Plato’s metaphysics is not systematic. It is problematic. It raises questions it cannot answer and problems that cannot be resolved. It is important to understand that this is a feature not a defect or failure. — Fooloso4
I think the first problem with that statement is that it ignores the fact that Plato's philosophy is primarily a way of life based on ethical values, the metaphysical justification for which (immortality of the soul, divine judgment in the afterlife, etc.) is clearly laid out in the dialogues. — Apollodorus
There is nothing "problematic" about the Forms at all. They are comparable to universals. Particulars instantiate universals, but this doesn't mean that particulars and universals are one and the same thing. — Apollodorus
Metaphysics is not in the business of justification. It is free inquiry. It does not aim at a goal. But ethics involves persuasion. — Fooloso4
The history of philosophy shows that 'universals' is not a problem free solution — Fooloso4
Ultimately, there is neither ‘this or that’ but ‘this and that’. The Whole is not reducible to One. The whole is indeterminate. — Fooloso4
Metaphysics serves to form a theoretical framework through which the world is better understood and can be used to support ethics making it more persuasive. — Apollodorus
why worry about it not being systematic??? — Apollodorus
It is important to understand that this is a feature not a defect or failure. — Fooloso4
This is exactly what I am arguing cannot be done. There is no theoretical framework for a world that is indeterminate. — Fooloso4
Not a worry. A statement of fact — Fooloso4
In the Philebus, Plato raises the problem of the “indeterminate dyad” . — Fooloso4
This is exactly what I am arguing cannot be done. There is no theoretical framework for a world that is indeterminate. — Fooloso4
I will take issue with the term "indeterminate" — Metaphysician Undercover
it doesn't make sense to say that a caused thing is indeterminate. — Metaphysician Undercover
Socrates insists that there must be a cause of these instances of balance, or equality, and it doesn't make sense to say that a caused thing is indeterminate. — Metaphysician Undercover
Once a thing has been caused, it has a determined existence as the thing which it is. — Metaphysician Undercover
The term indeterminate dyad is Aristotle's. — Fooloso4
It is not that it cannot be determined to exist. The intelligible world of Forms is fixed and determinate. What is unlimited cannot be determinate. It is without boundaries. — Fooloso4
If people believe in the Good as a higher principle and live their lives in harmony with what is good, then obviously it can be done. In fact, I think most people do something like that anyway. — Apollodorus
There is no theoretical framework for a world that is indeterminate. — Fooloso4
If it is not a worry then there is no need to discuss it. — Apollodorus
The term indeterminate dyad is Aristotle's. — Fooloso4
OK, if you want to switch to Aristotle's metaphysics — Metaphysician Undercover
Of course people can live lives that are regarded as good! — Fooloso4
It points to the limits of human understanding. The limited cannot comprehend the unlimited. Know yourself! — Fooloso4
Perhaps you could provide a reference as to where Aristotle refers to Plato's metaphysics as being concerned with an "indeterminate" dyad. — Metaphysician Undercover
Accordingly the material principle is the "Great and Small," and the essence <or formal principle> is the One, since the numbers are derived from the "Great and Small" by participation in the the One.
.. it is peculiar to him to posit a duality instead of the single Unlimited, and to make the Unlimited consist of the "Great and Small."
For number is from one and the indeterminate dyad. (1081a through 1082a)
Again, it must also be true that 4 is not composed of chance 2's. For according to them the indeterminate dyad, receiving the determinate dyad, made two dyads; for it was capable of duplicating that which it received (Meta. 1082a)
One place is at 987b:
Accordingly the material principle is the "Great and Small," and the essence <or formal principle> is the One, since the numbers are derived from the "Great and Small" by participation in the the One.
.. it is peculiar to him to posit a duality instead of the single Unlimited, and to make the Unlimited consist of the "Great and Small." — Fooloso4
Also:
For number is from one and the indeterminate dyad. (1081a through 1082a) — Fooloso4
Again, it must also be true that 4 is not composed of chance 2's. For according to them the indeterminate dyad, receiving the determinate dyad, made two dyads; for it was capable of duplicating that which it received (Meta. 1082a)
I think it is important to note that these are Aristotle's arguments against various proposals as to what kind of existence numbers have. There is no direct reference to Plato here, and the points listed by Aristotle, which he argues against, could very well be straw man points. — Metaphysician Undercover
arithmos eidetikos - idea numbers
arithmos aisthetetos - sensible number
metaxy - between
(Metaphysics 987b)
... the "first" eidetic number is the eidetic "two"; it represents the genos of being as such, which comprehends the two eide "rest and "change". (Jacob Klein, Greek Mathematical Thought and the Origins of Algebra).
Theaetetus:
We really do seem to have a vague vision of being as some third thing, when we say that motion and rest are.
Stranger:
Then being is not motion and rest in combination, but something else, different from them.
Theaetetus:
Apparently.
Stranger:
According to its own nature, then, being is neither at rest nor in motion.
Theaetetus:
You are about right.
Stranger:
What is there left, then, to which a man can still turn his mind who wishes to establish within himself any clear conception of being?
Theaetetus:
What indeed?
Stranger:
There is nothing left, I think, to which he can turn easily. (Sophist 250)
On the one hand this means that there can never be a comprehensive account of the whole, but on the other, it encourages an openness to what might be; beyond our limits of comprehension. — Fooloso4
[the study of geometry, etc.] would tend to draw the soul to truth, and would be productive of a philosophic attitude of mind, directing upward the faculties that now wrongly are turned earthward … (527b)
“And must we not agree on a further point?” “What?” “That it is the knowledge of that which always is, and not of a something which at some time comes into being and passes away.” “That is readily admitted,” he said, “for geometry is the knowledge of the eternally existent.”
for geometry is the knowledge of the eternally existent — Wayfarer
Now since the Forms are the causes of everything else, he supposed that their elements are the elements of all things. Accordingly the material principle is the "Great and Small," and the essence <or formal principle> is the One, since the numbers are derived from the "Great and Small" by participation in the One (Meta. 978b)
The problem is with number, but it is with number as understood by the Greeks, which is not the way we treat number.
Aristotle identifies three kinds of number: — Fooloso4
To count rest, change, and being as three would be mistaken. Being is a higher order than rest and change. It is not a third thing to be counted alongside them. — Fooloso4
Therefore the philosopher must rise to the perspective of the One — Apollodorus
I suspect that is a no parking zone. — Fooloso4
The mind as a whole must be turned away from the world of change until its eye can bear to look straight at reality, and at the brightest of all realities which is what we call the Good (Rep. 518c)
We have a multitude of different kinds of numbers as well, natural numbers, rational numbers, real numbers, to name a few. — Metaphysician Undercover
Eidetic numbers belong together in ways that units or monads do not. The eidetic numbers form an ordered hierarchy from less to more comprehensive. — Fooloso4
To count rest, change, and being as three would be mistaken. Being is a higher order than rest and change. It is not a third thing to be counted alongside them.
— Fooloso4
I don't see your point — Metaphysician Undercover
To count rest, change, and being as three would be mistaken. Being is a higher order than rest and change. It is not a third thing to be counted alongside them. — Fooloso4
For there were no days and nights and months and years before the heaven was created, but when he (the Demiurge) constructed the heaven, he constructed them also, they are all parts of time, and the past and future are created species of time, which we unconsciously but wrongly transfer to eternal being, for we say that it 'was,' or 'is' of 'will be,' but the truth is that 'is' alone is properly attributed to it, and that 'was' and 'will be' are only to be spoken of becoming in time, for they are motions, but that which is immovably the same forever cannot become older or younger by time. — Timaeus, 37e, translated by Benjamin Jowett
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