Ion reacts to the text Homer and not to the text Hesiod and Archilocus because he is does not own techne. With the frame of enthousiasmos, Plato conceals a slow development. Ion indicates the magnetic force of Homer, which reaches down link by link from the god and eventually lights on the dreamy listener as victim. Daedalus and Thamyris or Epeius and Orpheus: a glorious past that Ion suggest because he is lacking in techne and in thrall to the god. And the glorious past emerges through the form for excellence of archaic production: the catalogue.

Plato and the Catalogue Form in Ion

TULLI, MAURO
2016-01-01

Abstract

Ion reacts to the text Homer and not to the text Hesiod and Archilocus because he is does not own techne. With the frame of enthousiasmos, Plato conceals a slow development. Ion indicates the magnetic force of Homer, which reaches down link by link from the god and eventually lights on the dreamy listener as victim. Daedalus and Thamyris or Epeius and Orpheus: a glorious past that Ion suggest because he is lacking in techne and in thrall to the god. And the glorious past emerges through the form for excellence of archaic production: the catalogue.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11568/803926
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