Diotima of Mantinea
Diotima of Mantinea is the name or pseudonym of an ancient Greek character in Plato's dialogue Symposium, possibly an actual historical figure, indicated as having lived circa 440 B.C. Her ideas and doctrine of Eros as reported by the character of Socrates in the dialogue are the origin of the concept today known as Platonic love.
Role in ''Symposium''
In Plato's Symposium the members of a party discuss the meaning of love. Socrates says that in his youth he was taught "the philosophy of love" by Diotima, a prophetess who successfully postponed the Plague of Athens. In an account that Socrates recounts at the symposium, Diotima says that Socrates has confused the idea of love with the idea of the beloved. Love, she says, is neither fully beautiful nor good, as the earlier speakers in the dialogue had argued. Diotima gives Socrates a genealogy of Love, stating that he is the son of "resource and poverty ". In her view, love drives the individual to seek beauty, first earthly beauty, or beautiful bodies. Then as a lover grows in wisdom, the beauty that is sought is spiritual, or beautiful souls. For Diotima, the most correct use of love of other human beings is to direct one's mind to love of wisdom, or philosophy.From the Symposium Diotima's descriptor, "Mantinikê" seems designed to draw attention to the word "mantis", which suggests an association with prophecy. She is further described as a foreigner and as wise in not only the subject of love but also of many other things, she is often associated with priestcraft by a majority of scholars insofar as: 1 - she advises the Athenians on sacrifice which delayed the onset of a plague, and 2 - her speech on eros utilizes the language of sacrifice, prophecy, purification, mystical cultic practices like initiation and culminates in revelations/visions. In one manuscript her description was mistranscribed mantikê rather than Mantinikê, which may be another reason for the reception of Diotima as a "priestess". Her views of love and beauty appear to center Socrates' lesson on the value of the daimonic and "giving birth to the beautiful."