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Plato's philosophy
Descripción
An explanation of Plato's idea of the Forms and the Demiurge
Sin etiquetas
philosophy
plato
the forms
socrates
philosophy
a-level
Mapa Mental por
Sumahlor
, actualizado hace más de 1 año
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Sumahlor
hace más de 9 años
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Resumen del Recurso
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
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