Kant likes Plato the academic. He doesn’t like Plato the letter-writer, teacher, and sender of messages. The latter is, through no fault of his own, too much the Schwarmer for Kant’s tastes.
The dividing line between the good and bad Plato – or, more accurately, between Plato and Kant – has, Derrida says, to do with mathematics: “Plato, enchanted by geometric figures, as Pythagoras was by numbers, would have done nothing but have a presentiment of the problematic of the a priori synthesis and too quickly would have taken refuge in a mysticism of geometry, as Pythagoras in the mysticism of numbers. And this mathematizating mysticism always goes hand in hand with the phenomena of sect, cryptopolitics, indeed superstitious theophany that Kant opposes to rational theology” (Derrida in Raising the Tone of Philosophy, 135).
Lift My Chin, Lord
Lift my chin, Lord,Say to me,“You are not whoYou feared to be,Not Hecate, quite,With howling sound,Torch held…
Letters
Two delightful essays in the March issue, by Nikolas Prassas (“Large Language Poetry,” March 2025) and Gary…
Spring Twilight After Penance
Let’s say you’ve just comeFrom confession. Late sunPours through the budding treesThat mark the brown creek washing Itself…