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The SOPHISTS

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For them philosophical speculations are fruitless, man ... The world is created by the Demiurge. FIVE REGULAR SOLIDS. FIVE REGULAR SOLIDS. Other notions... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The SOPHISTS


1
The SOPHISTS
  • Sophists wise and informed persons
  • They made a living by teaching the citizens for
    money.
  • Theyre critical of traditional mythology
  • For them philosophical speculations are
    fruitless, man cannot know the truth about nature
    and the universe. - skepticism
  • Theyre concerned with man and his place in
    society. trying to replicate in the domain of
    ethics and politics what the Presocratics had
    achieved in the domain of physics.

2
Sophists
  • Cultural relativism to ethical relativism to
    epistemological skepticism
  • Man is the measure of all things. Protagoras
  • All opinions are equally true.
  • Truth or good is a matter of preference.

3
Socrates
  • (470 399)
  • Son of sculptor and midwife
  • Married Xanthippe, but had probably fallen in
    love with Alcibiades, a young soldier.
  • Extremely ugly short an stout, potbellied had
    bulging eyes and a snub nose.
  • But inside he was perfectly delightful, the
    wisest, and justest, and best of all men whom I
    have ever known. - Plato
  • He was irritated by the Sophists and their
    promotion of the idea that all things are
    relative.
  • Never wrote down his ideas, thus he is known only
    through the writings of his student, PLATO.

4
The Art of Discourse
  • Socrates did not teach nor instruct people,
    rather he discussed with them.
  • Playing ignorant He gave the impression that he
    does not know anything and that he desires to
    learn from others.
  • Ideas or the truth is given birth through his
    questioning with his interlocutor. So, like his
    mother who was a midwife, Socrates assisted in
    giving birth to ideas which he believed is always
    within us.
  • - this method is called MAIEUTICS.
  • This is also called Socratic irony
  • Athens is like a sluggish horse, and I am the
    gadfly trying to sting it into life.

5
Right Insight to Right Action
  • He who knows what good is will do good.
  • When we do wrong it is because we dont know any
    better.
  • He holds that there is a universally valid
    definition of right and wrong.
  • The ability to distinguish between right and
    wrong lies in peoples reason and not in society.

6
Plato
  • (437 347) his actual name was Aristocles
  • Son of a wealthy and powerful family.
  • At about 20, became student of Socrates
  • After Socrates death he wandered around Greece
    and Mediterranean.
  • Founded the Academy in 386.
  • Let no one ignorant of mathematics enter here.
  • Died at the age of 80, in his sleep.

7
Plato
8
Two Worlds
World of Ideas
World of the Senses
9
World of Ideas
  • Ultimate reality
  • Permanent, unchanging
  • Eternal, immutable
  • Spiritual
  • Perfect

10
World of the Senses
  • Phenomenal world appearances, the manifestation
    of the ideal.
  • Illusions
  • Flowing, ever-changing
  • Decay, corruption
  • Like soap bubbles

11
Example Idea horse vs. particular horse
12
Idea (or form) horse is immutable and will
never pass away.
13
TRUE KNOWLEDGE
  • We can never have true knowledge of anything that
    is in a constant state of change. We can only
    have opinions about things that belong to the
    world of the senses, tangible things. We can only
    have true knowledge of things that can be
    understood with our reason.

14
TRUE KNOWLEDGE
  • We can only have inexact conceptions of things we
    perceive with our senses. But we can have true
    knowledge of things we understand with our REASON.

15
  • The real knowledge of anything (hence science)
    depends upon the recognition of the idea apart
    from sense objects which vary from place to place
    or from person to person.

16
  • Science (and knowledge in general) is a grasping
    of the universal Idea or Form, which is
    changeless and eternal through its various
    manifestations in physical things.

17
  • A person tied exclusively to the physical world
    gains only opinionat times illusionfrom the
    senses.
  • Knowledge, on the other hand, is of universal
    ideas and gained through pure reason.

18
Theory of Forms
  • Form Gk. Eidos gt eidetic, idea
  • 1. Forms as class concepts

A is x. B is x.
X is here a class concept.
PARTICULAR designating some individual
UNIVERSAL
19
Theory of Forms
  • 2. Forms as standards

A is more x than B. This woman is more beautiful
than that statue.
20
The predicate X serves not merely to classify or
sort entities but also to rank them. Only the
beautiful itself is just beauty uncompounded
with any other properties. The beautiful woman
participates in or shares this beauty with
all other beautiful things, but both she and all
those other things can only be beautiful in
certain respects and to a certain degree.
21
Theory of Forms
  • 3. Our knowledge of forms

We cannot apprehend forms by our senses. We see
the beautiful person, but beauty itself is not
something we can see or hear. Thus, we apprehend
the forms with the MIND, and forms, like
Beauty, really exist.
Another example What is a circle?
22
Theory of Forms
  • 4. Reality

That which really exists is to be apprehended
only through thinking. Sensible objects could not
possibly be real they could at best be copies
or images of underlying realities. In short,
what we usually call the real world is not that
at all, but is rather just a world of appearance
or seeming.
23
Theory of Forms
  • 4. Reality

This woman is beautiful. Can this be genuine
knowledge?
In logic, knowledge can be expressed only in
universal propositions, not in singular
propositions. Thus, with Plato we say, scientific
statements are not about particular objects but
about universals.
24
Other notion cosmology
  • The heavenly bodies exhibited perfect geometric
    form.
  • The world is created by the Demiurge.

FIVE REGULAR SOLIDS
25
FIVE REGULAR SOLIDS
26
Other notions
  • The heavenly bodies exhibited perfect geometric
    form.

FIVE REGULAR SOLIDS
  • Tetrahedron (4)
  • Hexahedron (6)
  • Octahedron (8)
  • Icosahedron (20)
  • Dodecahedron (12)

Represented the four elements.
Represented the universe as a whole
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