"I want first to say how I must speak, and then to speak. For in my own opinion all the previous speakers did not eulogize the god but blessed human beings for the goods of which the god is the cause; yet no one has said what sort is he who makes these gifts." (194E-195A) He then goes on to suggest that the God of Eros is the happiest of the gods because he is the most beautiful. "I declare that though all gods are happy, Eros, (if sacred law allow it and it be without nemesis to say so) is the happiest of them, as he is the most beautiful and the best. As the most beautiful he is of the following sort: First, he is the youngest of gods, Phaedrus; and he by himself supplies a great proof for this assertion, for with healing flight he avoids old age-swift though it plainly is, coming on us, at any rate, swifter than he should. It is precisely old age that Eros naturally detests; he does not even come within hailing distance of it. He is always with and of the young." (195A-B) In this quote by Agathon, he implies that the God of Eros is the happiest of the gods because he is the youngest. He avoids old age, and only stays with and within the young. All obstacles old gods faced against each other have reformed in to peace since the God of Eros has ruled amongst them. "So it is plain that, when Eros came to be among them, the affairs of the goofed were arranged out of love and beauty_for there is no eros present in ugliness. But before that, as I said at the start, many awesome events tok place among the gods, as is said, through the monarchy of Necessity; whereas since the birth of this god, all good things have resulted for gods as well as for human beings from loving the beautiful things." (197B) This quotation by
"I want first to say how I must speak, and then to speak. For in my own opinion all the previous speakers did not eulogize the god but blessed human beings for the goods of which the god is the cause; yet no one has said what sort is he who makes these gifts." (194E-195A) He then goes on to suggest that the God of Eros is the happiest of the gods because he is the most beautiful. "I declare that though all gods are happy, Eros, (if sacred law allow it and it be without nemesis to say so) is the happiest of them, as he is the most beautiful and the best. As the most beautiful he is of the following sort: First, he is the youngest of gods, Phaedrus; and he by himself supplies a great proof for this assertion, for with healing flight he avoids old age-swift though it plainly is, coming on us, at any rate, swifter than he should. It is precisely old age that Eros naturally detests; he does not even come within hailing distance of it. He is always with and of the young." (195A-B) In this quote by Agathon, he implies that the God of Eros is the happiest of the gods because he is the youngest. He avoids old age, and only stays with and within the young. All obstacles old gods faced against each other have reformed in to peace since the God of Eros has ruled amongst them. "So it is plain that, when Eros came to be among them, the affairs of the goofed were arranged out of love and beauty_for there is no eros present in ugliness. But before that, as I said at the start, many awesome events tok place among the gods, as is said, through the monarchy of Necessity; whereas since the birth of this god, all good things have resulted for gods as well as for human beings from loving the beautiful things." (197B) This quotation by