Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Plato's philosophy
- Where did Plato's
ideas come from?
- The Sophists
- Earlier Greek philosophers - followers
of relative ethics, believed in no one
true morality. Plato disagreed with
them.
- Socrates
- Plato's teacher, who was killed because
of a democratic election. Plato therefore
disagreed with democracy
- The Forms
- We live in a world of
appearances. The real world is
that of the Forms
- Forms are the
eternal, perfect idea of
what a thing is
- We have immortal souls which
remember the Forms - a dualistic belief
- Metempsychosis -
the rebirth of the
soul
- Education is about
remembering the Forms
- The highest Form is the
Form of the Good, the
source of all other Forms,
existence and perfection
- It allows us to understand and
assess things. We require
knowledge to see it
- The Analogy
of the Cave
- Explains the
idea of the
Forms
- Chained prisoners believe
the shadows they see are
reality
- One who is brought out of the cave
sees the real world and the sun
- But the other prisoners do not
believe him when he tells them
about them
- Prisoners in the cave are people
in the world of appearances
- Prisoner who leaves the cave is a
philosopher who learns about the
Forms
- The Divided
Line
- This idea appears in Plato's
book 'The Republic'
- On one side is subjective opinion, on
the other is objective knowledge
- On the 'opinion' side are images and
objects, and on the 'objective' side are
thoughts and ideals
- Knowledge is superior
to opinion
- But only philosophers are on
that side of the line
- For and against
the Forms
- For
- A dualist will
support it
- Physical and mental properties do
seem to be different (physical can be
seen, mental cannot)
- It explains how we have concepts of
unteachable, abstract concepts such as
love and wisdom
- It explains how objects that can be
vastly different in appearance (eg dogs
and chairs) are all recognisably the same
thing
- 'Bad' Forms, eg those of
evil and disease, could be
explained as an absence
of good Forms
- It seems impossible, but
Plato says that most people
will believe that
- Explains imperfections
in the world
- Against
- Relativists and theists
will not accept it
- Plato says change
is bad - you may
not agree
- Are there forms of bad things?
How could they be perfect?
- Self-containing forms - eg
the Form of a triangle, and
the Form of a line?
- How detailed? Form of a
black cat, a tabby cat, a
ginger cat, etc?
- What about people
who have learning
disabilities and can't
be philosophers?
- Plato gives no
satisfactory
explanation for
where and what
they are
- Dawkins's criticism: ideas exist in
people's minds
- Aristotle's criticism: We gain knowledge
from experience
- Plato's self-criticisms: How do the
Forms interact with the physical world?
- What about actual things like
viruses which cause suffering?
- Keywords
- Metempsychosis
- Dualism
- A priori
- Epistemology
- The Demiurge
- Plato's idea of God
- 'Sculpts' the world out of pre-existing chaotic matter
- Brings order
- Uses the perfect Forms as a template
- The world is not perfect
because the chaotic matter
resists his will
- Is not the source of
morality - that is the
Forms
- Is not involved with the
universe