• March 8, 2026

Kreeft traces how this central idea was adapted and refined by later thinkers who gave the Forms a new "metaphysical address": Peter Kreeft on Platonism - Last Eden - WordPress.com

Kreeft also emphasizes the ethical dimension of the tradition. For Plato, philosophy was not an academic exercise but a way of life, a therapy for the soul. Kreeft revisits the "Ladder of Love" from the Symposium, illustrating how the tradition moves the individual from the love of physical beauty to the love of beautiful souls, and finally to the love of Beauty itself. This ascent is the core of Kreeft’s defense: he argues that modern secularism has severed the rungs of this ladder, trapping us in the lower realms of the senses. By restoring the Platonic tradition, Kreeft suggests we can recover the capacity for wonder and the pursuit of virtue.

"Philosophy is not about finding answers; it's about asking the right questions."

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