You, or anyone, can define whatever you want any way you want. And to start a discussion, the activity of defining is usually a good thing. Either folks will argue to establish some common ground of understanding, or they'll agree and start on such a common ground. But definitions, yours, mine, theirs, in-of-by themselves, being first words, cannot be the last word (except in those arguments when they are).but I believe the philosophy that you are ascribing to there is far more Aristotelian than Platonic. — username
I suspect that Plato also assumed a universal god-like Mind as the source of all Forms. But his notion of that Eternal Essence was more like an impersonal organizing force or necessity, such as the "Logos". So, I also interpret his argument for "The Good" to be referring to "The Ideal" or "The Perfect", instead of a divine being. Yet, the same reasoning could be used to prove the existence of absolute "Evil". Likewise, that we can imagine the "greatest conceivable mind/being", proves nothing about existence, but merely our ability to imagine, to generalize, and to idealize.I think I am of the belief that in order for Plato's theory of the forms to be true then there must be a God or in other words that Plato's theory can't be true without the existence of a God. God's essence would therefore be the form of the Good that he talks about. — username
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