If you cannot put one statement together with another I cannot help you. — Fooloso4
Socrates’ humanwisdomignorance is grounded in hisknowledgebelief in God... — Fooloso4
Agrippa's trilemma argument:
1. All arguments are one of the following:
a) Infinite regress: each premise requires an argument and the premises of the argument requires another ad infinitum.
b) Circular: The conclusion appears in the premises.
c) Axiomatic: We accept sans justification the truth of the premises.
2. None of a), b), or c) are acceptable
Ergo,
3. Sound arguments don't exist — TheMadFool
Socrates’ human wisdom is grounded in his knowledge of his ignorance, that he does not know anything noble and good. (Apology 21d) — Fooloso4
SO if they are not a hypothesis, what are they? — Banno
Agrippa's trilemma argument:
1. All arguments are one of the following:
a) Infinite regress: each premise requires an argument and the premises of the argument requires another ad infinitum.
b) Circular: The conclusion appears in the premises.
c) Axiomatic: We accept sans justification the truth of the premises.
2. None of a), b), or c) are acceptable
Ergo,
3. Sound arguments don't exist
— TheMadFool
Hey Mad!
Interesting post that the above was included within. I've a question though regarding what's quoted above. What reasons are there for believing 2., and how can we do that much without rendering the entire line of thinking as untenable, and/or self-defeating? In addition, how does 3 follow from 1 and 2? — creativesoul
If they [forms] are experienced then we know what they are by observation...? — Banno
Some sort of 'pattern recognition' is fundamental for perception to occur. Forms therefore underwrite perception rather than being themselves perceived. — Olivier5
Unless we knowledge of these things, which in the Republic is presented in the myth of transcendent experience, then the Forms remain hypothetical. — Fooloso4
My point is that the forms are not just any hypothesis, they are a fundamental, absolute presupposition, which underpins his way of seeing the world and his entire world view. — Olivier5
Plato's theory of forms underpins his thought like an axiom would underpin a branch of mathematics. — Olivier5
You have agreed with @Fooloso4 — Banno
I don't see where Socrates says "the Forms are hypotheses". — Apollodorus
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