, which, as described in Republic V, should be as a single individual.

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