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Summary
Chapter Summaries & Analyses
Prelude (227-230)
The Speech of Lysias (231-234)
Interlude—Socrates’s First Speech (234-241)
Interlude—Socrates’s Second Speech (242-245)
The Myth. The Allegory of the Charioteer and His Horses—Love Is the Regrowth of the Wings of the Soul—The Charioteer Allegory Resumed (246-257)
Introduction to the Discussion of Rhetoric—The Myth of the Cicadas (258-259)
The Necessity of Knowledge for a True Art of Rhetoric—The Speeches of Socrates Illustrate a New Philosophical Method (258-269)
A Review of the Devices and Technical Terms of Contemporary Rhetoric—Rhetoric as Philosophy—The Inferiority of the Written to the Spoken Word (269-277)
Recapitulation and Conclusion (277-279)
Key Figures
Themes
Symbols & Motifs
Important Quotes
Essay Topics
Tools
The main theme of the first half of Phaedrus is the difference between these two kinds of love, and the desirability of each. Lysias’s opening speech, as read by Phaedrus, makes no mention of what Socrates will come to call “ideal love.” For Lysias, all love is physical and erotic; it warps the senses of the lover to the point of madness. As Socrates later points out, Lysias’s argument suffers from his tendency not to define the terms he uses. In this case, Lysias makes no effort to distinguish between different varieties of love. When Socrates finally begins to rebut Lysias’s premise (after first giving a revised version of his speech on the same topic), he declares that “love” does not refer to a single concept, and that true love, or “ideal love,” is divinely inspired.
This contrast between the multiple senses of “love,”and the ambiguity one encounters when using the term, reinforces Socrates’s insistence that the terms of an argument must always be clearly defined. However, the picture that Socrates ultimately paints is slightly more complex. Both forms of love, physical and ideal, are not polar opposites. He makes this clear in his
By Plato