Yeah, this dialogue is just not fun. — Manuel
It's like: the mind always breaks the world into halves: light, dark, near, far, etc. These halves are dependent on one another for meaning.
It's a theory of meaning, sort of: meaning arises from oppositions. But when we think of the meaning of Unity, and note that it's dependent on the idea of Plurality, a second, transcendent unity appears — frank
I think this dialogue is about challenging the concept of the Forms — frank
Yes, for this One, not-One cannot even be thought of. As in looking at the Universe subjectively, from within there is nothing else, there is no outside.Recall that for Parmenides, it doesn't really make sense to say a thing is not, because if X is not, then how were you just talking about it? — frank
It's just recognition of the way we think, correct? — frank
Zeno says plurality is flawed because it means we have things that are like and unlike at the same time. — frank
Really, the Forms are not an invention. It's just recognition of the way we think, correct? — frank
, the direct Platonic answer is "No, not correct".the Forms are not an invention. It's just recognition of the way we think, correct? — frank
Forms are only used to build Plato's abstract metaphysical models, and have no psychologically useful correlates. — magritte
Doesn't our experience with recognizing kinds, types, and universals in the realm of particulars count as 'psychologically useful' correlates? — Paine
Your description seems to suggest that the problems of Parmenides have all been surpassed by means of some complete explanation. Some of the effort in the dialogue is troubled by the consequences of complete explanations. Are 'we' beyond that now? — Paine
Most philosophers and that includes Socrates, Plato, et al were, my hunch is, uncomfortable with the Heraclitean position because it has sophist written all over it. After all, to a philosopher veritas numquam perit (truth never expires or, positively rendered, truth is eternal). Given this view of truth is non-negotiable to a philosopher, Parmenides, for the reason that he subscribed to eternalism, was viewed as toeing the official line and thus favored. — TheMadFool
Do you take this dialogue as a warning against complete, self-contained systems of thought? — frank
Parmenides is urging reason above sense data — Manuel
Most philosophers and that includes Socrates, Plato, et al were, my hunch is, uncomfortable with the Heraclitean position because it has sophist written all over it. — TheMadFool
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