• Gregory
    4.7k
    So, this is how I understand the eight or so centuries of Platonic thought.

    First, there is the One. Which is pure potentiality

    Second, there is the Intellect. Whether it comes from the One or not is a mystery. It is the Demiurge

    Lastly, there is the Forms and the gods, and finally earth.

    My instinct is that they were not otherworldly people, but loved the rays of the sun. Ultimately, they may have believed that the One was subservient to matter. How this is possible wouldn't be dealt with in philosophy until phenomenology was born
  • Gregory
    4.7k
    The five ways of Aquinas were created for simple peasants to count on their fingers, like a little intellectual rosary. But he had far more to say on the subject:

    aquinasonline.com/aquinas-on-knowing-gods-existence/

    This is the most valiant effort offered on this issue from that side of the court.

    I'm reading about the panentheism of John Erigena in "On the Division of Nature" by him. A Platonist of a special breed
  • Tzeentch
    3.8k
    If you're interested in delving deeper into Plato (or maybe you already have), I can really recommend this YouTube channel:

    Pierre Grimes and the Noetic Society

    Pierre Grimes made many of his early lectures available in which he discusses a great deal of topics. He seems to have a real soft spot for Plato and Neoplatonic thinkers. His lectures really opened my eyes to the richness of Platonic thought, and how badly represented it is in contemporary education.
  • Gregory
    4.7k


    Thank you very much!
  • Metaphysician Undercover
    13.2k
    First, there is the One. Which is pure potentialityGregory

    I think the "One" is purely actual, the primary actuality from which everything else emanates, like the Christian "God".
  • Gregory
    4.7k


    Maybe Plato was ambiguous, since he writes in dialogues. Plotinus for one wrote in the Anneads that the One is pure potentiality
  • Metaphysician Undercover
    13.2k

    Actually there is significant ambiguity in Plotinus concerning this issue. Aristotle through his cosmological argument had already demonstrated that anything eternal must be actual or else there would be no actual existence now. And, he defined "form" as actual, so Neo-Platonic Forms are actual.

    Plotinus defined "One" as potentiality, but then he was forced to say that One had absolutely no movement, and so there was a problem which followed, as to how the One could engender the Intellect, and all else which follows, if the One consisted purely of potential. The One, is in some sense "the cause" of existence, and Aristotle's demonstration was that such a cause is necessarily actual. So Plotinus compared this cause to a type of "seeing".

    ...and it must be the second of all existence, for it is that
    which sees The One on which alone it leans while the First has no
    need whatever of it. The offspring of the prior to Divine Mind can be
    no other than that Mind itself and thus is the loftiest being in the
    universe, all else following upon it- the soul, for example, being an
    utterance and act of the Intellectual-Principle as that is an utterance
    and act of The One.
    — Plotinus, Fifth Ennead, First Tractate, ch.6

    Notice that he is forced here to refer to the "act" of the One.
  • Gregory
    4.7k


    We should turn to Plotinus because Plato is ambiguous, and maybe we should continue the thought with a Heidegarrian interpretation of Plotinus. Potentiality-to-being is not strictly static. And further, it is untrue that Aristotle proved that the actual is prior to the potential. I've read his arguments via Aquinas, who wrote them more clearly. I find them faulty to be honest
  • Gregory
    4.7k
    Plotinus's One can be seen as pure movement without entity being inside. My claim on this thread is that Platonists may not have really believed in top down theo-philosophy, but that the world is the master of the One and the One is subservient to matter. Much phenomenology is needed to unpack this. Forms can be relegated to our minds and gods seen to be the ghosts of our ancestors
  • Gregory
    4.7k
    Therefore my claim is that immediately after Plato Platonism became an aesthetic movement very much wedded to the world. It was Aristotle who was "up in the clouds"

    I also wanted to add that phenomenology immediately preceded Heidegger, who took it to a new stage
  • Tzeentch
    3.8k
    As I've understood the One in Plato, the One is not an object of knowledge, and since it is a pure 'one' any distinctions made in it or attributes ascribed to it turn it into a 'many', so one would inevitably err in its description.

    The One is approached through dialectic, based on the experience that is called 'The Idea of the Good' (idea as in 'to behold'), where the One is said to be the source of this experience. This experience is also called 'the Perfection of Beauty' or 'Divine Luminousity'.
  • Gregory
    4.7k


    Good thoughts. But can perfection finally happen in the universe?

    I see the Intellect as the "evil genius" of modern philosophy
  • Gregory
    4.7k
    Aristotle (in his book on the heavens?) said 3 was a special number, and not in an aesthetic sense, but objectively. Hegel answered him: "We may, of course, be prompted at first to connect the most general determinations of thought with the first numbers, and say therefore that 1 is what is simple and immediate, two a distinction and mediation, and three the unity of both. But these combinations are completely external, and there is nothing in these numbers as such to make them the expression of precisely these determinate thoughts."
  • Tzeentch
    3.8k
    Good thoughts. But can perfection finally happen in the universe?Gregory

    If you are talking about 'the Perfection of Beauty', according to Plato it can certainly be experienced. If I'm not mistaken Plotinus also goes into great depth about these experiences and he states to have had them on multiple occasions.
  • Gary M Washburn
    240
    In his Laws, Plato's lead character seems to rationalize the design of the state into numerical proportions. On and on he goes, while his interlocutors lap it up, only to find at the very end that there is something essential that number, and numerical relations, cannot bring to the world, and that, if left out, inevitably results in chaos and discord, no matter how rational the original order. The same thing in Timaeus/Critias. In the end, the perfect state is defeated by an upstart Athens, because perfect order is eviscerating, and the dialectic of periodic bouts with natural disasters made Athens stronger. And ultimately, the gods erase themselves from being (and so the Critias ends abruptly as the gods are about to speak, but can't because their system of "perfection" ends in their never having been at all!).

    It should be plain enough by now that the mathematical/logical model comes close, but does not quite close the gap through which something more, nominally ineffable, enters reality. And the thing is, how much of a deviation from the causal nexus, how much of a quantity untraceable in the calculus, how much of an ambiguity in the otherwise rigid progression of inference, is the downfall of these gods?

    It's perfectly true that logical inference is the conservation of its premise, but this can only be so if a proposition is determinant rather than mere trope. But if the proposition is not a categorization, but a characterization, of the subject by the predicate, then it is not possible to assemble two propositions from a single premise in which that characterization is wholly in the same terms. But we must become convinced that terms are indeed conserved if we are to begin reasoning at all. And so, if we engage in critical reasoning together (dialectic), we can become aware of that lapse in the continuity of terms. Probably we will never individually recognize the lapse in ourselves, but, nevertheless, terms evolve, and if the reasoning throughout, on all sides, is competent and honest, then that evolution cannot be false. Certainly not as false as either one alone is bound to be. It's not that we learn what's real by hashing things out together, but that we evolve together in the terms by which that learning might become a real possibility. The remaining work is not philosophy, it's science or technology, but the fundamental issues that should consume us here is that that evolution of the terms we must become convicted of to reason is the real issue. Plato's views are not correctly understood as ontology, but as characterology. The person of the thinker is paramount. There is no quantifier that can reveal this.
  • Gregory
    4.7k


    Are you speaking of meaningless (or empty) categories? I'm not sure what a trope is
  • Metaphysician Undercover
    13.2k
    And further, it is untrue that Aristotle proved that the actual is prior to the potential. I've read his arguments via Aquinas, who wrote them more clearly. I find them faulty to be honestGregory

    Let me state a simplified form of the argument, and you tell me where you believe the fault lies. The potential for a thing precedes its actual existence. But the potential for any particular thing requires something actual to actualize that specific thing rather than something else. This is contingency, the potential thing cannot come into actual existence without the required cause, which is something actual. If there ever was a time when there was infinite, or "pure" potential, then by the terms of that description it is impossible that there would be any actuality at that time. Without any actuality, this "pure" potential would never produce anything actual, therefore there would always be pure potential without ever being anything actual. What we observe however, is that there is actual existence. Therefore it is impossible that there ever was "pure", or infinite potential, and potential cannot be prior to actual in time.
  • Gregory
    4.7k
    .

    I see your argument. Now my response is that there are two "things", pure potentiality and the avenue for it to become actual. You might want to think of it as if pure potentiality was the Confucian "Heaven" and the avenue is the Daost "Way". I almost think of it in physical terms. Potentiality flows or maybe even falls into actuality. Or maybe I've read too much Heidegger :) lol
  • Gregory
    4.7k


    You apparently have a substance-based metaphysics. So is pure actuality for you the perfect Platonic form, God, or the Trinity? I don't see what else it could be but one of those three. I could be wrong. I could be wrong about all of this
  • Metaphysician Undercover
    13.2k
    I see your argument. Now my response is that there are two "things", pure potentiality and the avenue for it to become actual. You might want to think of it as if pure potentiality was the Confucian "Heaven" and the avenue is the Daost "Way". I almost think of it in physical terms. Potentiality flows or maybe even falls into actuality. Or maybe I've read too much Heidegger :) lolGregory

    The problem I see here is that the way, avenue, or falling, is a path which must be chosen, that is why Plato's "good" becomes a first principle. Potentiality could be actualized in a vast multiplicity of ways, that is the nature of contingency. The way cannot be predetermined or else this would negate the nature of contingency, because then there would only be one way. So whatever it is, the way, or path, must be chosen from a vast multitude of possibilities. Consider falling, like sky diving. As you are falling you have time to consider what is coming up, your landing place. Therefore you have choices as to your path.

    You apparently have a substance-based metaphysics. So is pure actuality for you the perfect Platonic form, God, or the Trinity? I don't see what else it could be but one of those three. I could be wrong. I could be wrong about all of thisGregory

    Yes, I think some people understand God as a pure actuality. The point is that in Aristotelian physics and metaphysics, "form" is what is active, actual. So in Christian theology Forms are actualities which are independent from matter, acting on matter to make matter what it is (as the particular objects which exist). Matter provides the potential for existence of things. So there is a realm of these immaterial Forms starting from God, similar to Neo-Platonist emanation, without Plotinus' designation that the One is pure potential, having been substituted with the more consistent pure actuality.
  • Gary M Washburn
    240
    Gregory,

    Potentiality presumes wanting to be. Isn't it fatuous to want to be anything if we don't know what being means? Socrates was pretty emphatic that we don't, and that a complete and certain proof we don't know is the only knowledge possible to us!

    Do you really mean to challenge me on a simple term like that? Or are you really saying you are not familiar with the word? I find neither credible. Do you suppose Plato viewed a proposition in the same technical sense today's logicians and computer programmers do? How do you suppose Plato meant the word "category"? Kat-agora, in the manner of the market, not the tech lab.

    Aristotle emerged from a lecture by Plato saying he hadn't a clue what it was all about. As soon as Plato died he was gone, to set up his own rival school. It is not a stretch to suppose, then, that he never understood Plato at all, and was not well liked at the Academy. It is also telling that none of Plato's immediate successors left a written record of their views, presumably taking Socrates at his word that writing was the murder of language, and dialectic. It was not for several centuries that we get Proclus and Plotinus, and with them "Platonism".
  • Gnomon
    3.8k
    First, there is the One. Which is pure potentiality
    Second, there is the Intellect. Whether it comes from the One or not is a mystery. It is the Demiurge
    Lastly, there is the Forms and the gods, and finally earth.
    Gregory
    I'm generally familiar with Plato's ideas, but I'm not a scholar. Where did Plato discuss the topic that you are calling "the One". I did a Google search and found nothing relatable. How is "the One" different from the "Logos". My interest is primarily in the notion of "pure potentiality". In my own thesis I call that abstract concept "BEING", the power or potential to exist. from which all "beings" come to be. I hadn't thought of BEING as "wanting to be" (Washburn), but in order for Potential to become Actual, there must be some Motivation and/or Intention. If so, The One, begins to take-on some characteristics of a universal creative deity. Is that what Plato had in mind?

    Also, where did the sequence of "One", "Intellect" (demiurge?), Forms, Gods, and Earth come from? Was this hierarchy from Plato, or from later commentators --- or from your own interpretation?
  • Gary M Washburn
    240
    There is something we today have a great deal of difficulty getting our head around in the Greek idea of, well..., ideas. Is 'one' same or different? If different, how is it one? if sameness only, how is it counted as one of two or more? The idea of ideas was not Plato's at all, he was steeped in such thinking, and actually critiqued it, but with such irony we do not see this. We take the theory of forms as his notion, rather than his milieu, because we just don't, and mostly don't even try to, understand his world. Ideas, concepts, categories, were personalities, like their gods and demigods, and (for the most part) not so much a religion as a language or body of terms by which they framed their discussions of fundamental issues. In Lesser Hippias there is a fascinating comparison of Achilles and Odysseus, in which, with a little interpreting, Achilles is the wannabe extreme case and Odysseus the wannabe typical example or member of, well..., whatever the hell 'one' is. Achilles, to his dismay, discovers that he has to die to achieve his ambition of being the paradigm of his class, Odysseus, to his, that his companions have to die for him to rediscover what home, or being 'one' is. Frege discovered, to his dismay, that his concept of class did not encompass this paradox. But I wonder if Russell realized that the alternative, the typical, is problematic as the paradigm of the class if half, at least, of its members are better at being it?

    I think you'll find a discussion of 'one' in book four of Polus. I seem to remember a discussion, too, of the oneness of the hand so clearly made up of disparate parts. How is this possible? Surely there is more than meets the eye to being 'one'! That discussion, I believe, is in Theatetus, I could track this down, but won't bother unless your interest is serious. I do wish others would study Plato by reading Plato and not the idiots that suppose they understand him but only cherry pick what supports their convictions, and that we would stop using contemporary notions "as a lens", as if he were an interesting but archaic version of our more sophisticated methods and norms. We haven't caught up to him yet, and there are going to be a lot of red faces if and when we do.
  • Gary M Washburn
    240
    A note on Polus: Socrates quite explicitly states the discussion of the state is just a trope for the character of the individual reasoner, in "letters writ large".
  • Gregory
    4.7k


    Plato talks about the One in Parmenides but as far as I know never says what is most prior of all. I wrote what I thought the Platonic tradition was aiming at in ancient times. No interpretation of ancient documents is dogma
  • Gregory
    4.7k
    .

    My understanding of pure potentiality as the prime first reality of our universe is very physical in nature. It's like Sean Carroll's ideas of the universe coming from a contingent wave form. You might say that, since it's physical, it is substance based. But this is a mistake. Aristotle's men just don't have a good grasp of what the universe is because Aristotle himself tripped them up
  • Metaphysician Undercover
    13.2k

    So what did you think of the argument I presented as to why pure potentiality as the prime first reality of our universe is impossible? Did you follow the argument? Have you found faults in it? Consider your analogy of an avenue, path, or way. Do you see the need for someone to select the path? If so wouldn't this decision maker be some type of actuality which would more appropriately be called "the prime first reality"?
  • Gregory
    4.7k


    I've actually seen your argument many times, having read a lot of Edward Feser after studying Thomas Aquinas. If the avenue is infinite, any possibility can fly thru it in any way. The one we came up with is random. I believe most physicists hold this position. They call pure potentiality "nothing", but they are not philosophers, and there is hardly a difference anyway. Is an infinitesimal something or nothing?
  • Metaphysician Undercover
    13.2k
    If the avenue is infinite, any possibility can fly thru it in any way.Gregory

    Wait a minute. How could an avenue be infinite. It is one path, one way, out of many possible ways. There might be an infinite number of possible avenues, but an avenue is a definite thing. You go through it in the way that it is, and no other way.
  • Gregory
    4.7k


    Infinite worlds are a tempting theory for many physicists these days because they hold my theory. Or rather, I hold theirs'
  • Gary M Washburn
    240
    Gregory,

    Take a look at "The Analyst" by George Berkeley. He accuses mathematicians of making just that error in the invention of the calculus. First, they take the infinitesimal as a small but positive value to support the integration, but then take it as zero to support the differential. That critique quite aside, the infinitesimal is a blatant attempt to reduce an irrational quantity to a rational equivalence amongst a myriad but countable values, plus a "negligible" left-over. But the neglected value is precisely what we are trying to discover and understand! Why is reality so stubbornly resistant to the mathematical model? What if the neglected value is the whole shebang?

    If you really want a bellyful of "Being is...," talk, take a look at Euthydemus. It's as if Plato anticipated Heidegger and all his 'One' talk. Somewhere, maybe in the Intro to Metaphysics, Heidegger quotes Parmenides saying "Let it not be said that Being is not." Fact is, if you don't know a little something of what anything isn't you don't have a clue what it is. This goes for "Being". Does Heidegger ever speak a word of what "Being" isn't, anywhere? The Euthydemus also is a reminder that philosophers take themselves much too seriously! Socrates really and literally means it when he says that if you haven't been proven wrong in your views you don't really know them at all. Rigorous recognition of our being wrong is our only real knowledge. It's the terms of that rigor alone that is the issue of philosophy. If there is anything to be proved true it is something else, not philosophy.

    Physics is dogmatically convicted in the mathematical model and hence is no place to look for methods or answers in doing philosophy. String theory and multiple universes reflect that dogmatic commitment. Some weeks ago there was a discussion here about dark matter, the whole thing orbited around a theory of ballistics, very much a terrestrial principle. A bomb on earth creates a spherical pressure wave and cloud of ejecta. But cosmologically this model does not hold. There is no center to the universe. As Steven Hawking put it, "the center of the universe is the tip of your nose!" If there is no center, if every point in space is the center, there can be no spherical cloud of mass pulling the universe apart from just outside our ability to sense it. We need to look closer to home, and take into account all the strangest behavior of matter space and time we have learned of in the past century, and stop thinking like Enlightenment Protestants.

    In Gorgias, Plato explains how ideas come into view as analogy. But, of course, like everything else about him, we get this wrong too. An analogy is not a comparison of likes. It is a likening of differentiation. "The doctor is to the cook as the personal trainer is to the tailor." That is, one cures, the other merely disguises, infirmity. In Lysis, we are entertained for a while in the aspirations of a young man to be befriended by the most popular kid in class. In the end Socrates laments, in the standard translation: "we still don't know what the friend is!" But a little time spent with my Liddell and Scott reveals another possibility: "we still do not know which one is the friend!" In this, as in so many other dialogues, this is the point he is making, one we seem incapable of getting though our thick skulls, that it is not by being one there is anything at all, but by not being the one that oneness is. And even by being so quite deliberately. The friend is the friend by not being the friendship. The apple is red by not being what redness is. The wise philosopher has done all the rigor required of him only when he or she has completely proven he or she does not know. What one means is no more philosophically interesting than what "Being" is. It's what it ain't that matters! And, even, what meaning is.
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