Thursday, November 28, 2019
Philosophy - Plato Essays - Dialogues Of Plato, Socratic Dialogues
  Philosophy - Plato    Plato was born to an aristocratic family in Athens, Greece. When he was a child his  father, Ariston, who was believed to be descended from the early kings of Athens died, and his  mother, Perictione married Pyrilampes. As a young man Plato was always interested in political  leadership and eventually became a disciple of Socrates. He followed his philosophy and his   dialectical style, which is believed to be the search for truth through questions, answers, and  additional questions. After witnessing the death of Socrates at the hands of the Athenian  democracy in 399 B.C., Plato left Athens and continued to travel to Italy, Sicily, and Egypt.   (Internet)   In 387 B.C. Plato founded the Academy in Athens otherwise known as the first European  university. The Academy provided a wide range of curriculum including subjects such as  astronomy, biology, philosophy, political theory, and mathematics. Aristotle was the Academy's  most outstanding student. (Internet)  The internal affairs of the academy ruled the next 20 years of Plato's life and he wrote  nothing. Many Greek youths were attracted to the new school. Plato then went to Syracuse to  supervise the education of the ruling prince. Plato was not certain about the success of this  adventure although he felt he could not refuse this opportunity of putting his ideas to a test. It  did not work out for Plato and he returned to Athens in 360 B.C. He then devoted himself to  teaching and lecturing at the Academy. He died at age 80 in Athens in 348 B.C. Before his  death Plato completed the Sophist, the Politicus, the Philebus, the Timaeus and finally the Laws.  (Internet)    DIALOGUES   The Symposium is the most widely read of Plato's dialogues with the exception of the  Republic and it is with good reason. It's literary merit is outstanding with philosophical and  psychological sources (Allen)        ANAYA--2  THE EARLY DIALOGUES  In the early dialogues Socrates always played the leading roll. In all of them, Plato was  trying to keep the spirit of Socrates alive. There are also early dialogues that portray Socrates in  whimsical moods but always with a serious purpose. (Allen)  The Republic was the most revealing of all Plato's early writings. Plato believed that one  could not seriously construct a political theory without a metaphysics. Therefore, we find an  outline of human life as it should be lived according to nature. (Allen)    THE LATER DIALOGUES  In the later dialogues Soctates does not always play the leading role. He does not enter  into the conversation of Laws. More interest was shown in the possibilities of politics. Law and  legal government were stressed and it greatly influenced Aristotle. It is clear that in later years  Plato became more aware of the difficulties in attempting to combine science with government.   Plato's main interest at the end of his life was to guide human effort as indicated in his last  dialogues, the Laws. (Allen)  Many students of the Academy were reaching into positions of power in the Greek world.   Plato planned a trilogy at the end of his life, the Timaeus, the Critias, and the Hermoncrates.   (Allen)    THEORY OF KNOWLEDGE   Plato's theory of knowledge can be found in the myth of the cave. The myth describes  people chained within a cave. The only images they see are the shadows of objects and animals  held in front of a fire that is behind them that reflects on the cave walls in front of them. That is  all they had ever seen so that is what they believe to be real. One day a man escaped the cave  and went outside. With the sun he saw what was real in the world and realized all he ever saw  were just shadows. He went back to the men in the cave and told them all this. He told them  that they     ANAYA--3  too could see the outside if they broke free of their chains but they didn't believe him. The  environment of the cave to Plato symbolizes the physical world of appearances. Escaping into  the sun-filled world means the transition into the real world that is full and perfect being the  world of forms, which is the proper object of knowledge. (Hare p.39)    NATURE OF FORMS   The theory of Forms may be understood best in terms of mathematical entities. This  theory was his way of explaining how the same universal term can refer to so many particular  things or events. An individual is human to the extent that they resemble or participate. In the  Form    
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