Basically, Plato's allegory of the cave. — TheMadFool
I think that to say that a Form is a kind, is a misunderstanding of Forms. — Metaphysician Undercover
I am saying that an argument which proceeds in this way could be deceptive. — Metaphysician Undercover
To ask in what way are all the things which are called by the same name similar, is a completely different process than to divide things into kinds. Do you see this difference? — Metaphysician Undercover
The Socratic method is to look at all the different examples of people who are called "hunters", to see what they all have in common, so that we can glean an idea of what it means to be a hunter. — Metaphysician Undercover
The Theaetetus does not claim that. The dialogue ends without finding an adequate account of knowledge. The 'paradigmatic' role of the Forms, spoken of in the Republic, is not on display in Socrates' argument against Protagoras' measure being able to be a judge upon possible future events 178b. — Valentinus
The Forms do not play an essential part in this Socratic dialogue on knowledge. — Fooloso4
Eidetic numbers are relations of eidos or Forms. Their order is determined by kind. — Fooloso4
I see from another of your responses that you reject 'kinds'. You seem unaware that Forms are Kinds. — Fooloso4
Plato’s concern is the Whole. Forms are not the Whole. Knowledge of the Forms is not knowledge of the whole. — Fooloso4
Noun
εἶδος • (eîdos) n (genitive εἴδους or εἴδεος); third declension
1. That which is seen: form, image, shape
2. appearance, look, beauty (comeliness)
3. sight
4. fashion, sort, kind
5. species
6. wares, goods
I think that to say that a Form is a kind, is a misunderstanding of Forms. — Metaphysician Undercover
Stranger: Dividing according to kinds, not taking the same form for a different one or different one for the same - is not that the business of the science of dialectic?
Theaetetus: Yes.
Stranger: And the man who can do that discerns clearly one form everywhere extended throughout many, where each one lies apart, and many forms, entirely marked off apart. That means knowing how to distinguish, kind by kind, in what ways the several kinds can and cannot combine.
Theaetetus: Most certainly.
Stranger: And the only person , I imagine, to whom you would allow this mastery of dialectic is the pure and rightful lover of wisdom. — Sophist, 253d, translated by F.M. Cornford
Are there examples of division and recognition of forms in the Dialogues that depart from this use? — Valentinus
Stranger
Now since we have agreed that the classes or genera also commingle with one another, or do not commingle, in the same way, must not he possess some science and proceed by the processes of reason who is to show correctly which of the classes harmonize with which, and which reject one another, and also if he is to show whether there are some elements extending through all and holding them together so that they can mingle, and again, when they separate, whether there are other universal causes of separation?
.......
Stranger
Shall we not say that the division of things by classes and the avoidance of the belief that the same class is another, or another the same, belongs to the science of dialectic? (Soph. 253b-d)
Stranger:
And as classes are admitted by us in like manner to be some of them capable and others incapable of intermixture ….
Stranger:
Should we not say that the division according to classes, which neither makes the same other, nor makes other the same, is the business of the dialectical science?
Basically, Plato's allegory of the cave.
— TheMadFool
The Theaetetus does not claim that. The dialogue ends without finding an adequate account of knowledge. The 'paradigmatic' role of the Forms, spoken of in the Republic, is not on display in Socrates' argument against Protagoras' measure being able to be a judge of possible future events (178b). — Valentinus
The Greek includes εἶδος, the word that is used for Forms, as an essential part of the description. The description does not turn 'kind'; and 'form' into one word. But to deny the close link made between them in the passage is odd. It is like you are trying to use alternative translations of the text to be used as changes to the text. — Valentinus
Noun
εἶδος • (eîdos) n (genitive εἴδους or εἴδεος); third declension
1. That which is seen: form, image, shape
2. appearance, look, beauty (comeliness)
3. sight
4. fashion, sort, kind
5. species
6. wares, goods
You proposed that the Sophist was written specifically as a refutation of Parmenides. — Valentinus
Plato is not content with Parmenides' position either. — Valentinus
Both sameness and difference are necessary for intelligibility. — Fooloso4
Is the coupon cutter a hunter? Is a fisherman a hunter? Treating them as if they are the same or similar leads to some comical images. Fish and game requires separate fishing and hunting licenses, but no shopping licence for bargain hunters. — Fooloso4
The text refers to the use of Kind and Form in the following way: — Valentinus
A "kind" is a class of things, as Appollodorus has been pointing out, and neither "rest" nor "change" refers to a class of things. — Metaphysician Undercover
By the way, Valentinus, you seem to be very adept at pulling up the most highly relevant and significant passages from Plato. How do you do this? What supports that skill? — Metaphysician Undercover
I thought Socrates defined knowledge as justified, true belief? — TheMadFool
The future is within our grasp given the laws of nature are universal and constant - a good basketball player can, if he's skilled enough, score. — TheMadFool
Also, if the future can't be known isn't Heraclitus right? — TheMadFool
Hesiod distinguishes good days and bad day, not knowing every day is like every other.
It should be understood that war is the common condition, that strife is justice, and that all things come to pass through the compulsion of strife.
I.that which is seen, form, shape, figure, Lat. species, forma, Hom.; absol. in acc., εἶδος ἄριστος, etc.
II.a form, sort, particular kind or nature, Hdt., etc.
2.a particular state of things or course of action, Thuc.
III.a class, kind, sort, whether genus or species, Plat., etc. (Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, An Intermediate Greek-English Lexicon)
It is a mistake to put sameness and difference in the same category. "Similar" is a type of difference, but "same" is fundamentally different from similar. So it is a mistake to assume sameness and difference as both necessary for intelligibility. — Metaphysician Undercover
In no way does "rest" or "change" refer to a kind. A "kind" is a class of things ... — Metaphysician Undercover
By the way, Valentinus, you seem to be very adept at pulling up the most highly relevant and significant passages from Plato. How do you do this? What supports that skill? — Metaphysician Undercover
Cornford has many worthy challengers. In the text under discussion, and throughout this dialogue, he at least displays the virtue of being consistent in translating Kind for γένη and Form for εἶδος. — Valentinus
And he still hasn't shown us where Plato uses the phrase "a noble lie" .... — Apollodorus
That proposition is addressed and deemed inadequate in the Theaetetus starting at 200d. — Valentinus
The future is within our grasp given the laws of nature are universal and constant - a good basketball player can, if he's skilled enough, score.
— TheMadFool
That observation is also made by Socrates to note that Protagoras' use of each person's experience as an adequate measure does not account for differences in ability amongst men. — Valentinus
According to the Fragments of Heraclitus, you would not be able to affirm or deny the proposition:
Hesiod distinguishes good days and bad day, not knowing every day is like every other. — Valentinus
And you would be too busy fighting to care:
It should be understood that war is the common condition, that strife is justice, and that all things come to pass through the compulsion of strife. — Valentinus
Change is the only constant. — Heraclitus
Plato uses the phrase in the Republic 414b-c. I gave the Greek text for it here, in Shawn's OP, An analysis of the shadows. — Valentinus
γενναῖόν τι ἓν ψευδομένους πεῖσαι μάλιστα μὲν καὶ αὐτοὺς τοὺς ἄρχοντας, εἰ δὲ μή, τὴν ἄλλην πόλιν; — Valentinus
Isn't that putting the cart before the horse? The differences in ability amongst men explains/supports Protagoras' stand that "man is the measure of all things". — TheMadFool
That proposition is addressed and deemed inadequate in the Theaetetus starting at 200d. — Valentinus
Can't be because of Gettier cases. — TheMadFool
So, "every day is like every other"? In a certain sense, yes (cyclical aspects) but in a different sense, no (acyclical aspects). I guess it depends on how we look at it aka perspective. Protagoras? — TheMadFool
Basically, the world is chaotic, pulling us in all directions.
Change is the only constant. — Heraclitus — TheMadFool
Homer was wrong in saying, "Would that strife might perish from amongst gods and men." For if that would occur, then all things would cease to exist.
If there are variations of ability between men then there must be some means of comparing them to each other beyond the horizon of personal experience. — Valentinus
You will have to show how that problem of epistemology relates to Plato's actual argument in the dialogue. I don't see why I have to be the only one reading the dialogue in our discussion. — Valentinus
Relativism is the nemesis of absolutism. :confused: I don't understand how the former could coexist with latter? — TheMadFool
These thinkers came upon the doctrine of Ideas because they were convinced about the truth of the Heraclitean arguments which state that all sensible things are always in a state of flux, so that if there is to be a science or knowledge of anything, there must exist apart from the sensible things some other natures which are permanent, for there can be no science of things which are in a state of flux. — Metaphysics, 1078b, translated by H.G. Apostle
Aristotle said one gave rise to the other — Valentinus
Together with terms such as 'class', 'genus', 'species', 'look', 'shape', 'type', and others they give the scope of the meaning of the Greek term εἶδος. And of course the English terms have a scope of meaning as well. There is no one term that is a perfect match. — Fooloso4
You seem unaware that Forms are Kinds. — Fooloso4
εἶδος:
I.that which is seen, form, shape, figure, Lat. species, forma, Hom.; absol. in acc., εἶδος ἄριστος, etc.
II.a form, sort, particular kind or nature, Hdt., etc.
2.a particular state of things or course of action, Thuc.
III.a class, kind, sort, whether genus or species, Plat., etc. (Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, An Intermediate Greek-English Lexicon)
Basically, the world is chaotic, pulling us in all directions. — TheMadFool
Now we have also been saying for a long time, have we not, that, when the soul makes use of the body for any inquiry, either through seeing or hearing or any of the other senses—for inquiry through the body means inquiry through the senses,—then it is dragged by the body to things which never remain the same, and it wanders about and is confused and dizzy like a drunken man because it lays hold upon such things.
But when the soul inquires alone by itself, it departs into the realm of the pure, the everlasting, the immortal and the changeless, and being akin to these it dwells always with them whenever it is by itself and is not hindered, and it has rest from its wanderings and remains always the same and unchanging with the changeless, since it is in communion therewith (Phaedo 79c-d).
Once again, this is how it is defined by Liddell & Scott with bolding since you apparently missed it the first two times: — Fooloso4
You seem unaware that Forms are Kinds. — Fooloso4
However, Liddle & Scott does not say "Forms are Kinds". That is YOUR statement — Apollodorus
Were this not the case, you would be able to show us the three Greek words that together form the phrase "a noble lie" — Apollodorus
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