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Anon fragte in Arts & HumanitiesPhilosophy · vor 6 Jahren

What was Plato s key contribution to philosophy?

I have to do sort of a fact file card thing on a bunch of philosophers for school.One of them is Plato, and one of the things that needs to be on the card is his key contribution to his field . Plato did a lot and I really don t know what to write here. It just needs to be a short sentence. Thanks!

9 Antworten

Relevanz
  • Prasad
    Lv 7
    vor 6 Jahren

    Plato often discusses the father-son relationship and the question of whether a father's interest in his sons has much to do with how well his sons turn out. In ancient Athens, a boy was socially located by his family identity, and Plato often refers to his characters in terms of their paternal and fraternal relationships. Socrates was not a family man, and saw himself as the son of his mother, who was apparently a midwife. A divine fatalist, Socrates mocks men who spent exorbitant fees on tutors and trainers for their sons, and repeatedly ventures the idea that good character is a gift from the gods. Crito reminds Socrates that orphans are at the mercy of chance, but Socrates is unconcerned. In the Theaetetus, he is found recruiting as a disciple a young man whose inheritance has been squandered. Socrates twice compares the relationship of the older man and his boy lover to the father-son relationship (Lysis 213a, Republic 3.403b), and in the Phaedo, Socrates' disciples, towards whom he displays more concern than his biological sons, say they will feel "fatherless" when he is gone.

    In several of Plato's dialogues, Socrates promulgates the idea that knowledge is a matter of recollection, and not of learning, observation, or study.[47] He maintains this view somewhat at his own expense, because in many dialogues, Socrates complains of his forgetfulness. Socrates is often found arguing that knowledge is not empirical, and that it comes from divine insight. In many middle period dialogues, such as the Phaedo, Republic and Phaedrus Plato advocates a belief in the immortality of the soul, and several dialogues end with long speeches imagining the afterlife. More than one dialogue contrasts knowledge and opinion, perception and reality, nature and custom, and body and soul.

  • vor 6 Jahren

    "Platonism" is a term coined by scholars to refer to the intellectual consequences of denying, as Plato's Socrates often does, the reality of the material world. In several dialogues, most notably the Republic, Socrates inverts the common man's intuition about what is knowable and what is real. While most people take the objects of their senses to be real if anything is, Socrates is contemptuous of people who think that something has to be graspable in the hands to be real. In the Theaetetus, he says such people are eu amousoi (εὖ ἄμουσοι), an expression that means literally, "happily without the muses" (Theaetetus 156a). In other words, such people live without the divine inspiration that gives him, and people like him, access to higher insights about reality.

    Socrates's idea that reality is unavailable to those who use their senses is what puts him at odds with the common man, and with common sense. Socrates says that he who sees with his eyes is blind, and this idea is most famously captured in his allegory of the cave, and more explicitly in his description of the divided line. The allegory of the cave (begins Republic 7.514a) is a paradoxical analogy wherein Socrates argues that the invisible world is the most intelligible ("noeton") and that the visible world ("(h)oraton") is the least knowable, and the most obscure.

  • vor 6 Jahren

    Plato gave elaborate philosophical justification to the dualistic view of human nature, the premise that a human being is a ghost working levers inside a machine.

  • ?
    Lv 6
    vor 6 Jahren

    Plato's cave analogy is still true today everyone wants everyone to think the same way and if any person thinks differently he is considered weird

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  • vor 5 Jahren

    Chew gum. Sometimes just chewing something with negligible calories inside is all it takes. When you can handle it, chew a section of gum for one hour as well as drop 11 calories. Remember to choose the sugar-free variety.

  • Anonym
    vor 5 Jahren

    Cinnamon: Just half a teaspoon of cinnamon per day, sprinkled into your breakfast cereal, will allow you to shift an amazing one kilo every 4 weeks.

  • Anonym
    vor 6 Jahren

    Promoted the notion of a higher reality (the Cave and the Sun, and the Line parables, all found in "Republic," Book 6, and on Wikipedia.

  • ?
    Lv 7
    vor 6 Jahren

    Plato formulated most of the questions still asked today, but he failed at most of the answers. Aristotle answered them for the most part.

  • vor 5 Jahren

    Stock up on nude heels – the more expensive the better. They play around the eye and no-one knows where your limbs finish along with the Louboutin’s start.

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