The writer and philosopher Iris Murdoch dives into Plato's Theory of Beauty and projects her philosophy on the ideas of other thinkers.
In this book, based on the lectures he gave in Rome in 1976, Iris Murdoch examines Plato's vision of art and, in particular, the reasons for the philosopher's manifest hostility towards him.
For this, the author, while making a synthetic tour of the elements that underlie Platonic theories on Beauty, seeks an explanation for the fact that the Greek thinker attributed so much importance in his work to the role that Beauty plays, but, paradoxically , denigrates the artists. Leaning on the contrast between the deceptive shadows of the fire of the Cavern and the light of the sun, illuminator of Truth, Murdoch highlights the primordial work that creators carry out in revealing the transcendent.
His accurate examination is further enriched...read more







