Self Class E 53 - Plato
Self Class E 53 - Plato
Self Class E 53 - Plato
PLATO(428-347 BC)
• Plato was a rationalist (who bases his opinions and action on reason and
knowledge).
• He was also dualist (who believes body and soul exist separately but
connected in some ways).
The Republic:
• Portrays argument in defense of the just life and its necessary link with happy life.
• Upholds the importance of educating both men and women, and the need for
both mental and physical activity.
• Admits “philosophical wisdom is the only way to escape the prison of existence.”
1.Socrates
2.Pre socratic philosophers
3.The Sophists
Theory of Knowledge:
2. The shadows represent illusions within the cave. Also symbolizes the
states of mind, the lowest level of understanding based on opinion.
6. The world beyond the cave is the intelligible world. The world of reality and forms
beyond the shadow.
7. The Sun is used metaphorically that represents the source of absolute truth. When
the released prisoner sees the sun, it represents the philosopher achieving
enlightenment.
The Divided Line:
In the divided line Plato explains his theory of knowledge diagrammatically,
as he explained it allegorically in the cave theory .
THOUGHT OBJECTS
REASON HIGHER
(DIALECTIC) FROMS
KNOWLEDGE UNDERSTANDING FROMS OF SCIENCE INTELLIGIBLE
(SCIENCE AND MATHEMATICS
MATHEMETICS
BELIEF THINGS,
(PERCEPTION) OBJECTS
CONJECTURE SHADOWS, VISIBLE
OPINION
(IMAGINING) IMAGES WORLD
REFLECTIONS
Visible World/ Opinion (Images/ Imagination): The eye makes guesses
upon observing likeness or differences of visible things. ( the shadows
from fire,the echo from the wall)
He says the intelligible world contains fixed forms which are absolutely
true for all the time, people and place. Therefore it is objective.
Plato’s Theory of Forms:
Whereas the material world , is in a constant state of flux. Plato
believed that there must be a world that is unchanging and contains
perfect forms of things we know on earth, AKA the intelligible world.
And our world is a pale imagination and imitation of that real world.
Plato says we recognize the Forms because we are born with dim
recollection of our prior existence.
Plato’s Theory of Forms:
The most important Form of all is the Form of Good. And it is the
source of the other forms.
The Ideal Forms are greater than others as they have presence of
Good in them.
Is reliable.
The few have ethical knowledge and they are to control others.