5
The clear analysis of
Luce, J.V. ‘Immortality in Plato’s Symposium,’ A History of Greek Philosophy
4 (Cambridge
1975), 387ff.,Google Scholar with reference among others to the basic article of
Neumann, H. ‘Diotima’s Concept of Love,’ CR
2 (1952), 137–41.Google Scholar Another good discussion on similar lines is
Robinson, T.M.
Plato’s Psychology (Toronto
1970), 125ff.Google Scholar Closer to the line which I take is the contention of
Dover, K.J. ‘The Date of Plato’s Symposium
,’ Phronesis
10 (1965),16ff.,CrossRefGoogle Scholar that Diotima’s thesis that ‘it is only by generation that mortal nature can be immortal’, is compatible with an impersonal formulation of immortality, namely ‘there is in me something which will exist when I am dead’. Present purposes further require consideration of the mode of existence of this‘ something’ and of how, being immortal, it can be creative.