Abstract
A comprehensive review of Grenet's book would have to approach book-length itself, for "analogy" is discovered in all the Dialogues, and the Platonic principle and method of reasoning to which Grenet gives this name, and to which he attributes absolute universality, he treats extensively in heavily documented, text-packed treatises. His book in fact is divided into four "books." I shall therefore limit myself to two general questions: What does Grenet find to be the fundamental meaning of "philosophical analogy" in Plato? Is this "analogy" philosophical, and if so, in what sense and with what value?