Or not — Banno
Appo is perhaps being obtuse in his insistence. — Banno
And so, he provides what seems to be the truth, but is a lie, a lie that cannot be effective unless it is believed to be the truth. — Fooloso4
Again, Collingwood comes to mind: The logical efficacy of a supposition does not depend upon the truth of what is supposed, or even on its being thought true, but only on its being supposed. — Olivier5
If we hypothesize about what it is or how it comes about, it doesn’t mean that perception itself is mere hypothesis. — Apollodorus
Again, Collingwood comes to mind: The logical efficacy of a supposition does not depend upon the truth of what is supposed, or even on its being thought true, but only on its being supposed.
— Olivier5
That was exactly what I was saying — Apollodorus
Collingwood's idea is very close to the "noble myth". — Olivier5
So, Socrates often uses hypotheses to prove the validity of a concept, not to deny it. He does this, for example, with the immortality of the soul and concludes that “it turns out that the soul is immortal” (Phaedo 114d). — Apollodorus
That may or may not be the case. — Apollodorus
Isn't that glaringly obvious? — Olivier5
it could be adopted as a useful doctrine, a foundational myth. — Olivier5
But why does it have to be a "myth"? And why does a myth have to be a "lie"? — Apollodorus
Collingwood's concept of 'absolute presupposition' avoids the negative connotation of the words 'lie' and 'myth'. — Olivier5
Even if we designate something "noble lie", to most people's minds it is still a lie. — Apollodorus
The claim that the Forms are more than just hypothetical requires that they are things known. — Fooloso4
It follows that we cannot have much certainty about what Plato and Socrates truly meant to say. — Olivier5
(2) is doable, without any certainty in sight of course, but we can try and even perhaps make some progress along the way.However, we have the texts under discussion, viz., the dialogues, and on that basis, we may infer logically (1) what the character "Socrates" is trying to say and/or (2) what Plato is trying to say through Socrates. — Apollodorus
It does not appear from the text that either Socrates or Plato thought the Forms to be "hypothetical", "myths" or "noble lies".
Note that Plato may well have been voluntarily ambiguous here or there, for obvious reasons of self-protection. In those cases, the "true" Plato teaching may well be simply ambiguous by design...In these cases, the true Plato teaching may be unknown. Lost. — Olivier5
It does not appear to you because you close your eyes when it appears. — Olivier5
In that case, it's all speculation and a waste of time. — Apollodorus
Note that Plato may well have been voluntarily ambiguous here or there, for obvious reasons of self-protection. In those cases, the "true" Plato teaching may well be simply ambiguous by design. — Olivier5
It does not appear to you because you close your eyes when it appears. — Olivier5
What's the trace of Plato in our thinking today, our intellectual debt to him? Or is this debt rather a liability, some sophisticated mental shackle we should get rid of? — Olivier5
The art of writing has as its complement an art of reading. — Fooloso4
That helps explain why not all logical consequences of a given idea are spelled out, or why an author may be careful avoiding certain subjects in his writings. — Olivier5
And isn't posting comments on an online forum the same as writing philosophical dialogues? — Apollodorus
It is about the activity of thinking, of working things out, of making connections, of trying to reconcile seeming contradictions. — Fooloso4
Also therefore it's about dialoguing. The centrality of oral debate in Socrates is pretty obvious. He could have written books but didn't. — Olivier5
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.