Plato
(ca. 428/427 - 348/347 B.C.E.)
Greek Philosopher
Portugees version
Influences
Education
- Studied philosophy in Athens under Socrates, 408-400 B.C.E.
Career
- Ca. 387, established the Academy of Athens, taught philosophy
there for 40 years
Ideas and Contributions
Plato was born into a wealth Athenian family and planned to become a
politician. As he grew older, he became repulsed by the brutal and unethical
practices of Athenian dictators. In 399 B.C.E. he left Athens when his
friend Socrates was sentenced to death. Twelve years later, he founded
a school of philosophy and science called the Academy, the first
university. Plato is famous for his written dialogues, conversations
between two or more characters debating philosophical issues. His earliest
dialogues utilize Socrates as the main character who questions others
on their beliefs and ideas. (World Book)
Plato's philosophy was based on his theory of a soul divided into three
components, reason, will and appetite. He contended that one can identify
the parts of the soul because they sometimes clash with each other. A
person may crave or have an appetite for something, yet resist the craving
with willpower. A correctly operating soul requires the highest part,
reason, to control the lowest part, appetite, with assistance from the
will.
Plato regarded the body and soul as separate entities. As a dualist,
he also posited an "unreal" world of the senses and physical processes,
and a "real" world of ideal forms.
Plato believed that though the body dies and disintegrates, the soul
continues to live forever. After the death of the body, the soul migrates
to what Plato called the realm of the pure forms. There, it exists
without a body, contemplating the forms. After a time, the soul is reincarnated
in another body and returns to the world. But the reincarnated soul retains
a dim recollection of the realm of forms and yearns for it. . . . In the
Meno, Plato has Socrates teach an ignorant slave boy a truth of
geometry by simply asking a series of questions. Because the boy learns
this truth without being given any information, Plato concluded that learning
consists of recalling what the soul experienced in the realm of the forms.
(World Book, p. 570)
Plato thought that only the soul could perceive the ideal forms. When
the body and the soul combine, the body obstructs the soul's ability to
recall the ideal forms. "Knowledge is not given by the senses but acquired
thought them as reason organizes and makes sense out of that which is
perceived ( Zusne, p. 6)." Reason unveils the ideal forms behind appearances.
Plato's philosophy was influential in the development of early Christian
thought through the ideas of Plotinus [ca. 205-270, Roman philosopher
who developed Neoplatoism, a philosophy based on Plato's ideas] and the
writing of St. Augustine. The idea of the separation of the body and soul,
and an immortal soul also began with Plato. During the 13th century, Aristotle's
ideas replaced Plato's ideas as the most influential philosophy in Christian
thought.
Publications
- The Sophist
- The Symposium
References: 27, 29
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29 April 2018