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_Abe_Froman_SKOC t1_ivkgvaq wrote

There's another story that Aristotle (student of Plato) used the story of Atlantis during his education of Alexander the Great. He used the story as a parable to teach that all glory, no matter how great, was fleeting and could vanish at any time.

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DarkNinjaPenguin t1_ivkmkb2 wrote

Basically there are as many stories about who thought up Atlantis, as there are stories about Atlantis.

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CAPTAIN_DIPLOMACY t1_ivkol73 wrote

Not really, it's fairly well settled that Aristotle got the parable from Plato's work. And that Plato as the originator made it up.

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DevilsWelshAdvocate t1_ivm7mts wrote

Its not well established he made it up, he claims to have heard it from a distant relative who had travelled to Egypt. To say it is well established as made up is a farce based on incomplete data

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Unlimitles t1_ivmjv0q wrote

thank you for fighting against this clear purposeful misinformation.....there seems to be a real push of it.

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BirdUp69 t1_ivmxv6v wrote

To clarify: Plato heard it from Solon. Solon is well regarded as a key figure in Ancient Philosophy. And it was well within his capabilities at the time to travel to Egypt to visit with the priest at Sais. Interestingly, Sais is also claimed as the place Paris and Helen eloped to, but were sent home, the Egyptians realising the problems they were bringing with them.

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beachedwhale1945 t1_ivn89i0 wrote

Herodotus, the Father of Lies, claimed to have heard all his stories from other people. Just because someone said “I heard it from reliable sources” doesn’t mean it’s accurate, especially since the Plato descriptions are part of a philosophical discussion about the perfect society with Atlantis playing the part of the opposite of the ideal Athens and it’s a very safe bet that Plato’s account is fiction.

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Kalglodril t1_ivo12ni wrote

"He" never claimed anything. A fictional character in one of his fictional dialogues claimed that he heard it from a pseudo-fictional relative in a fictional anecdote.

Plato's Timaeus is the first instance of Atlantis being mentioned in any Greek text, which as a historical culture rehashes or discusses older stories is relatively remarkable and heavily implies that Plato was the originator of the myth.

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DevilsWelshAdvocate t1_ivo3mxf wrote

Everything is fictional if you don’t know the facts. We’re talking about a time where extremely little was written down, let alone maintained and kept for todays world to see and understand. You can make your presumptions and perhaps are more likely to be correct than I, but there could be more to this, such as the timespan being in line with the younger dryas in the story, a crazy incredible coincidence?

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Kalglodril t1_ivo44az wrote

No, those are literal fictional. Timaeus is a Platonic dialogue, it's fictional.

These are not presumptions, this is based in literature. Timaeus (the text where this was first mentioned) and its relationship to myth was the subject of my Undergraduate dissertation and then I wrote a further 40'000 words on Platonic dialogues in my research based MLitt. I severely doubt you have read as much primary or secondary academic literature concerning Plato.

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DevilsWelshAdvocate t1_ivo47xf wrote

Conveniently leaving out the year lining up to the younger dryas period huh, I wonder why..

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sennbat t1_ivlzail wrote

... are there? There's really just... the one. No one who came after Plato could have thought it up (because we know Plato did) and anyone who came before him that thought it up never mentioned it as far as we have evidence of.

There's really only the one, lol.

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