Title: Philosophy
1Philosophy
- Philosophy f???s?f?a (philosophía) love of
wisdom (Pythagoras) - the study of general problems concerning matters
such as existence, knowledge, truth, beauty,
justice, validity, mind, language Philosophy is
distinguished from other ways of addressing these
questions (such as mysticism or mythology) by its
critical and systematic approach.
2Branches of philosophy
- Metaphysics - the nature of being and reality
(ontology, cosmology, but also mysticism,
theology ). - Epistemology - nature and scope of knowledge and
believe (truth, justification ..., methodology) - Ethics, or 'moral philosophy', concerned with
questions of how persons ought to act (morality,
virtue) - Political philosophy - study of government and
the relationship of individuals and communities
to the society and state (justice, the good, law,
property, rights obligations of the citizen). - Aesthetic deals with beauty (art, enjoyment,
sensory-emotional values). - Logic deals with patterns of thinking that lead
from true premises to true conclusions. - Philosophy of mind deals with the nature of the
mind and its relationship to the body (dualism x
monism, cognitive science) - Philosophy of language - inquiry into the nature,
origins, and usage of language. - Etc.
3Western philosophy historical division
- Ancient philosophy (Greece 6th ct BC 6th AC)
- Medieval philosophy (6th AC - 14th AC), Muslim,
Jewish, Christian - Renaissance (14th AC 17th)
- Early modern phil. (17th 19th)
- Nineteenth cent. phil.
- Contemporary philosophy
4Eastern philosophy
- Belongs Eastern thinking to philosophy?
- No Hegel, Philosophy label only for western
thinking? - Europocentrism?
- Different nature of Eastern ph. (interconnection
with mythology, religious nature) but not of
whole. - Not one philosophy, but various philosophies
- Persian philosophy (e.g. Zoroastrianism)
- Indian philosophy (Buddhism, Hindu )
- Chinese philosophy (Taoism, Konfucionalism )
- Korean, Japanese, African .
5Ancient western philosophy temporal division
- Pre-Socratic period
- Classical periods (Socrates, Plato, Aristotle)
- Hellenistic (post-Aristotelian) period
- Christian (and Neo-Platonist) philosophy
6Mythological background of philosophy
- Myth philosophy science (August Comte)
applied science - technology - All ethnics have their own myths.
- Traditional myths, artificial (modern) myths
(fakes?) Myths and fairytales. - Passed by word of mouth (life of myths)
- Written form (eposes) fixation, petrification
7Mythological background of philosophy
- Role of myths
- Entertainment dramatic stories
- Formation and encourage group self consciousness,
formation of tribe, ethnics, nation
(justification why our tribe is super ordinate) - Formation and consolidation of moral and social
system - (model phenomena - archetypes gods, heroes,
solutions of situations) (C. G. Jung) - Base of religion
- From epistemological view
- There is a (non visible, metaphysical) world that
controls our visible (physical) world.
8Mythological background of philosophy
- Myths in ancient Greece
- Homerepics (9th century BC) and Homeric
mythology (no moral order, gods capriciously play
with human fates) - Hesiod (8th century BC) concept of moral order
that is given by chief god Zeus to humans - Other systems Orphism, Pythagoras sect,
Empedocles
9Mythological background of philosophy
- Truth of myth implicit expressions, metaphors,
model situations - Judgement of Paris - bone of contention in
Czech apple of contention - Mythological truth and literal truth (art,
literature, theatre, film, photography) - Truth of religion ?
- Truth of science
- Truth in philosophy
10Conditions for formation of philosophy
- SCHOLE (free time, leisure)
- Developed language (abstract concepts)
- Naivety of Homeric mythology religion
(anthropomorphism) - Exchange of ideas and cultural influences
(connection with other civilisations) - -----------------------
- Material conditions (but cynics, Eastern sages)
- Fine climate
- Freedom (but among philosophers there were also
slaves)
11Presocratic philosophyMilesians (Milesian school)
- Thales of Miletus (about 625 - 545 BC)
- first philosopher politics, astronomy,
geometry(Thales theorem, Thales circle,
rangefinder, division of celestial sphere ) - Flat Earth floating on ocean
- Solar eclipse 28. May 585 BC
- Search for ARCHE (PRINCIPIUM)
- Water (HYDOR) why just water?
- (Magnet soul (PSYCHE) as another principle of
motion and gods)
12Presocratic philosophyMilesian School
- Anaximander of Miletus (about 610 546 BC)
- Quadrant, GNOMON (sundial), celestial globe, map
of the world - ARCHE APEIRON (indefinite boundless, infinity)
- Things arise by process of separation
- evolutionary theory
- IN THE BEGINNING MEN WERE BORN FROM
CREATURES OF A DIFFERENT SORT, BECAUSE THE OTHER
ANIMALS QUICKLY MANAGE TO FEED THEMSELVES, BUT
MAN ALONE REQUIRES A LONG PERIOD OF NURSING
HENCE HAD HE BEEN LIKE THAT IN THE BEGINNING TOO,
HE WOULD NEVER HAVE SURVIVED
13Presocratic philosophyMilesian School
- ... THE EATRH IS IN MID-AIR , OVERPOWERED BY
NOTHING, AND STAYING WHERE IT IS ON ACOUNT OF ITS
SIMILAR DISTANCE FROM EVERYTHING - Existence of antipodes
14Presocratic philosophyMilesian School
- Anaximenes (about 585 528 BC)
- ARCHE AER APEIROS
- AER (air, gas) PNEUMA (SPIRIT)
- Everything is breathing (later accepted by
Stoics) - Things arise by changes of concentration of AER.
(MANOSIS and PYKNOSIS) - The change of quantity into quality
- Flat Earth floating in air (also Moon)
15Heritage of Milesians
- Reductionism complex can be reduced to simple,
many to few or even one - Monism everything comes from one principle
but inconsistent - All rational approach and all science is based on
reduction (inner and outer reductionism) - Basic difference to Eastern thinking HOLISM
- Problems of HOLISM, intuition. Meditation.
- Capra, Bohr and Eastern philosophy.
- HYLOZOISM (paradox of hylozoism, modern science
hylonekrism)
16The end of Milesians
- 547 BC - Miletus fell under Persia the end of
Milesian philosophy - 479 BC - Miletus rebuilt
- 334 BC - captured by Alexander the Great
- 133 - part of Roman empire, Byzantine empire
- 1328 AD till now - under Turkish rule (Balat)
17Presocratic philosophyPythagoras and Pythagoreans
- Pythagoras of Samos (about 572 - 494 BC)
- Disciple of Anaximander ?
- visited Egypt (perhaps he knew read hieroglyphs),
- India (not probable)
- Rule of tyrant Polycrates,
- migration to southern Italy, Croton
- Pythagorean School
- philosopher and thaumaturgist
18Pythagoras of Samos
- School of Pythagoras -
- Number or limit is the basic principle
- ? mathematics and numerology
- THEORIA (theory) originally (watching)
religious festival, narrating about r.f. ?
looking by inner sight - MATHEMATICA (mathematics), MATHEMA theorem,
doctrine teaching esoteric and exoteric - COSMOS (order, jewel) ? HARMONY ? UNIVERSE
19- HARMONIA (harmony) joint, fastening ? principle
of unification - MUSICA (music), laws of acoustic, (P. tuning)
monochorde sound of string, musical intervals,
music of spheres (we are accustomed with it),
MUSIC THERAPY - ARITHMOS and LOGOS (ratio)
- Pythagoras theorem and crisis of mathematics
- Irrational numbers
20Pythagoras
- PSYCHE (soul) principle of personal identity
- METEMPSYCHOSIS and problems of personal identity
- Other problems of REINKARNATION (deja vu, belief
in fairness, vegetarianism, original sin,
psychotherapy) - ONCE THEY SAY THAT PYTHAGORAS WAS PASSING BY WHEN
A DOG WAS BEING BEATEN AND SPOKE THIS WORD
"STOP! DON'T BEAT IT!
FOR IT IS THE SOUL OF A FRIEND OF MINE I
RECOGNIZED HIM BY HIS VOICE."
21Pythagoras
- Medicine the most honourable art (TECHNE),
principle of HARMONY at work - Body as a musical instrument
- Health harmony
- Metrology unifying measures, units of length
and weight
22Same of later Pythagoreans
- Alcmaeon from Croton (5 cent. BC)
- Astronomer, physician, concept of divine or
animated planets (Giordano Bruno 1600) - Closed time Great year, Calpa and the age of
Earth - Modern concepts of closed time
- Autopsy (nerves, brain)
- Philolaos of Croton (end of 5th cent. BC)
- The first non-geocentric system (10 planets,
Anti-earth), central fire of Cosmos (nucleus of
our Galaxy?)
23Same of later Pythagoreans
- Archytas from Tarentum (cca 400 365 BC)
- Ruler of Tarentum (Tarano, Italy) friend of Plato
- Study of mathematics, acoustics (sound of moving
bodies, pipes) - Mechanical dove
- Finite universe
- IF I AM AT THE EXTREMITY OF THE HEAVEN OF THE
FIXED STARS, CAN I STRETCH OUTWARD MY HAND OR
STAFF? IT IS ABSURD TO SUPPOSE THAT I COULD NOT.
IF I CAN, WHAT IS OUTSIDE MUST BE EITHER BODY OR
SPACE. WE MAY THEN IN THE SAME WAY GET TO THE
OUTSIDE OF THAT AGAIN, AND SO ON. IF THERE IS
ALWAYS A NEW PLACE TO WHICH THE STAFF MAY BE HELD
OUT, THIS CLEARLY INVOLVES EXTENSION WITHOUT
LIMIT.
24Neopythagoreism
- Numerology
- Kepler Cosmographic mystery
- Physics and numerological from 1-st century BC to
5-th AC) new ideas packed in the form of old
time-honoured teaching - Heritage of Pythagoreism
- Mathematics ARITHMOLOGY speculative approaches
25Heraclitus of Ephesus
- Heraclitus of Ephesus (about 535 - 475 BC)
- noble from the Androclus family (founder of
Ephesus) - Contempt for the mass of mankind, loner, against
democracy (DEMOS people) advocated ARISTOCRACY
(ARISTOS the best) - Treatise deposited in the temple of Artemis
- SKOTEINOS - dark
26- Dynamical approach
- YOU CANNOT STEP TWICE INTO THE SAME RIVER.
- The learning of many things teaches not
understanding. - IF YOU DO NOT EXPECT THE UNEXPECTED, YOU WILL NOT
FIND IT - NATURE LOVES TO HIDE.
- THE EYES ARE MORE EXACT WITNESSES THAN THE EARS.
27- TO GOD ALL THINGS ARE FAIR AND GOOD AND RIGHT,
BUT PEOPLE HOLD SOME THINGS WRONG AND SOME RIGHT. - IT IS NOT GOOD FOR PEOPLE TO GET ALL THEY WISH TO
GET. - IT IS SICKNESS THAT MAKES HEALTH PLEASANT EVIL,
GOOD HUNGER, PLENTY WEARINESS, REST. - A PERSON'S CHARACTER IS HIS FATE.
28- THIS WORLD, WHICH IS THE SAME FOR ALL, NO ONE OF
THE GODS OR HUMANS HAS MADE BUT IT WAS EVER, IS
NOW, AND EVER WILL BE AN EVER-LIVING FIRE, WITH
MEASURES OF IT KINDLING, AND MEASURES GOING OUT. - EPYROSIS ? Conflagration
- THE WAKING HAVE ONE COMMON WORLD, BUT THE
SLEEPING TURN ASIDE EACH INTO A WORLD OF HIS OWN.
29Some later reflection and similarities of
Heraclitus
- Cratylus
- YOU CANNOT STEP EVEN ONCE INTO THE SAME RIVER.
- Heraclitus and Taoism
- Laoze (Lao Tzu)
- Dynamic approach
- Stoic philosophy
- EKPYROSIS, LOGOS, PANTA REI, Everything flows
- Hegel, Marx, Nietzsche, Heidegger
30The Eleatic school
- Xenophanes of Colophone (570 - 475 BC)
- HOMER AND HESIOD HAVE ASCRIBED TO THE GODS ALL
THINGS THAT ARE A SHAME AND A DISGRACE AMONG
MORTALS, STEALING AND ADULTERIES AND DECEIVING OF
ANOTHER - One god (atheism, monotheism, metaphysical
theology?) - MEN MAKE GODS IN THEIR OWN IMAGE. THOSE OF THE
ETHIOPIANS ARE BLACK AND SNUB-NOSED, GODS OF THE
THRACIANS HAVE BLUE EYES AND RED HAIR. IF HORSES
OR OXEN OR LIONS HAD HANDS AND COULD PRODUCE
WORKS OF ART, THEY TOO WOULD REPRESENT THE GODS
AFTER THEIR OWN FASHION. - The One. If there had ever been a time when
nothing existed, nothing could ever have existed.
-
31The Eleatic school
- Parmenides (circa 540 - after 470 BC)
- PERI FYSEOS
- COME NOW, I WILL TELL YOU AND DO YOU LISTEN TO MY
SAYING AND CARRY IT AWAY, THE ONLY TWO WAYS OF
SEARCH THAT CAN BE THOUGHT OF. - THE FIRST, NAMELY, THAT IT IS, AND THAT IT IS
IMPOSSIBLE FOR IT NOT TO BE, IS THE WAY OF
BELIEF, FOR TRUTH IS ITS COMPANION. - THE OTHER, NAMELY, THAT IT IS NOT, AND THAT IT
MUST NEEDS NOT BE, THAT, I TELL YOU, IS A PATH
THAT NONE CAN LEARN OF AT ALL. - FOR YOU CANNOT KNOW WHAT IS NOT THAT IS
IMPOSSIBLE NOR UTTER IT FOR IT IS THE SAME THING
THAT CAN BE THOUGHT (CONCEIVED) AND THAT CAN BE.
32The Eleatic school
- Melissus of Samos (5th century BC)
- NOR IS ANYTHING EMPTY FOR WHAT IS EMPTY IS
NOTHING SO NOTHING WILL NOT BE BEING OF NOTHING
IS NOT BEING. - Horror vacui, paradox of vacuum and its solution
Descartes, Thomas Hobes and Boyles works on gas
dynamics
33The Eleatic school
- Epistemology Paradox of negative concepts (myth
about giant Polyphemos) - Paradoxes of infinity
34The Eleatic school
- Zeno of Elea (about 489 BC)
- Proof by contradiction
- Zeno arguments against multiplicity, and against
motion. APORIA - Bisection of line
- The flying arrow
- Achilles and the tortoise
- 1 ½ ¼ 1/2n 2
- Concept of infinity. Continuum. Classical
(Cantor) set theory and Alternative set theory
(AST, Vopenka)
35The way to materialism
- Empedocles (circa 490 - 430 BC)
- Religion of Orphic type, underworld. Poem On
Nature (PERI PHYSEOS), and Purifications
(KATHARMOI). Death in vulcano Etna. - Love (PHILIA) attraction
- Strife (NEIKOS) separation
- NOW BY LOVE ALL COMING TOGETHER INTO ONE, NOW
AGAIN EACH CARRIED APART BY THE ENMITY OF STRIFE - roots (RIZOMATA) -- fire, air, earth, and water
- (THERE IS) ONLY A MINGLING AND INTERCHANGE OF
WHAT HAS BEEN MINGLED. SUBSTANCE (PHYSIS) IS BUT
A NAME GIVEN TO THESE THINGS BY MEN. - KLEPSHYDRA existence of air (experimental
proof!) - Questions
36The way to materialism
- Anaxagoras of Clazomenae (about 500 - 428 BC)
- brought philosophy to Athens
- Sun great stone bigger than Pelopones
- Seeds SPERMATA
- NOUS reason
- IN EVERYTHING THERE IS PRESENT A PORTION OF
EVERYTHING EXCEPT MIND (NOUS) AND IN SOME THINGS
MIND TOO IS PRESENT. - (ANAXAGORAS) WAS THE FIRST TO ADD MIND (NOUS) TO
MATTER, BEGINNING HIS BOOK, WHICH IS PLEASANTLY
AND GRANDLY RITTEN, THUS ALL THINGS WERE
TOGETHER THEN MIND CAME AND ARRANGED THEM
37The way to materialism
- Anaxagoras criticism
- Plato in his dialogue Phaedo
PROCEEDING AND READING ON, I SEE THE MAN MAKING
NO USE OF MIND (NOUS), NOR INDICATING ANY
EXPLANATIONS FOR THE ORDERING OF THINGS, BUT
MAKING EXPLANATIONS OF AIRS AND ETHERS AND WATERS
AND MANY OTHER SUCH ABSURDITIES - Aristotle in his book of Metaphysics
ANAXAGORAS USES MIND (NOUS) AS A
THEATRICAL DEVICE (MECHANE) FOR HIS COSMOLOGY
AND WHENEVER HE IS PUZZLED OVER THE EXPLANATION
OF WHY SOMETHING IS FROM NECESSITY, HE WHEELS IT
IN BUT IN THE CASE OF OTHER HAPPENINGS HE MAKES
ANYTHING THE EXPLANATION RATHER THAN MIND. - ANAXAGORAS ADVOCATED THE METHOD PROPER TO NATURAL
SCIENCE
38The way to materialism atomism
- Leucippus (about 500 - 440 BC)
- Postulated existence of free space (voids,
vacuum) - NO THING COMES ABOUT IN VAIN, BUT EVERYTHING FOR
A REASON (LOGOS) AND BY NECESSITY (ANANKE). - Principle of causality (?).
39The way to materialism atomism
- Democritus (460-370 BC)
- MACROCOSMOS and MICROCOSMOS
- Ethical teaching of Democritus
- INSTEAD OF ENJOYING LIFE FOR WHAT IT IS, THEY
HATE IT FOR WHAT IT IS NOT ...
THEY WANT TO PROLONG THE LIFE
THEY HATE, IN ORDER TO POSTPONE DEATH. IT WOULD
BE HARD TO FIND A BETTER EXAMPLE OF MAN BEING HIS
OWN WORST ENEMY THROUGH STUPID DISREGARD OF THE
LIMIT. - theory of knowledge moving images (EIDOLA)
40Presocratic philosophy Atomism
- Free space
- Atoms
- Differences between ancient and modern atoms
- Crisis of atomism
- Order of necessity ANANKE
- (The atomists say that the universe is) NEITHER
ANIMATE NOR GOVERNED BY PURPOSE, BUT BY A SORT OF
IRRATIONAL NATURE (PHYSIS ALOGOS).
41Presocratic philosophy Atomism
- ANANKE
- Inferences of ANANKE
- No chance
- No freedom (free will)
- No responsibility
- Fatalism
- EVERYTHING HAPPENS BY FATE, IN THE SENSE THAT
FATE APPLIES THE FORCE OF NECESSITY - (Democritus said that) HE WOULD RATHER FIND A
SINGLE CAUSAL EXPLANATION (AITIOLOGIA) THAN GAIN
THE KINGDOM OF PERSIA.
42Presocratic philosophy Atomism
- (Absolute) determinism (Stoics, P. S. Laplace)
- AN INTELLECT WHICH AT A GIVEN INSTANT KNEW ALL
THE FORCES ACTING IN NATURE, AND THE POSITION OF
ALL THINGS OF WHICH THE WORLD CONSISTS -
SUPPOSING THE SAID INTELLECT WERE VAST ENOUGH TO
SUBJECT THESE DATA TO ANALYSIS - WOULD EMBRACE IN
THE SAME FORMULA THE MOTIONS OF THE GREATEST
BODIES IN THE UNIVERSE AND THOSE OF THE SLIGHTEST
ATOMS NOTHING WOULD BE UNCERTAIN FOR IT, AND THE
FUTURE, LIKE THE PAST, WOULD BE PRESENT TO ITS
EYES. - Laplace demon
43Presocratic philosophy Atomism
- Further history of the paradox
- Two meanings of determination (passive and
active mode) - Epicurus introduction of PARENCLISIS
- Stoics no freedom but spontaneity
(voluntarity), one LOGOS (also Boethius there
is no contradiction between foreknowledge and
freedom) - Modern history quantum mechanics (Copenhagen
interpretation) and TYCHISM - Free will antinomy (Plotinos )
- IF I WISH, I COULD GIVE AWAY MY PROPERTY TO THE
POOR, BUT I CANNOT WISH TO WISH. A. Schopenhauer
44Presocratic philosophy The Sophists
- 5th cent. BC, democracy - growing demand for
education. Sophists - teachers of wisdom(?) or
spurious learning, ancient enlightment.
Rhetorics, politics, grammar, history, physics,
mathematics . - Sophistry the use of fallacious argument
knowing them to be such - Negative approaches (relativism, agnosticism,
subjectivism, deconstruction od ethics) - Gorgias (483 - 378 BC)
- On Nature, or the Non-existent NOTHING EXISTS
IF ANYTHING EXISTED, IT COULD NOT BE KNOWN IF
ANYTHING DID EXIST, AND COULD BE KNOWN, IT COULD
NOT BE COMMUNICATED. - Agnosticism or parody on eleatism?
- Rhetoric art of persuasion
45Presocratic philosophy The Sophists
- Protagoras (480 - 411 BC) of Abdera, Pericles
debated with him - On the Gods (PERI THEON)
- RESPECTING THE GODS, I AM UNABLE TO KNOW WHETHER
THEY EXIST OR DO NOT EXIST. - On Truth (ALETHEIA)
- MAN IS THE MEASURE OF ALL THINGS OF WHAT ARE
THAT (how?) THEY ARE OF
WHAT ARE NOT THAT (how?) THEY ARE NOT. - Plato why men and not horse or pig? (Theaithetos)
46Presocratic philosophy The Sophists
- Thrasymachus (4 th century BC)
- injustice is preferred to a life of justice,
unjust person superior i character and
intelligence. - Justice is pursued by simpletons and leads to
weakness. - Reduction of morality to power (nihilism towards
thruth and ethics)
47Presocratic philosophy The Sophists
- Sophists and atheism
- Rise of W. philosophy connected with overcoming
mythology and (naive, anthropomorfic) religion. - Diagoras - his opponent violated an oath and
remain unpunished non-existence of gods - Critias religion device of rulers, instrument
against breaking rules when nobody observes. - Sophists and post-modern philosophy
- Modern science disappointed many people, the fail
of communism rejection of old values, old
science, old aims, evolution, progress. The rise
of negative approaches (irrationality,
immorality, subjectivism) - Negative stage positive value clear space
from obsolete conceptual schemes. Must be
followed by positive stage. In ancient Greece
Socrates directed thinking in a positive way.
Unraveled logical inconsistencies of Sophists,
48Classical PeriodSocrates and Socratic schools
- Socrates (469 - 399 BC)
- Directed sophistic thinking in a positive way
- Golden age of Athens
- Aischylus, Euripides, Sophocles, Pericles,
builded parthenon on Acropolis. Persia defeated,
Athens was naval power - Father sculptor (stonemason), mother midwife
- Socrates practised craft of sculptor, married
Xanthyppe (famous for quarrelsomeness) - Admolished by divine call gave up occupation
and devote himself to moral and intelectual
reform of society - Socrates trial
- Athens under Pericles, Socrates could pursue his
calling as a gadfly. War with Sparta, betrayal of
Alcibiades, accusations of impiety, of corrupting
the young, Socrates sentenced to death - Self-knowledge is the starting point, he realised
how little we know about anything
49Socrates and Socratic schools
- Socratic method dialectic method, based on
dialogues - Self-knowledge the starting point
- Socrates did not write (Plato, Aristophanes,
Xenophon) - Negative stage (assumed ignorance, Socratic
irony) - Positive stage (intellectual midwifery), series
of questions - the opponent acknowledges his
ignorance - knowledge through concepts
- WHATEVER EXISTS FOR A USEFUL PURPOSE
- MUST BE THE WORK OF SOME INTELLIGENCE (GOD?).
50Socrates and Socratic schools
- Socratic moral paradox
- Knowledge virtue
- Ignorance evil
- Sin the lack of knowledge
- If anybody does evil, he should not be punished,
but instructed what not to do. - Ethics epistemology
- NO ONE FREELY GOES FOR BAD THING OR THING HE
BELIEVES TO BE BAD - Aristotle ACRASIA weakness of will, passions
and instinct prevail. Humans are not rational
creatures.
51Socratic schools - Megarian school
- Euclid (circa 430 - 360 BC)
- Student of Socrates
- Highest goodness highest reality
- Concepts - bodiless forms (step to Plato
teaching) - Reductio ad absurdum attacks not the premises
but the conclusion of the argument, showing the
absurd consequences. - Paradox of the liar (Epimenides)
- All Cretans are liars.
- self-referential semantic paradoxes
- Homological terms, are such which can be
defined as those, which express a quality that
they have (for example the word short,
English). And further heterological words are
those that do not express such a quality that
they have. The problem is whether the term
heterological is itself heterological or
homological. If it is heterological it does
express the quality of being heterological, so it
must be homological, but if it is homological, it
must be, on the contrary, heterological.
52Socrates and Socratic schoolsCynic school
- Athens about 400 BC to about 200 BC. Coarse and
vulgar depreciation of Socrates ethics ? - Antisthenes (about 450 BC - 360 BC)
- advocated all natural including manual work,
despised culture and all artificial comfort - no universal objects of knowledge
- I SEE A HORSE BUT NOT HORSENESS
- Diogenes of Sinope
- (about 403 - 323 BC), lived in large barrel
- NOT TO HAVE ANY NEEDS IS GODLIKE
53Plato and Platonism
- Plato (428/7 - 347 BC)
- Great poetic writer (unlike Socrates)
- Cratylus (descendant of Heraclitus), Socrates,
Megara, three times in Sicily, Academy - A. N. Whitehead (overdone?)
- The safest general characterization of the
European philosophical tradition is that it
consists of a series of footnotes to Plato. - Democracy
- AS IN THE CASE OF A SHIP, WHERE THE PILOTS
AUTHORITY RESTS UPON KNOWLEDGE OF NAVIGATION, SO
ALSO THE SHIP OF STATE SHOULD BE PILOTED NOT BY
ALL CITIZENS, LIKE IN DEMOCRACY, BUT BY ONLY ONE
WHO HAS ADEQUATE KNOWLEDGE. - Kings were philosophers and philosophers were
kings.
54Plato and Platonism
- Travels in Egypt, Sicily (intended to influence
Dionysios of his ideal system of government),
cast into prison, sold as a slave, ransomed by
friends - Academy (387 BC - 529 AD)
- LET NO ONE IGNORANT OF MATHEMATICS ENTER HERE.
- Scientific orientation attracted the ablest
thinkers
55Plato
- Platos works
- Not written teaching?
- Series of 36 dialogues, Letters
- Socratic method of question and answer
- Plato own philosophical myths - Atlantis
56Plato
- Plato own myths - Atlantis
- 200-year-old annals of Solon, who heard it from
an Egyptian priests. Island located in the Ocean.
Great and wonderful empire. The inhabitants
possessed great wealth thanks to the natural
resources, centre for trade and commerce. The
island provided all kinds of herbs, fruits, and
nuts. An abundance of animals, including
elephants, roamed the island. - Generations the Atlanteans lived simple, virtuous
lives. But slowly they began to change. Greed and
power began to corrupt them. When the chief god
Zeus saw the immorality of the Atlanteans he
gathered the other gods to determine a suitable
punishment. Soon, in one violent tsunami surge,
Atlantis was gone.
57Plato and Platonism
- The allegory of the cave
- Philosophical fiction
- prisoners living in a large cave
- chained by their necks in a fixed position, so
that they can look only at the wall in front of
them - Behind them a fire, farther back the entrance to
the cave. - Path, where there are persons carrying various
figures - The prisoners can observe shadows on the wall,
they are not aware that the shadows are only
shadows.
58Plato and Platonism
One prisoner released from his chains, forced to
stand up, turn around, and walk towards the light
of the fire. He would not be able to recognise
actual objects and his eyes would ache. If
they could lay hands on the man who was trying to
set them free and lead them up, they would kill
him. The prisoners are like us, Socrates
concluded. Prisoners who have been liberated
from the cave must not be allowed to remain in
the higher world of contemplation, but must be
made to come back down into the cave and take
part in the life and labours of the prisoners.
59Plato and Platonism
- System of philosophy
- Forms Ideas
- various degrees of reality
- Platos physics
- Timaeus view on Cosmos teleology
- Platonic bodies
- Five regular solids, Platonic bodies have all
their sides the same and all their vertexes are
equivalent tetrahedron cube, octahedron,
dodecahedron, icosahedron. Five basic elements
fire, ground, water, air, and ether.
60Plato and Platonism
- precession of the Earths axis
- Platonic year
- 30 000 years.
- Concepts of
- closed or cyclic time
61Plato and Platonism
- Plato's ideal state
- UNLESS PHILOSOPHERS BECOME RULERS OR RULERS
BECOME TRUE AND THOROUGH STUDENTS OF PHILOSOPHY,
THERE SHALL BE NO END TO THE TROUBLES OF STATES
AND OF HUMANITY. - rulers (corresponding to the reasonable soul),
- producers (corresponding to desire), and finally
- warriors (corresponding to courage).
- State absolutism totalitarianism
- No private property, family. Children belong to
the state. - Platonism and mathematics
62Aristotle and Aristotelism
- Aristotle (384-322 BC)
- Stagira, Academy, Assos, Pella
- Alexander
- THANKS TO MY FATHER I AM LIVING, THANKS TO
ARISTOTLE I KNOW HOW TO LIVE. - Athens, Lykeion (PERIPATETIC school)
- Death of Alexander
- THE ATHENIANS MIGHT NOT HAVE ANOTHER OPPORTUNITY
OF SINNING AGAINST PHILOSOPHY AS THEY HAD ALREADY
DONE IN THE PERSON OF SOCRATES.
63Aristotle and Aristotelism
- General characterisation of Aristotles
philosophy - Logic
- Theoretical philosophy, including Metaphysics,
Physics, Mathematics - Practical philosophy
- Philosophy of art
- Logic (analytics)
- Founder of logic, reduction of logic to an exact
science - SYLLOGISMs - schemes of logical judgments
64Aristotle and Aristotelism
- Metaphysics
- first philosophy, ontology
- Theory of causes
- Material Cause
- Formal Cause
- Efficient Cause
- Final Cause
- Potentiality and Actuality (DYNAMIS, ENTELECHEIA)
- Matter and Form
65Aristotle and Aristotelism
- Physics
- Four elements, ether, natural motions (up down,
circular) - Elements, natural motions, prime matter
- First Mover, concept of infinite, mechanics
- Aristotle concept of God
- It has seemed to me unfortunate that the word
God (which is, after all, a religious word)
should have been retained by philosophers as the
name for a factor in their system that no one
could possibly regard as an object of worship,
far less of love. (Cornford)
66Aristotle and Aristotelism
67Aristotle and Aristotelism
- Politics
- ZOON POLITIKON - social animal
- The best form of government is that, which best
suits the character of the people. - IT IS CLEAR THAT SOME MEN ARE BY NATURE FREE, AND
OTHERS SLAVES, AND THAT FOR THESE SLAVERY IS BOTH
EXPEDIENT AND RIGHT.
68Aristotle and Aristotelism
- Aristotelean school and Aristotelism
- Andronicus of Rhodes - edited Aristotle's works
- Alexander from Aphrodisias (2nd century AD)
- John Philoponus (6th century)
- Avicenna and Averroes (Commentator)
- St. Thomas Aquinas (1225 - 1274 AD) Christian
adaptation of Aristotles philosophy - Aristotles philosophy, and especially his logic,
has been considered as a basis for modern
science. - In the middle ages, Aristotle philosophy
gradually degenerated. Also Aristotles logic was
subjected to some contempt. It was satirised by
Francis Bacon (1561 - 1626), who argued that in
other civilisations, namely in China, the
development of science had been quite possible
without Aristotle.
69Philosophy of the Hellenistic period Epicureanism
- Epicurus (342 - 270 BC)
- Samos, Garden of Epicurus
- Physics atomism (PARENCLISIS - CLINAMEN)
- Ethics and psychology - theory of human life,
personal happiness - HABITUATE YOURSELF TO THINK THAT DEATH IS NOTHING
TO US FOR ALL GOOD AND EVIL IS IN FEELING NOW
DEATH IS THE PRIVATION OF FEELING. WHERE WE
ARE, DEATH IS NOT AND WHERE DEATH IS, WE ARE
NOT.
70Philosophy of the Hellenistic period Epicureanism
- BETTER WERE IT TO ACCEPT ALL THE LEGENDS OF THE
GODS THAN TO MAKE OURSELVES SLAVES TO THE FATE OF
THE NATURAL PHILOSOPHERS. - Theology
- GODS IN METACOSMIA
71Philosophy of the Hellenistic period Later
Epicureanism
- Titus Lucretius Carus (about 91 51 BC)
- DE RERUM NATURA
- The universe of matter and space, no centre,
space is without limit, matter is composed of
atoms - mind and soul of a material nature, of the finest
and roundest atoms - sense-perception from the surface of objects
thin films of matter are continually flying off - origin of life by spontaneous generation,
preservation of animal life in accordance with
the law of the survival of the fittest - description of free fall (friction, resistance of
enviroment)
72Philosophy of the Hellenistic periodStoicism
- STOA (colonnade or porch), STOA POIKILE (Painted
Colonnade) - Zeno of Citium (circa 336 264 BC)
- 300 BC Stoic school
- Chrysippus (280 205 BC)
- Logic (propositional calculus)
- AII knowledge enters the mind through the senses.
Criterion of truth lie in sensation itself.
Intense feeling of reality (KATALEPSIS)
73Philosophy of the Hellenistic periodStoicism
- Stoic ethics
- ascetic system, perfect indifference to
everything external, APATHEA passions as
essentially irrational - LIVE ACCORDING TO NATURE.
- Morality is simply rational action. From the
root-virtue, wisdom, spring insight, bravery,
self-control, and justice. - Suicide
74Philosophy of the Hellenistic periodStoicism
- Stoic physics
- NOTHING INCORPOREAL EXISTS.
- Existence subsistence (time, logical rules,
space ) - world issue from one principle LOGOS
(monism). The corporeal cannot act on the
incorporeal, nor the incorporeal on the
corporeal. There is no point of contact. Hence
all must be equally corporeal. - All things are composed of fire ( God).
(Heraclitus).
75Philosophy of the Hellenistic periodStoicism
- God - LOGOS is absolute reason.
- purpose in the world (order, harmony, beauty and
design). - no freedom of the will but voluntarity
- world-process is circular (circular, closed time)
- EKPYROSIS - rational soul (divine fire) from God
76Philosophy of the Hellenistic periodStoicism
- Seneca (about 3 BC 65 AD)
- Roman politician, orator and the most famous
Roman Stoic. - YOUR HAPPINESS LIES IN NO ASPIRATION FOR
HAPPINESS. - The main sources of evil are human passions.
- Epictetus (50 130 AD)
- God had arranged all for the happiness of man, so
evil is no more than an illusion. - Marcus Aurelius Antonius (121 - 180 AD)
- seeker after righteousness, Meditations
77Scepticism
- SKEPTIKOI - seekers or inquirers, basic mood is
of doubt - We only know how things appear to us, but the
same thing appears differently to different
people - Complete suspense of judgement (EPOCHE) all
systems of philosophy are equally false - Pyrrho of Elis (about 360 - 270 BC)
- Pyrrhonism
- Timon of Athens - Academic scepticism
- Arcesilaus (ca. 315 - 241 BC) paradox of
scepticism
78Science in Alexandria and the Museum
- Alexandria (323 BC), Ptolemy 308 BC founder of
Ptolemy dynasty (commander of Alexander army) - Demetris Phaleron urged for Museum (after 285
BC) - temple of the Muses, scientific institution - Library with 700 000 books
- Septuaginta
79Science in Alexandria and the Museum
- Euclid (ca. 330 - ca. 275 BC)
- Elements STOCHEIA
- definitions, 5 axioms and 5 postulates, theorems
(with proofs) - The fifth postulate (the parallel postulate)
80Science in Alexandria and the Museum
Archimedes (287 - 212 BC) Hydrostatic
law
81Science in Alexandria and the Museum
82Science in Alexandria and the Museum
- Archimedes
- Counting sand
- 1051 1063 grains of sand in the Universe
- To the sphere with diameter of Pluto orbit aprox.
1051 grains of sand
83Science in Alexandria and the Museum
- Hipparchos from Nicae (2-nd cent. BC)
- geocentrism, catalogue of 850 stars
- Epicyclic theory
84Science in Alexandria and the Museum
- Eratosthenes of Cyrene
- (about 275 - 195 BC)
- System of meridians and parallels
- star map containing 675 stars
- A new calendar system, accepted later in Rome by
Caesar (Julian calendar in 46 BC,) - one year 9 minutes longer
- 1582 Gregorian calendar
- 1752 England, rebelions (?)
- In orthodox countries till the begining of 20-th
century.
85Science in Alexandria and the Museum
- Eratosthenes sieve (identifying the prime numbers)
86Alexandria and the Museum
- Aristarchos of Samos
- (3rd century BC)
- HELIOCENTRIC SYSTEM
87Science in Alexandria and the Museum
- Claudius Ptolemy (about 85 165 AD)
- ALMAGEST
- Earth-centred system
- Epicycles and deferents
88Science in Alexandria and the Museum
- Hypatia (355-370 - 415 AD) lectured on Plato,
Aristotle, wroute on mathematics and astronomy,
commentaries to work of Ptolemy - Astrolabe, distilation of alcohol
- Tortured to death, patriarch Cyrilos
- 643 library destroyed by Arabs
89Philosophy of the Patristics100 800 AD
- Early Christian writers Church Fathers (Greek,
Latin writeings) - Theology and philosophy
- Tertullianus (Carthage cca 160 230)
- Roman theologian, advocate
- Christian, Montanist, his own sect
- Aggressive sarcastic style
- De Performances should Christians attent games?
no - Christians heve pleasures many reconciliation
with God and pardon of many sins. Tertullian
closes his eyes to the spectacles of the world
and appears before him spectacle of the Lord
(angels, saints rising from the dead, kingdom of
the just, New Jerusalem)
90Tertullianus
- Persecution of the Christians was ever present
danger and Chtistians were perplexed by it. - Was it persecution by Devil? No even such
persecution comes from God It never happens
without God willing it and it is fitting for Him
to do so, to the approval or condemnation of his
servants. - What has Athens to do with Jerusalem, what has
the Academy to do with the Church?
91Tertullianus
- Christian truth is in opposition to secular
wisdom and to education as a whole. Here lies its
power and victory. - I believe it because it is impossible.
- Naïve materialism all existing thing (incl. God
and soul) of material nature. - The term trinity
92Augustin of Hippo (Tageste 354 430 AD)
- If you want to understand the catholic church,
you have to understand Augustine -
H. Kung - Monica (saint Monica), study in Carthage,
hedonistic sinful life (commited thefts for fun) - Catholic ? Manichaean sect
- Teacher of rhetoric in Carthage, Rome, Milan
- Summer 386 personal crisis (mystical experience
conversion to Christianity, baptized, back to
Africa - Priest in Hippo 350 sermons, bishop
- Died 75 during the siege of Hippo by the Vandals
93Works of Augustine
- More than hundred titles
- Confessions - 13 autobiographical books
- Deep psychological insight into previous life
- There is no salvation outside the Church.
- 11th book about time
- What, then, is time? If no one asks me, I know
what it is. If I wish to explain it, I do not
know. - God created time within the word.
94The City of God (De civita dei)
- Human history as a conflict between City of God
and City of Man (New Jerusalem and Babylon) - People of City of God forgo earthly pleasures
and dedicate themselves to Christian values, but
inhabitants of City of Man strayed from the City
of God - In 410 Roman empire sacked by Visigots
- Conflict with Pelagius
- Celtic monk, from Britain to Rome, recognized
grandeaur of Church and moral laxity. - One could achieve grace through his own free
will, criticisled Augustine doctrine of salvation
depended only on God (and Church). Basis the
nature of Original Sin (St. Paul) - Heresy Ephesus 431 (rejected especially by
Calvin)
95Boethius (cca 480 525)
- Intermediary between ancient philosophy and Latin
Middle Ages. - Last Romans and the first scholastic
philosopher. - 395 Roman empire divided (E and W part)
- 476 Western part conquered by Ostrogoths
(Germans). Capital Ravena, ruler Theodoric the
Great
96Boethius - works
- Service of emperor Theodoric, many high posts
- 523 arrested (charged of treason plot with
Byzantine Emperor) prison in Pavia, executed in
524 - Intended to translate into Latin works of
Aristotle and Plato, Euclid, Ptolemy - On Music - Musica mundana, humana, instrumentalis
(incl. voice)
97Boethius Consolidation of Philosophy
- Written in prison waiting for execution
- Prose and verse - dialogue between Author and
Lady Philosophy - Discussion of many old philosophical questions
- Translated to practically to all languages
- Pope Leo XIII Boethius st. Severinus