• introbert
    333
    Plato has an interesting concept of forms, that reality is a simulacra of absolute ideas that souls have prior knowledge of but there is a process of remembering them or else living in illusion. In the way that I think about things this is an indirect realism that has a different formula than the modern neuroscientific view that our brain's mind is a simulation of the world. In either formula there are objective truths and a simulation that can be deceptive. I am not rigid in either one of these formulas, or others, but my philosophical system is based on a continuum of analogy between simulation and objective truth, however that is manifest. The mind can be deceptive, and information from the world can be deceptive. The doctoring of thought changes the primary knowledge that there is access to and also the ways if thinking about it. That all modern thought is doctored presents a challenge to the soul for achieving divine knowledge or actual knowledge, depending on your formula for realism.

    Plato is one of my favorite philosophers. The idea that my soul can attain divine knowledge that contradicts that of the prevailing formula for realism could possibly result in a mental health diagnosis. The doctoring of thought as indicative of health of the body is a departure from the Platonic formulation. It is an attempt to unite the physical with the ideal in a coherent way, that rejects the individual soul for a collective soul. Thought is doctored for the health of the larger body. This is opposed to the theory of forms, the form of forms. The simulation or perception that my mind/soul simulates/ remembers of this form of forms is irony. Irony is the mechanism of the soul achieving divine knowledge, the difference between idea and physical world, and something which has been clearly doctored in conventional understanding. This collective understanding is for the health of the soul of the world, or something.

    Socrates to me, as I understand him through likely doctored texts, is irony actualized. Theres is so much irony symbolized in his thought and action he is like the the purest form of forms. His method, his underdog position, his subjectivism versus objective truth of prevailing rationality etc. and even taking the poison when he could have escaped his unjust treatment for challenging societies lies, is ironic. To me the story of Socrates embodies the entire conflict in rational objectivity versus the soul trying to escape a physical world/ society of deception and achieve trancendence of physical for truth.

    Maybe my actual thoughts differ thats just how I can express them.
  • Fooloso4
    6.1k
    The idea that my soul can attain divine knowledge ...introbert

    In the Phaedo Socrates calls Forms hypothesis. In the dialectic of the Republic too the Forms are hypothetical, and remain so unless or until one is able to free themself from hypothesis. In the dialogue Socrates is clear in stating that he has not done so.

    In none of the dialogues do we find someone who has attained divine knowledge. Philosophy is, according to the Symposium, the desire for wisdom. The philosophers in the Republic, who rule because they are divinely wise, are shadows on the cave wall. The Forms too, images on the cave wall. Irony indeed!
  • introbert
    333
    I entertain the idea that schizo is the manifestation of irony that was once in the premodern viewed as divine and the same manifestation of forms that is in the assemblage of collective rationality justifying the poisoning of an irrational subject for the preservation of the collective ideal which in the modern is the antischizophrenic persecution of irrational behavior and delusion.
  • introbert
    333
    That is reasonable of Socrates to not claim he possesses the divine knowledge, but still ironic that without true knowledge can still prove the falsity of belief. This kind of irony to a rationalist would make Socrates seem too contradictory, and the rational tendancy to unite thought with the world is in conflict with the Platonic ideal of uniting the memory of the soul to absolute truths that the world decieves us of. That irony acknowledges fundamental contradiction and uses a process of uncovering contradiction can be contrasted with other rational methods that achieve certainty by conforming to what is made agreeable by the intersubjectivity of conventional forms of reason. I'm not sure exactly what conventional forms of reason the philosophers of Ancient Greece agreed was divine, but an analogy can be drawn between scientism as a rejection of the ironic condition by a nonironic process of scientific progress, that doesn't acknowledge rational detachment from actuality as argument against fundamental belief but simply part of a futurist process that will not abandon it's antiironic foundation.
  • 180 Proof
    15.3k
    The Forms too, images on the cave wall.Fooloso4
    Really? :chin:
  • Fooloso4
    6.1k


    The Forms are said to be the things themselves of which things in the visible world are images, but what do we know of Forms beyond what we are told? Have any of us seen the Forms themselves with the mind itself, or do we only imagine what they might be? In none of the dialogues is there anyone who has seen the Forms and is able to give an account of their experience, There are only questionable stories of what we see when we are dead.

    In the Phaedo Socrates calls the hypothesis of Forms “safe and ignorant” (105c). In addition to the Forms, he later recognizes the necessity of admitting physical causes such as fire and fever (105c). As to the causal relationship between Forms and sensible things, he says:

    I simply, naively and perhaps foolishly cling to this, that nothing else makes it beautiful other than the presence of, or the sharing in, or however you may describe its relationship to that Beautiful we mentioned, for I will not insist on the precise nature of the relationship, but that all beautiful things are beautiful by the Beautiful. (100e)

    In the Philebus Plato introduces what Aristotle refers to as the indeterminate dyad, the limited (peras) and unlimited (apieron). Contrary to the fixed, unchanging nature of the Forms, indeterminacy is an ineliminable element of Plato’s metaphysics.

    Plato’s metaphysics is not systematic. It is problematic. It raises questions it cannot answer and problems that cannot be resolved. It is important to understand that this is a feature not a defect or failure.

    Plato’s concern is the Whole. Forms are not the Whole. Knowledge of the Forms is not knowledge of the whole.

    These dyads include:

    Limited and Unlimited

    Same and Other

    One and Many

    Rest and Change

    Eternity and Time

    Good and Bad

    Thinking and Being

    Being and Non-being

    Each side stands both together with and apart from the other. There is not one without the other.

    Ultimately, there is neither ‘this or that’ but ‘this and that’. The Whole is not reducible to One. The whole is indeterminate.

    And yet we do separate this from that. Thinking and saying are dependent on making such distinctions.

    We informally divide things into kinds. Forms are kinds.

    Forms are both same and other. Each Form is itself both other than the things of that Form, and other than the other Forms.

    The Forms are each said to be one, but the Forms and things of that Form are an indeterminate dyad, one and many.

    The indeterminate dyad raises problems for the individuality and separability of Forms. There is no “Same itself” without the “Other itself”, the two Forms are both separable and inseparable.

    Socrates likens the Forms to originals or paradigms, and things of the world to images or copies. This raises several problems about the relation between Forms and particulars, the methexis problem. Socrates is well aware of the problem and admits that he cannot give an account of how particulars participate in Forms.

    Things are not simply images of Forms. It is not just that the image is distorted or imperfect. Change, multiplicity and the unlimited are not contained in unchanging Forms.

    The unity of Forms is subsumed under the Good. But Socrates also says that the Good is not responsible for the bad things. (Republic 379b)

    The Whole is by nature both good and bad.

    The indeterminate dyad Thinking and Being means that Plato’s ontology is inseparable from his epistemology.

    Plato’s ontology must remain radically incomplete, limited to but not constrained by what is thought.

    The limits of what can be thought and said are not the limits of Being.

    The Timaeus introduces three kinds:

    … that which comes to be, that in which it comes to be, and that from which what comes to be sprouts as something copied. And what’s more, it’s fitting to liken the receiver to a mother , the ‘from which’ to a father, and the nature between these to an offspring (50d).

    Like intelligible things, the chora always is. But unlike intelligible things, it is changeable. (52a) Unlike sensible things it does not perish. Befitting its indeterminacy, the chora does not yield to simple definition.

    Metaphysics for Plato was speculative and contemplative play, a form of poiesis, the making of images of the whole and parts. Without knowledge of beginnings that are forever lost to us he is saying that we cannot take any of this too seriously as true accounts. But that is not to say that we should not take such play seriously.

    It may appear as though the Timaeus is a departure for Plato, but it is consistent with Socratic skepticism. An indeterminate world, one where chance and contingency play a role, is a world that cannot be known. An indeterminate world of chance and contingency is one where the unknowable, the mystical dimension of life, is not flattened and destroyed.
  • 180 Proof
    15.3k
    Plato’s metaphysics is not systematic. It is problematic. It raises questions it cannot answer and problems that cannot be resolved.Fooloso4
    :fire: It's going to take me some time to think through the labyrinth of your post.
  • Fooloso4
    6.1k


    For anyone that might be interested, the post is mostly excerpts from a few different forum threads I started.that provide greater textual analysis and support.

    Socratic Philosophy

    Plato's Metaphysics

    Timaeus

    Phaedo
  • Tom Storm
    9.1k
    Your contributions are wonderful. Thanks.
  • Fooloso4
    6.1k


    Thanks Tom. Good to hear. I put a lot of time and effort in and sometimes wonder if anyone is even reading.
  • Tom Storm
    9.1k
    Well, it's a good thing for this place that you do. :up:

    Foolish questions coming: I'm interested in this notion of The Whole. Is it fair to say that goodness can be understood as an expression/instantiation of unified wholeness (is this a synonym for perfection?) and can we say by extension that what is bad is that which is partial or lacking coherence and the bad is in effect a form of asymmetry?

    The idea that The Whole is indeterminate and not reducible to one is interesting.
  • Moliere
    4.7k
    I read them! Your interpretations of Plato are always a joy to read, because of your clear depth of knowledge.
  • frank
    15.8k

    What you've expressed is a brand of neo-platonism. That's fine, but do identify it as such. Intellectual honesty would demand that.
  • Fooloso4
    6.1k
    Is it fair to say that goodness can be understood as an expression/instantiation of unified wholeness ...Tom Storm

    In the Republic Socrates says:

    The good is not the source of everything; rather it is the cause of things that are in a good way, while it is not responsible for the bad things. (379b)

    Since bad things are part of the whole of what is, the Good and the Whole cannot be the same.

    Why the Good cannot be known
  • Paine
    2.5k

    Which brand?
    I am pretty familiar with Plotinus and Proclus. This statement, for instance, would be strongly rejected by both.

    Plato’s ontology must remain radically incomplete, limited to but not constrained by what is thought.Fooloso4
  • Fooloso4
    6.1k
    What you've expressed is a brand of neo-platonism. That's fine, but do identify it as such. Intellectual honesty would demand that.frank

    I am surprised to hear that. What elements of neo-platonism do you find?
  • frank
    15.8k
    I am surprised to hear that. What elements of neo-platonism do you find?Fooloso4

    Neoplatonism isn't one line of thought. It's any interpretation of Plato that fills in the blanks in a certain way. Christianity, Plotinus, and Ficino are all neoplatonist. They aren't identical, though. As I said, what you're expressing is a brand of neoplatonism. That's not an insult. It's just a simple clarification.
  • Paine
    2.5k
    Neoplatonism isn't one line of thought. It's any interpretation of Plato that fills in the blanks in a certain way.frank

    Does this make Aristotle a Neoplatonist?
  • frank
    15.8k

    1511-Raphael-TheSchoolofAthens-closeup.jpg?format=1000w

    What do the hand gestures on each figure mean?
  • Fooloso4
    6.1k


    I did not take it as an insult. It is because neoplatonism is not singular that I asked what elements of neoplatonism you find in what I said.
  • frank
    15.8k

    Neoplatonism isn't one line of thought. It's any interpretation of Plato that fills in the blanks in a certain way. Christianity, Plotinus, and Ficino are all neoplatonist. They aren't identical, though. As I said, what you're expressing is a brand of neoplatonism. That's not an insult. It's just a simple clarification.
  • Fooloso4
    6.1k
    It's any interpretation of Plato that fills in the blanks in a certain way.frank

    What is that "certain way" of filling in the blanks?
  • frank
    15.8k
    What is that "certain way" of filling in the blanks?Fooloso4

    One that creates a cohesive narrative?
  • Fooloso4
    6.1k


    So any interpretation of Plato that presents a cohesive narrative is neoplatonist?
  • frank
    15.8k
    So any interpretation of Plato that presents a cohesive narrative is neoplatonist?Fooloso4

    Any interpretation of Plato that presents a cohesive narrative could be described as "a brand of neoplatonism."
  • Fooloso4
    6.1k


    In the Phaedrus Socrates compares the well written work to a living animal with each part having a function working together to form a whole. This tells us how a well written work should be read - as a whole, with each part having its function working together in a particular way to form that whole. On the assumption that the Platonic dialogues are well written works, Plato himself tells us how they are to be read.
  • frank
    15.8k
    In the Phaedrus Socrates compares the well written work to a living animal with each part having a function working together to form a whole. This tells us how a well written work should be read - as a whole, with each part having its function working together in a particular way to form that whole. On the assumption that the Platonic dialogues are well written works, Plato himself tells us how they are to be read.Fooloso4

    It's the difference between theology and religion studies. Theology presents interpretations. Religion studies just sticks to what we've got and tries to fit the work into the era in which it was written.

    Your approach to Plato is like the theological approach where you're using your own intuitions to guide you in arriving at a meaning. In particular, this is a Protestant approach.

    An academic approach to Plato would not settle in any one interpretation, but would just explain what we know about the times and the various ways Plato has been interpreted since.

    For obvious reasons, it's extremely important to mark out this kind of distinction. If you're going to interpret, that's great. I truly welcome that and think we should all be doing that. Philosophy comes alive in this way.

    But I'm sure you agree that each of us needs to be honest and say, "This is my interpretation."
  • frank
    15.8k
    We've already got one religion based on Plato. We don't need another one.
  • Wayfarer
    22.5k
    I don't see that at all. I get a lot from Fooloso4's posts, but mainly I get how little I know about Plato, and the Herculean task of becoming more familiar with the labyrinthine layers of meaning.

    A general question I have is this: I think there is a widespread mistake in the understanding of the term 'Forms'. I think it's almost universally taken to be something like shape - after all, in English, 'shape' and 'form' are very close in meaning. But I would have thought that a better modern interpretation would be something like 'principle'.

    For instance, there's an argument in the Phaedo (which I don't recall being discussed in the thread on that dialogue) called The Argument from Imperfection (reference). Basically this revolves around the 'idea of Equals'. It points out that there is no physical instantiation or example of 'Equals'. It argues that things that we see as equal - two sticks, or two stones - are not really equal but merely alike. Plato argues that the ability to grasp 'Equal' amounts to grasping the Form of Equal, which is something that is done solely by the Intellect, not by sensory apprehension.

    That argument has intuitive appeal to me, because I believe that it is indeed true that 'Equal' has no physical instantiation, and yet it is a fundamental element of mathematical and indeed general reasoning.
  • Fooloso4
    6.1k
    An academic approach to Plato would not settle in any one interpretation, but would just explain what we know about the times and the various ways Plato has been interpreted since.frank

    An essential part of contemporary Plato scholarship includes not only how he has been interpreted but how he is being interpreted. Arguments are made in favor or against various interpretive claims but nothing is settled.

    Contrary to anything being settled I have repeatedly pointed to the indeterminacy, the openendness, the aporia of Plato's work.

    Your approach to Plato is like the theological approach where you're using your own intuitions to guide you in arriving at a meaning. In particular, this is a Protestant approach.frank

    I do not use intuitions, I investigate hunches and possibilities to see whether they are supported by the text and help make sense of it. If they don't I try something else to help me make sense of the text. There is nothing "theological" or "Protestant" about this approach.

    But I'm sure you agree that each of us needs to be honest and say, "This is my interpretation."frank

    Again you raise the issue of honesty. Why? Of course my interpretation is my interpretation!
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