What is G? And what is F?
Is G an idea? Is F a property?
And if F is a property, con-F is the contrary to F, how could I explain "G is not F and not con-F"? — guanyun
something is missing if I don't understand it. — guanyun
Socrates [... at Phaedo(76d7-e7)] marks the existence of forms as an unargued and as yet unsecured hypothesis — Palmer
Since the "theory of forms" is more accurately a hypothesis [... a hunch] under development in the Symposium, Phaedo, and Republic, Rickless's attempt to furnish a systematic reconstruction of the "theory" in would-be definitive fashion not only is misplaced but also makes it more difficult than necessary to understand what to make of Parmenides' criticisms. — Palmer
It would seem so.I'd favour the reading that what is shown instead is that the arguments reach contrary conclusions, and hence that the One is an incoherent notion. — Banno
This is why the dialogues frequently end in aporia. What is at issue is not simply the problem of Forms but the problematic nature of philosophy. It raises insoluble problems. — Fooloso4
Yes, of course, it is very easy to find out in the Web that it's from Parmenides Dialogue, but I wonder how this could help you answering what the topic asks ...Are you referring to the very difficult second part of the Parmenides? — magritte
Plato was a sceptic. — Jackson
An aporia is because you believe a total compression is possible — Jackson
I wonder how this could help you answering what the topic asks ... — Alkis Piskas
But zetetic skepticism is not the claim that total comprehension is not possible, but simply that it is not something that anyone possesses.
— Fooloso4
I do not see the difference. — Jackson
Although things are said to be images of Forms, the Forms are themselves images. A kind of philosophical poiesis.
— Fooloso4
Then reason depends on the imagination. Something which Plato spends his entire career denying. — Jackson
The Republic is clear about the limits of reason (dianoia). It does not grasp each thing itself in its singularity (noesis), but always as it is in relation (ratio) to something else.That is to say, it makes use of likenesses (eikasia). Plato repeatedly points to the use of images for mathematics — Fooloso4
Plato gives us the answer in Parmenides: One who does not “allow that for each thing there is a character that is always the same" will “destroy the power of dialectic entirely” (135b8–c2). Something like the Forms underlies (hypo - under thesis - to place or set) thought and speech. — Fooloso4
What is at issue is not simply the problem of Forms but the problematic nature of philosophy. It raises insoluble problems. — Fooloso4
This scientific and philosophical revolution - it is indeed impossible to separate the philosophical from the purely scientific aspects of this process: they are interdependent and closely linked together - can be described roughly as bringing forth the destruction of the Cosmos, that is, the dissappearance from philosophically and scientifically valid concepts, the conception of the world as a finite, closed and hierarchically ordered whole (a whole in which the hierarchy of value determined the hierarchy and structure of being, rising from the dark, heavy and imperfect earth to the higher and higher perfection of the stars and heavenly spheres), and its replacement by an indefinite and even infinite universe which is bound toether by the identity of its fundamental components and laws, an in which all those components are placed on the same level of being. This, in turn, implies the discarding by scientific thought of all considerations based upon value-concepts, such as perfection, harmony, meaning and aim, and finally the utter devalorisation of being, the divorce of the world of value from the world of facts. — Alexander Koyré, From the Closed World to the Infinite Universe
As Plato believes that the objects of reason have a greater degree of reality than those of sense, then they must have something unchangeable as their object. — Wayfarer
Could you say that Aristotle's later theory of essence and substance is foreshadowed here? — Wayfarer
The term essence (essentia) was a Latin invention used to translate Aristotle's Greek ousiai, or substance. Substance oressentia is the “the what it was to be” of a thing. His answer was not that what it is is a Form. — Fooloso4
The term essence (essentia) was a Latin invention used to translate Aristotle's Greek ousiai — Fooloso4
It was translated into Latin as 'substantia' and thence English as 'substance' but it has a completely different meaning in philosophical than in everyday discourse. — Wayfarer
There was no equivalent grammatical formation in Latin, and it was translated as essentia or substantia. Cicero coined essentia and the philosopher Seneca and rhetorician Quintilian used it as equivalent for οὐσία, while Apuleius rendered οὐσία both as essentia or substantia. In order to designate οὐσία, early Christian theologian Tertullian favored the use of substantia over essentia, while Augustine of Hippo and Boethius took the opposite stance, preferring the use of essentia as designation for οὐσία.[4][5] Some of the most prominent Latin authors, like Hilary of Poitiers, noted that those variants were often being used with different meanings.[6] Some modern authors also suggest that the Ancient Greek term οὐσία is properly translated as essentia (essence), while substantia has a wider spectrum of meanings.
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