Plato
(circa 428-c. 347 BC)
Greek philosopher, one of the most creative and influential
thinkers in Western philosophy. Life Plato was born to an aristocratic
family in Athens. His father, Ariston, was believed to have descended
from
the early kings of Athens. Perictione, his mother, was distantly
related to the 6th-century BC lawmaker Solon. When Plato was
a child, his father died, and his mother married Pyrilampes,
who
was an associate
of the statesman Pericles. As a young man Plato had political
ambitions, but he became disillusioned by the political leadership
in Athens.
He eventually became a disciple of Socrates, accepting his
basic philosophy and dialectical style of debate: the pursuit of
truth
through questions, answers, and additional questions.
Plato witnessed the death of Socrates at the hands of the Athenian
democracy in 399 BC. Perhaps fearing for his own safety, he
left Athens temporarily and traveled to Italy, Sicily, and
Egypt.
In 387 Plato founded the Academy in Athens, the institution
often described
as the first European university. It provided a comprehensive
curriculum, including such subjects as astronomy, biology,
mathematics, political
theory, and philosophy. Aristotle was the Academy's most prominent
student. Pursuing an opportunity to combine philosophy and
practical politics, Plato went to Sicily in 367 to tutor the
new ruler
of Syracuse, Dionysius the Younger, in the art of philosophical
rule. The experiment
failed.
Plato made another trip to Syracuse in 361, but again his engagement
in Sicilian affairs met with little success. The concluding years
of his life were spent lecturing at the Academy and writing.
He died at about the age of 80 in Athens in 348 or 347 BC. Works
Plato's writings were in dialogue form; philosophical ideas were
advanced, discussed, and criticized in the context of a conversation
or debate involving two or more persons. The earliest collection
of Plato's work includes 35 dialogues and 13 letters. The authenticity
of a few of the dialogues and most of the letters has been disputed.
Early Dialogues
The dialogues may be divided into early, middle, and later periods
of composition. The earliest represent Plato's attempt to communicate
the philosophy and dialectical style of Socrates.
Several of these dialogues take the same form. Socrates, encountering
someone who claims to know much, professes to be ignorant and
seeks assistance from the one who knows. As Socrates begins to
raise questions, however, it becomes clear that the one reputed
to be wise really does not know what he claims to know, and Socrates
emerges as the wiser one because he at least knows that he does
not know. Such knowledge, of course, is the beginning of wisdom.
Included in this group of dialogues are Charmides (an attempt
to define temperance), Lysis (a discussion of friendship), Laches
(a pursuit of the meaning of courage), Protagoras (a defense
of the thesis that virtue is knowledge and can be taught), Euthyphro
(a consideration of the nature of piety), and Book I of the Republic
(a discussion of justice).
Middle and Late Dialogues
The dialogues of the middle and later periods of Plato's life
reflect his own philosophical development. The ideas in these
works are attributed by most scholars to Plato himself, although
Socrates continues to be the main character in many of the dialogues.
The writings of the middle period include Gorgias (a consideration
of several ethical questions), Meno (a discussion of the nature
of knowledge), the Apology (Socrates' defense of himself at his
trial against the charges of atheism and corrupting Athenian
youth), Crito (Socrates' defense of obedience to the laws of
the state), Phaedo (the death scene of Socrates, in which he
discusses the theory of Forms, the nature of the soul, and the
question of immortality), the Symposium (Plato's outstanding
dramatic achievement, which contains several speeches on beauty
and love), the Republic (Plato's supreme philosophical achievement,
which is a detailed discussion of the nature of justice).
The works of the later period include the Theaetetus (a denial
that knowledge is to be identified with sense perception), Parmenides
(a critical evaluation of the theory of Forms), Sophist (further
consideration of the theory of Ideas, or Forms), Philebus (a
discussion of the relationship between pleasure and the good),
Timaeus (Plato's views on natural science and cosmology), and
the Laws (a more practical analysis of political and social issues).
Theory of Forms
At the heart of Plato's philosophy is his theory of Forms, or
Ideas. Ultimately, his view of knowledge, his ethical theory,
his psychology, his concept of the state, and his perspective
on art must be understood in terms of this theory. Theory of
Knowledge Plato's theory of Forms and his theory of knowledge
are so interrelated that they must be discussed together. Influenced
by Socrates, Plato was convinced that knowledge is attainable.
He was also convinced of two essential characteristics of knowledge.
First, knowledge must be certain and infallible. Second, knowledge
must have as its object that which is genuinely real as contrasted
with that which is an appearance only. Because that which is
fully real must, for Plato, be fixed, permanent, and unchanging,
he identified the real with the ideal realm of being as opposed
to the physical world of becoming. One consequence of this view
was Plato's rejection of empiricism, the claim that knowledge
is derived from sense experience. He thought that propositions
derived from sense experience have, at most, a degree of probability.
They are not certain. Furthermore, the objects of sense experience
are changeable phenomena of the physical world. Hence, objects
of sense experience are not proper objects of knowledge. Plato's
own theory of knowledge is found in the Republic, particularly
in his discussion of the image of the divided line and the myth
of the cave. In the former, Plato distinguishes between two levels
of awareness: opinion and knowledge. Claims or assertions about
the physical or visible world, including both commonsense observations
and the propositions of science, are opinions only. Some of these
opinions are well founded; some are not; but none of them counts
as genuine knowledge.
The higher level of awareness is knowledge, because there reason,
rather than sense experience, is involved. Reason, properly used,
results in intellectual insights that are certain, and the objects
of these rational insights are the abiding universals, the eternal
Forms or substances that constitute the real world. The myth
of the cave describes individuals chained deep within the recesses
of a cave. Bound so that vision is restricted, they cannot see
one another. The only thing visible is the wall of the cave upon
which appear shadows cast by models or statues of animals and
objects that are passed before a brightly burning fire. Breaking
free, one of the individuals escapes from the cave into the light
of day. With the aid of the sun, that person sees for the first
time the real world and returns to the cave with the message
that the only things they have seen heretofore are shadows and
appearances and that the real world awaits them if they are willing
to struggle free of their bonds.
The shadowy environment of the cave symbolizes for Plato the
physical world of appearances. Escape into the sun-filled setting
outside the cave symbolizes the transition to the real world,
the world of full and perfect being, the world of Forms, which
is the proper object of knowledge.
Nature of Forms
The theory of Forms may best be understood in terms of mathematical
entities. A circle, for instance, is defined as a plane figure
composed of a series of points, all of which are equidistant
from a given point. No one has ever actually seen such a figure,
however. What people have actually seen are drawn figures that
are more or less close approximations of the ideal circle. In
fact, when mathematicians define a circle, the points referred
to are not spatial points at all; they are logical points. They
do not occupy space. Nevertheless, although the Form of a circle
has never been seen-indeed, could never be seen-mathematicians
and others do in fact know what a circle is. That they can define
a circle is evidence that they know what it is.
For Plato, therefore, the Form "circularity" exists,
but not in the physical world of space and time. It exists as
a changeless object in the world of Forms or Ideas, which can
be known only by reason. Forms have greater reality than objects
in the physical world both because of their perfection and stability
and because they are models, resemblance to which gives ordinary
physical objects whatever reality they have. Circularity, squareness,
and triangularity are excellent examples, then, of what Plato
meant by Forms. An object existing in the physical world may
be called a circle or a square or a triangle only to the extent
that it resembles ("participates in" is Plato's phrase)
the Form "circularity" or "squareness" or "triangularity." Plato
extended his theory beyond the realm of mathematics. Indeed,
he was most interested in its application in the field of social
ethics.
The theory was his way of explaining how the same universal
term can refer to so many particular things or events. The word
justice, for example, can be applied to hundreds of particular
acts because these acts have something in common, namely, their
resemblance to, or participation in, the Form "justice." An
individual is human to the extent that he or she resembles or
participates in the Form "humanness." If "humanness" is
defined in terms of being a rational animal, then an individual
is human to the extent that he or she is rational. A particular
act is courageous or cowardly to the extent that it participates
in its Form. An object is beautiful to the extent that it participates
in the Idea, or Form, of beauty. Everything in the world of space
and time is what it is by virtue of its resemblance to, or participation
in, its universal Form.
The ability to define the universal term is evidence that one
has grasped the Form to which that universal refers. Plato conceived
the Forms as arranged hierarchically; the supreme Form is the
Form of the Good, which, like the sun in the myth of the cave,
illuminates all the other Ideas. There is a sense in which the
Form of the Good represents Plato's movement in the direction
of an ultimate principle of explanation. Ultimately, the theory
of Forms is intended to explain how one comes to know and also
how things have come to be as they are. In philosophical language,
Plato's theory of Forms is both an epistemological (theory of
knowledge) and an ontological (theory of being) thesis.
Political Theory
The Republic, Plato's major political work, is concerned with
the question of justice and therefore with the questions "what
is a just state" and "who is a just individual?" The
ideal state, according to Plato, is composed of three classes.
The economic structure of the state is maintained by the merchant
class. Security needs are met by the military class, and political
leadership is provided by the philosopher-kings. A particular
person's class is determined by an educational process that begins
at birth and proceeds until that person has reached the maximum
level of education compatible with interest and ability. Those
who complete the entire educational process become philosopher-kings.
They are the ones whose minds have been so developed that they
are able to grasp the Forms and, therefore, to make the wisest
decisions. Indeed, Plato's ideal educational system is primarily
structured so as to produce philosopher-kings. Plato associates
the traditional Greek virtues with the class structure of the
ideal state. Temperance is the unique virtue of the artisan class;
courage is the virtue peculiar to the military class; and wisdom
characterizes the rulers. Justice, the fourth virtue, characterizes
society as a whole. The just state is one in which each class
performs its own function well without infringing on the activities
of the other classes. Plato divides the human soul into three
parts: the rational part, the will, and the appetites.
The just person is the one in whom the rational element, supported
by the will, controls the appetites. An obvious analogy exists
here with the threefold class structure of the state, in which
the enlightened philosopher-kings, supported by the soldiers,
govern the rest of society.
Ethics
Plato's ethical theory rests on the assumption that virtue is
knowledge and can be taught, which has to be understood in terms
of his theory of Forms. As indicated previously, the ultimate
Form for Plato is the Form of the Good, and knowledge of this
Form is the source of guidance in moral decision making. Plato
also argued that to know the good is to do the good. The corollary
of this is that anyone who behaves immorally does so out of ignorance.
This conclusion follows from Plato's conviction that the moral
person is the truly happy person, and because individuals always
desire their own happiness, they always desire to do that which
is moral.
Art
Plato had an essentially antagonistic view of art and the artist,
although he approved of certain religious and moralistic kinds
of art. Again, his approach is related to his theory of Forms.
A beautiful flower, for example, is a copy or imitation of the
universal Forms "flowerness" and "beauty." The
physical flower is one step removed from reality, that is, the
Forms. A picture of the flower is, therefore, two steps removed
from reality. This also meant that the artist is two steps removed
from knowledge, and, indeed, Plato's frequent criticism of the
artists is that they lack genuine knowledge of what they are
doing. Artistic creation, Plato observed, seems to be rooted
in a kind of inspired madness. Influence Plato's influence throughout
the history of philosophy has been monumental.
When he died, Speusippus became head of the Academy. The school
continued in existence until AD 529, when it was closed by the
Byzantine emperor Justinian I, who objected to its pagan teachings.
Plato's impact on Jewish thought is apparent in the work of the
1st-century Alexandrian philosopher Philo Judaeus. Neoplatonism,
founded by the 3rd-century philosopher Plotinus, was an important
later development of Platonism. The theologians Clement of Alexandria,
Origen, and St. Augustine were early Christian exponents of a
Platonic perspective. Platonic ideas have had a crucial role
in the development of Christian theology and also in medieval
Islamic thought (see Islam).
During the Renaissance, the primary focus of Platonic influence
was the Florentine Academy, founded in the 15th century near
Florence. Under the leadership of Marsilio Ficino, members of
the Academy studied Plato in the original Greek. In England,
Platonism was revived in the 17th century by Ralph Cudworth and
others who became known as the Cambridge Platonists. Plato's
influence has been extended into the 20th century by such thinkers
as Alfred North Whitehead, who once paid him tribute by describing
the history of philosophy as simply "a series of footnotes
to Plato." Source: Microsoft Encarta 97
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