Persons of the Dialogue : SOCRATES ; PROTARCHUS ; PHILEBUS.
The plan is complicated, or rather, perhaps, the want of plan renders the progress of the dialogue difficult to follow. A few leading ideas seem to emerge: the relation of the one and many, the four original elements, the kinds of pleasure, the kinds of knowledge, the scale of goods. These are only partially connected with one another. The dialogue is not rightly entitled ‘Concerning pleasure’ or ‘Concerning good,’ but should rather be described as treating of the relations of pleasure and knowledge, after they have been duly analyzed, to the good. (1) The question is asked, whether pleasure or wisdom is the chief good, or some nature higher than either; and if the latter, how pleasure and wisdom are related to this higher good. (2) Before we can reply with exactness, we must know the kinds of pleasure and the kinds of knowledge. (3) But still we may affirm generally, that the combined life of pleasure and wisdom or knowledge has more of the character of the good than either of them when isolated. (4) To determine which of them partakes most of the higher nature, we must know under which of the four unities or elements they respectively fall. These are, first, the infinite; secondly, the finite; thirdly, the union of the two; fourthly, the cause of the union. Pleasure is of the first, wisdom or knowledge of the third class, while reason or mind is akin to the fourth or highest.
(5) Pleasures are of two kinds, the mixed and unmixed. Of mixed pleasures there are three classes—(?) those in which both the pleasures and pains are corporeal, as in eating and hunger; (?) those in which there is a pain of the body and pleasure of the mind, as when you are hungry and are looking forward to a feast; (?) those in which the pleasure and pain are both mental. Of unmixed pleasures there are four kinds: those of sight, hearing, smell, knowledge.
(6) The sciences are likewise divided into two classes, theoretical and productive: of the latter, one part is pure, the other impure. The pure part consists of arithmetic, mensuration, and weighing. Arts like carpentering, which have an exact measure, are to be regarded as higher than music, which for the most part is mere guess-work. But there is also a higher arithmetic, and a higher mensuration, which is exclusively theoretical; and a dialectical science, which is higher still and the truest and purest knowledge.
(7) We are now able to determine the composition of the perfect life. First, we admit the pure pleasures and the pure sciences; secondly, the impure sciences, but not the impure pleasures. We have next to discover what element of goodness is contained in this mixture. There are three criteria of goodness—beauty, symmetry, truth. These are clearly more akin to reason than to pleasure, and will enable us to fix the places of both of them in the scale of good. First in the scale is measure; the second place is assigned to symmetry; the third, to reason and wisdom; the fourth, to knowledge and true opinion; the fifth, to pure pleasures; and here the Muse says ‘Enough.’
‘Bidding farewell to Philebus and Socrates,’ we may now consider the metaphysical conceptions which are presented to us. These are (I) the paradox of unity and plurality; (II) the table of categories or elements; (III) the kinds of pleasure; (IV) the kinds of knowledge; (V) the conception of the good. We may then proceed to examine (VI) the relation of the Philebus to the Republic, and to other dialogues.
- Jowett: Philebus 11a-12b — Prólogo
- Jowett: Philebus 12b-13d — Anfibologia da noção de prazer
- Jowett: Philebus 13d-14c — Anfibologia da noção de sabedoria
- Jowett: Philebus 14c-20a — Prazer e sabedoria: problema capital da filosofia
- Jowett: Philebus 15c-17a — Dialética
- Jowett: Philebus 17a-18d — Exemplos concretos
- Jowett: Philebus 18d-20a — O um e o múltiplo
- Jowett: Philebus 20a-27c — Retorno ao problema original
- Jowett: Philebus 23a-27c — Os cinco gêneros do Ser
- Jowett: Philebus 27c-31b — O esclarecimento aos gêneros do Ser aplicado ao problema
- Jowett: Philebus 31b-59d — Formas diversas e condições concretas do Prazer e da Sabedoria
- Jowett: Philebus 33c-36c — Prazeres próprios à alma
- Jowett: Philebus 36c-42c — Prazeres verdadeiros e prazeres falsos
- Jowett: Philebus 42c-46b — Crítica de teorias do prazer
- Jowett: Philebus 46b-53c — Prazeres puros e prazeres misturados
- Jowett: Philebus 53c-55c — Crítica da doutrina do prazer como processo
- Jowett: Philebus 55c-59d — A Sabedoria
- Jowett: Philebus 59d-66d — O Soberano Bem
- Jowett: Philebus 61a-64b — A vida mixta, mistura de sabedoria e de prazer
- Jowett: Philebus 64c-66d — Os três fatores constitutivos do Soberano Bem