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Between Chora and the Good : Metaphor's Metaphysical Neighborhood

Part of the Perspectives in Continental Philosophy series
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Plato's chora, as developed in the Timaeus, is a creative matrix in which things arise and stand out in response to the lure of the Good.

Chora is paired with the Good, its polar opposite; both are "beyond being" and the metaphors hitherto thought to disclose the transcendent.

They underlie Plato's distinction of a procreative gap between being and becoming.

The chiasmus between the Good and chora makes possible their mutual participation in one another.

This gap makes possible both phenomenological and cosmological interpretations of Plato.

Metaphor is restricted to beings as they appear in this gap through the crossing of metaphor's terms, terms that dwell with, rather than sublate, one another.

Hermeneutically, through its "is" we can see something being engendered or determined by that crossing.

Bigger's larger goal is to align the primacy of the Good in Plato and Christian Neoplatonism with the creator God of Genesis and the God of love in the New Testament.

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Product Details
Fordham University Press
0823223507 / 9780823223503
Hardback
111.84
01/09/2004
United States
English
576 p.
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