1 / 26

Plato

Plato. Socrates (470-399 BC) Plato (427-347 BC) Aristotle (384-322 BC). Philosophy & Athens. Plato is a nickname for Aristocles He came from a distinguished Athenian family Became a student of Socrates at age 28 At age 40 he founded The Academy Died at age 80. Plato’s Life.

aida
Télécharger la présentation

Plato

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Plato

  2. Socrates (470-399 BC) Plato (427-347 BC) Aristotle (384-322 BC) Philosophy & Athens

  3. Plato is a nickname for Aristocles He came from a distinguished Athenian family Became a student of Socrates at age 28 At age 40 he founded The Academy Died at age 80 Plato’s Life

  4. Approximately 30 of his known writings survive. • Early dialogues • Ethical investigations but few answers • Middle dialogues • Socrates is a spokesman for Plato’s ideas • Later dialogues • Socrates doesn’t appear Writings

  5. Socrates • Displeasure with the Sophists • Important more for influence and method than for content. • Pythagoreans • Pre-Socratic philosophers mediated through Socrates (Armstrong, p. 20) Influences on Plato

  6. Teachers of Rhetoric • A well-spoken man could make lots of money in Athens • Not primarily interested in truth • Relativists • Protagoras • “Man is the measure.” Socrates verses the Sophists

  7. Socrates “you believe that everyman is the authority on what is true.” Protagoras “true” “Well, I just took a survey and …” Theaetetus

  8. Every man’s idea is equally true Plato counters with - - 1. Self-refuting 2. The Test of Future Experience Man Is the measure

  9. Socrates executed when Plato was 28 • Recorded in Apology, Crito, Phaedo • Plato was nominally a follower, but it was the death of Socrates that most greatly influenced him. Socrates

  10. Human beings participate in two different worlds • Physical world (the lower world) • The world of particular things • Everything in the world changes • Everything in this world is known by sense experience • World of Forms (the higher world) • The world of universals • Unchanging • Know by Plato’s Theory of the Forms

  11. Plato took the two worlds of Heraclitus and Parmenides and made them two features of the same world.

  12. There is a form in the world for every class of object • Universals – properties shared by objects • Eternal entities – numbers or propositions that can only exist in the mind What Is A Form

  13. Appear in book 7 of The Republic Prisoners bound in the back of a cave and only able to see the back wall of the cave. Behind them there is a fire producing light for the back of the cave. Behind them men walk carrying statues which cast shadows on the back wall of the cave. One prisoner frees himself Allegory of the cave

  14. He discovers that the shadows are not the real world. Finds the path out of the cave and after an arduous journey arrives in bright sunlight. Amazed by the wonder of the world Goes back to tell the other prisoners – kill him. You are the prisoners!

  15. Metaphysical Dualism • World of Forms • World of Particular Things • Anthropological Dualism • Body (bad) • Soul (good) • Epistemological Dualism • Know the world of particular things with body • Know the world of forms with soul Plato’s Dualism

  16. 1. Philosophical systems find their way into pop culture. • Postmodernism • Music, Emergent Church, etc. 2. Historical – Stand on the Shoulders of Giants • Ethics, Politics, Epistemology, Metaphysics, etc. • Ex. Four Virtues (Courage, Moderation, Wisdom, Justice) Why Study This “Stuff”

  17. 3. Historical - Counter Errors by understanding the past • Syncretism - “Early Christianity combination of Hebrew expectation and Greek metaphysical ideas.” NO! • How do you deal with similarity? 4. Many modern Errors have been countered by the ancients. • C.S. Lewis on the value of reading old books • No need to recreate the arguments

  18. Hedonism Empiricism Relativism Materialism Mechanism Atheism Naturalism . Herman7 Ideas That Plato Attacked

  19. Hedonism = Pleasure is the greatest good Plato counters with the question, “Can there be such a thing as an evil pleasure?” If yes, then there is a higher standard Plato Counters Hedonism

  20. “Kill them all and let God sort them out.” • Probably not our best response • Shows how seriously Plato took it. • Atheism is a danger to the state (Republic) • C.S. Lewis said that the greatest thing we could do for both God and man was to convert our neighbor. Plato Counters Atheism

  21. Empiricism - All human knowledge has its source in sense experience. • Plato calls all lower world understanding “opinion” • Only in the upper story do you have “knowledge” • Know the world of the forms via “reason” Plato Counters Empiricism

  22. Sophists “man is the measure of all things” Plato argued for objective truths and values that are the same for all Plato counters Relativism

  23. What is really, real? Matter. Argues that there must me a reality that is non-material – spiritual. Plato Counters Materialism

  24. Naturalism – the world can be explained without reference to any supernatural reality Plato Counters Naturalism

  25. The world is just an elaborate machine Plato was a teleologist. Plato Counters Mechanism

  26. Read Armstrong pages 64-65 Plato is on our side

More Related