fbpx
Wikipedia

Theory of forms

The theory of Forms, theory of Ideas,[1][2][3] Platonic idealism, or Platonic realism is a philosophical theory of metaphysics developed by the Classical Greek philosopher Plato. The theory suggests that the physical world is not as real or true as "Forms". According to this theory, Forms—conventionally capitalized and also commonly translated as "Ideas"[4]—are the non-physical, timeless, absolute, and unchangeable essences of all things, of which objects and matter in the physical world are merely imitations. Plato speaks of these entities only through the characters (primarily Socrates) of his dialogues who sometimes suggest that these Forms are the only objects of study that can provide knowledge.[5] The theory itself is contested from within Plato's dialogues, and it is a general point of controversy in philosophy. Nonetheless, the theory is considered to be a classical solution to the problem of universals.[6]

The early Greek concept of form precedes attested philosophical usage and is represented by a number of words mainly having to do with vision, sight, and appearance. Plato uses these aspects of sight and appearance from the early Greek concept of the form in his dialogues to explain the Forms and the Good.

Forms edit

The original meaning of the term εἶδος (eidos), "visible form", and related terms μορφή (morphē), "shape",[7] and φαινόμενα (phainomena), "appearances", from φαίνω (phainō), "shine", Indo-European *bʰeh₂- or *bhā-[8] remained stable over the centuries until the beginning of Western philosophy, when they became equivocal, acquiring additional specialized philosophic meanings. Plato used the terms eidos and idea (ἰδέα) interchangeably.[9]

The pre-Socratic philosophers, starting with Thales, noted that appearances change, and began to ask what the thing that changes "really" is. The answer was substance, which stands under the changes and is the actually existing thing being seen. The status of appearances now came into question. What is the form really and how is that related to substance?

The Forms are expounded upon in Plato's dialogues and general speech, in that every object or quality in reality—dogs, human beings, mountains, colors, courage, love, and goodness—has a form. Form answers the question, "What is that?" Plato was going a step further and asking what Form itself is. He supposed that the object was essentially or "really" the Form and that the phenomena were mere shadows mimicking the Form; that is, momentary portrayals of the Form under different circumstances. The problem of universals – how can one thing in general be many things in particular – was solved by presuming that Form was a distinct singular thing but caused plural representations of itself in particular objects. For example, in the dialogue Parmenides, Socrates states: "Nor, again, if a person were to show that all is one by partaking of one, and at the same time many by partaking of many, would that be very astonishing. But if he were to show me that the absolute one was many, or the absolute many one, I should be truly amazed."[10]: 129  Matter is considered particular in itself. For Plato, forms, such as beauty, are more real than any objects that imitate them. Though the forms are timeless and unchanging, physical things are in a constant change of existence. Where forms are unqualified perfection, physical things are qualified and conditioned.[11]

These Forms are the essences of various objects: they are that without which a thing would not be the kind of thing it is. For example, there are countless tables in the world but the Form of tableness is at the core; it is the essence of all of them.[12] Plato's Socrates held that the world of Forms is transcendent to our own world (the world of substances) and also is the essential basis of reality. Super-ordinate to matter, Forms are the most pure of all things. Furthermore, he believed that true knowledge/intelligence is the ability to grasp the world of Forms with one's mind.[13]

A Form is aspatial (transcendent to space) and atemporal (transcendent to time).[14] In the world of Plato, atemporal means that it does not exist within any time period, rather it provides the formal basis for time.[14] It therefore formally grounds beginning, persisting and ending. It is neither eternal in the sense of existing forever, nor mortal, of limited duration. It exists transcendent to time altogether.[15] Forms are aspatial in that they have no spatial dimensions, and thus no orientation in space, nor do they even (like the point) have a location.[16] They are non-physical, but they are not in the mind. Forms are extra-mental (i.e. real in the strictest sense of the word).[17]

A Form is an objective "blueprint" of perfection.[18] The Forms are perfect and unchanging representations of objects and qualities. For example, the Form of beauty or the Form of a triangle. For the form of a triangle say there is a triangle drawn on a blackboard. A triangle is a polygon with 3 sides. The triangle as it is on the blackboard is far from perfect. However, it is only the intelligibility of the Form "triangle" that allows us to know the drawing on the chalkboard is a triangle, and the Form "triangle" is perfect and unchanging. It is exactly the same whenever anyone chooses to consider it; however, time only affects the observer and not the triangle. It follows that the same attributes would exist for the Form of beauty and for all Forms.

Plato explains how we are always many steps away from the idea or Form. The idea of a perfect circle can have us defining, speaking, writing, and drawing about particular circles that are always steps away from the actual being. The perfect circle, partly represented by a curved line, and a precise definition, cannot be drawn. Even the ratio of pi is an irrational number, that only partly helps to fully describe the perfect circle. The idea of the perfect circle is discovered, not invented.

Intelligible realm and separation of the Forms edit

Plato often invokes, particularly in his dialogues Phaedo, Republic and Phaedrus, poetic language to illustrate the mode in which the Forms are said to exist. Near the end of the Phaedo, for example, Plato describes the world of Forms as a pristine region of the physical universe located above the surface of the Earth (Phd. 109a–111c). In the Phaedrus the Forms are in a "place beyond heaven" (hyperouranios topos) (Phdr. 247c ff); and in the Republic the sensible world is contrasted with the intelligible realm (noēton topon) in the famous Allegory of the Cave.

It would be a mistake to take Plato's imagery as positing the intelligible world as a literal physical space apart from this one.[19][20] Plato emphasizes that the Forms are not beings that extend in space (or time), but subsist apart from any physical space whatsoever.[21] Thus we read in the Symposium of the Form of Beauty: "It is not anywhere in another thing, as in an animal, or in earth, or in heaven, or in anything else, but itself by itself with itself," (211b). And in the Timaeus Plato writes: "Since these things are so, we must agree that that which keeps its own form unchangingly, which has not been brought into being and is not destroyed, which neither receives into itself anything else from anywhere else, nor itself enters into anything anywhere, is one thing," (52a, emphasis added).

Ambiguities of the theory edit

Plato's conception of Forms actually differs from dialogue to dialogue, and in certain respects it is never fully explained, so many aspects of the theory are open to interpretation. Forms are first introduced in the Phaedo, but in that dialogue the concept is simply referred to as something the participants are already familiar with, and the theory itself is not developed. Similarly, in the Republic, Plato relies on the concept of Forms as the basis of many of his arguments but feels no need to argue for the validity of the theory itself or to explain precisely what Forms are. Commentators have been left with the task of explaining what Forms are and how visible objects participate in them, and there has been no shortage of disagreement. Some scholars advance the view that Forms are paradigms, perfect examples on which the imperfect world is modeled. Others interpret Forms as universals, so that the Form of Beauty, for example, is that quality that all beautiful things share. Yet others interpret Forms as "stuffs," the conglomeration of all instances of a quality in the visible world. Under this interpretation, we could say there is a little beauty in one person, a little beauty in another – all the beauty in the world put together is the Form of Beauty. Plato himself was aware of the ambiguities and inconsistencies in his Theory of Forms, as is evident from the incisive criticism he makes of his own theory in the Parmenides.

Evidence of Forms edit

Human perception edit

In Cratylus, Plato writes:[22][23]

But if the very nature of knowledge changes, at the time when the change occurs there will be no knowledge, and, according to this view, there will be no one to know and nothing to be known: but if that which knows and that which is known exist ever, and the beautiful and the good and every other thing also exist, then I do not think that they can resemble a process of flux, as we were just now supposing.

Plato believed that long before our bodies ever existed, our souls existed and inhabited heaven, where they became directly acquainted with the forms themselves. Real knowledge, to him, was knowledge of the forms. But knowledge of the forms cannot be gained through sensory experience because the forms are not in the physical world. Therefore, our real knowledge of the forms must be the memory of our initial acquaintance with the forms in heaven. Therefore, what we seem to learn is in fact just remembering.[24]

Perfection edit

No one has ever seen a perfect circle, nor a perfectly straight line, yet everyone knows what a circle and a straight line are. Plato uses the tool-maker's blueprint as evidence that Forms are real:[25]

... when a man has discovered the instrument which is naturally adapted to each work, he must express this natural form, and not others which he fancies, in the material ....

Perceived circles or lines are not exactly circular or straight, and true circles and lines could never be detected since by definition they are sets of infinitely small points. But if the perfect ones were not real, how could they direct the manufacturer?

Criticisms of Platonic Forms edit

Self-criticism edit

One difficulty lies in the conceptualization of the "participation" of an object in a form (or Form). The young Socrates conceives of his solution to the problem of the universals in another metaphor:[26]

Nay, but the idea may be like the day which is one and the same in many places at once, and yet continuous with itself; in this way each idea may be one and the same in all at the same time.

But exactly how is a Form like the day in being everywhere at once? The solution calls for a distinct form, in which the particular instances, which are not identical to the form, participate; i.e., the form is shared out somehow like the day to many places. The concept of "participate", represented in Greek by more than one word, is as obscure in Greek as it is in English. Plato hypothesized that distinctness meant existence as an independent being, thus opening himself to the famous third man argument of Parmenides,[27] which proves that forms cannot independently exist and be participated.[28]

If universal and particulars – say man or greatness – all exist and are the same then the Form is not one but is multiple. If they are only like each other then they contain a form that is the same and others that are different. Thus if we presume that the Form and a particular are alike then there must be another, or third Form, man or greatness by possession of which they are alike. An infinite regression would then result; that is, an endless series of third men. The ultimate participant, greatness, rendering the entire series great, is missing. Moreover, any Form is not unitary but is composed of infinite parts, none of which is the proper Form.

The young Socrates did not give up the Theory of Forms over the Third Man but took another tack, that the particulars do not exist as such. Whatever they are, they "mime" the Forms, appearing to be particulars. This is a clear dip into representationalism, that we cannot observe the objects as they are in themselves but only their representations. That view has the weakness that if only the mimes can be observed then the real Forms cannot be known at all and the observer can have no idea of what the representations are supposed to represent or that they are representations.

Socrates' later answer would be that men already know the Forms because they were in the world of Forms before birth. The mimes only recall these Forms to memory.[29]

Aristotelian criticism edit

 
The central image from Raphael's The School of Athens (1509–1511), depicting Plato (left) and Aristotle (right). Plato is depicted pointing upwards, in reference to his belief in the higher Forms, while Aristotle disagrees and gestures downwards to the here-and-now, in reference to his belief in empiricism.

The topic of Aristotle's criticism of Plato's Theory of Forms is a large one and continues to expand. Rather than quote Plato, Aristotle often summarized. Classical commentaries thus recommended Aristotle as an introduction to Plato, even when in disagreement; the Platonist Syrianus used Aristotelian critiques to further refine the Platonic position on forms in use in his school, a position handed down to his student Proclus.[30] As a historian of prior thought, Aristotle was invaluable, however this was secondary to his own dialectic and in some cases he treats purported implications as if Plato had actually mentioned them, or even defended them. In examining Aristotle's criticism of The Forms, it is helpful to understand Aristotle's own hylomorphic forms, by which he intends to salvage much of Plato's theory.

Plato distinguished between real and non-real "existing things", where the latter term is used of substance. The figures that the artificer places in the gold are not substance, but gold is. Aristotle stated that, for Plato, all things studied by the sciences have Form and asserted that Plato considered only substance to have Form. Uncharitably, this leads him to something like a contradiction: Forms existing as the objects of science, but not-existing as substance. Scottish philosopher W.D. Ross objects to this as a mischaracterization of Plato.[31]

Plato did not claim to know where the line between Form and non-Form is to be drawn. As Cornford points out,[32] those things about which the young Socrates (and Plato) asserted "I have often been puzzled about these things"[33] (in reference to Man, Fire and Water), appear as Forms in later works. However, others do not, such as Hair, Mud, Dirt. Of these, Socrates is made to assert, "it would be too absurd to suppose that they have a Form."

Ross[31] also objects to Aristotle's criticism that Form Otherness accounts for the differences between Forms and purportedly leads to contradictory forms: the Not-tall, the Not-beautiful, etc. That particulars participate in a Form is for Aristotle much too vague to permit analysis. By one way in which he unpacks the concept, the Forms would cease to be of one essence due to any multiple participation. As Ross indicates, Plato didn't make that leap from "A is not B" to "A is Not-B." Otherness would only apply to its own particulars and not to those of other Forms. For example, there is no Form Not-Greek, only particulars of Form Otherness that somehow suppress Form Greek.

Regardless of whether Socrates meant the particulars of Otherness yield Not-Greek, Not-tall, Not-beautiful, etc., the particulars would operate specifically rather than generally, each somehow yielding only one exclusion.

Plato had postulated that we know Forms through a remembrance of the soul's past lives and Aristotle's arguments against this treatment of epistemology are compelling. For Plato, particulars somehow do not exist, and, on the face of it, "that which is non-existent cannot be known".[34] See Metaphysics III 3–4.[35]

Scholastic criticism edit

Nominalism (from Latin nomen, "name") says that ideal universals are mere names, human creations; the blueness shared by sky and blue jeans is a shared concept, communicated by our word "blueness". Blueness is held not to have any existence beyond that which it has in instances of blue things.[36] This concept arose in the Middle Ages,[37] as part of Scholasticism.

Scholasticism was a highly multinational, polyglottal school of philosophy, and the nominalist argument may be more obvious if an example is given in more than one language. For instance, colour terms are strongly variable by language; some languages consider blue and green the same colour, others have monolexemic terms for several shades of blue, which are considered different; other languages, like the Mandarin qing denote both blue and black. The German word "Stift" means a pen or a pencil, and also anything of the same shape. The English "pencil" originally meant "small paintbrush"; the term later included the silver rod used for silverpoint. The German "Bleistift" and "Silberstift" can both be called "Stift", but this term also includes felt-tip pens, which are clearly not pencils.

The shifting and overlapping nature of these concepts makes it easy to imagine them as mere names, with meanings not rigidly defined, but specific enough to be useful for communication. Given a group of objects, how is one to decide if it contains only instances of a single Form, or several mutually exclusive Forms?

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Modern English textbooks and translations prefer "theory of Form" to "theory of Ideas", but the latter has a long and respected tradition starting with Cicero and continuing in German philosophy until present, and some English philosophers prefer this in English too. See W. D. Ross, Plato's Theory of Ideas (1951)
  2. ^ The name of this aspect of Plato's thought is not modern and has not been extracted from certain dialogues by modern scholars. However, it is attributed to Plato without any direct textual evidence that Plato himself holds the views of the speakers of the dialogues. The term was used at least as early as Diogenes Laërtius, who called it (Plato's) "Theory of Ideas:" Πλάτων ἐν τῇ περὶ τῶν ἰδεῶν ὑπολήψει..., "Plato". Lives of Eminent Philosophers. Vol. Book III. p. Paragraph 15.
  3. ^ Plato uses many different words for what is traditionally called Form in English translations and Idea in German and Latin translations (Cicero). These include idéa, morphē, eîdos, and parádeigma, but also génos, phýsis, and ousía. He also uses expressions such as to x auto, "the x itself" or kath' auto "in itself". See Christian Schäfer: Idee/Form/Gestalt/Wesen, in Platon-Lexikon, Darmstadt 2007, p. 157.
  4. ^ "Chapter 28: Form" of The Great Ideas: A Syntopicon of Great Books of the Western World (Vol. II). Encyclopædia Britannica (1952), pp. 526–542. This source states that Form or Idea get capitalized according to this convention when they refer "to that which is separate from the characteristics of material things and from the ideas in our mind."
  5. ^ Watt, Stephen (1997). "Introduction: The Theory of Forms (Books 5–9)". Plato: Republic. London: Wordsworth Editions. pp. xiv–xvi. ISBN 1-85326-483-0.
  6. ^ Kraut, Richard (2017), "Plato", in Zalta, Edward N. (ed.), The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Fall 2017 ed.), Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University, retrieved 2021-05-20
  7. ^ Possibly cognate with Sanskrit bráhman. See Thieme (1952): Bráhman, ZDMG, vol. 102, p. 128.ZDMG online..
  8. ^ "*bhā-". American Heritage Dictionary: Fourth Edition: Appendix I. 2000.
  9. ^ Morabito, Joseph; Sack, Ira; Bhate, Anilkumar (2018). Designing Knowledge Organizations: A Pathway to Innovation Leadership. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons. p. 33. ISBN 9781118905845.
  10. ^ Parmenides.
  11. ^ Kidder, D. S. and Oppenheim, N. D. (2006), The Intellectual Devotional, p. 27, Borders Group, Inc, Ann Arbor, ISBN 978-1-60961-205-4.
  12. ^ Cratylus 389: "For neither does every smith, although he may be making the same instrument for the same purpose, make them all of the same iron. The form must be the same, but the material may vary ...."
  13. ^ For example, Theaetetus 185d–e: "...the mind in itself is its own instrument for contemplating the common terms that apply to everything." "Common terms" here refers to existence, non-existence, likeness, unlikeness, sameness, difference, unity and number.
  14. ^ a b Mammino, Liliana; Ceresoli, Davide; Maruani, Jean; Brändas, Erkki (2020). Advances in Quantum Systems in Chemistry, Physics, and Biology: Selected Proceedings of QSCP-XXIII (Kruger Park, South Africa, September 2018). Cham, Switzerland: Springer Nature. p. 355. ISBN 978-3-030-34940-0.
  15. ^ The creation of the universe is the creation of time: "For there were no days and nights and months and years ... but when he (God) constructed the heaven he created them also." – Timaeus, paragraph 37. For the creation God used "the pattern of the unchangeable," which is "that which is eternal." – paragraph 29. Therefore "eternal" – to aïdion, "the everlasting" – as applied to Form means atemporal.
  16. ^ Space answers to matter, the place-holder of form: "... and there is a third nature (besides Form and form), which is space (chōros), and is eternal (aei "always", certainly not atemporal), and admits not of destruction and provides a home for all created things ... we say of all existence that it must of necessity be in some place and occupy space ...." – Timaeus, paragraph 52. Some readers will have long since remembered that in Aristotle time and space are accidental forms. Plato does not make this distinction and concerns himself mainly with essential form. In Plato, if time and space were admitted to be form, time would be atemporal and space aspatial.
  17. ^ These terms produced with the English prefix a- are not ancient. For the usage refer to "a- (2)". Online Etymology Dictionary. They are however customary terms of modern metaphysics; for example, see Beck, Martha C. (1999). Plato's Self-Corrective Development of the Concepts of Soul, Form and Immortality in Three Arguments of the Phaedo. Edwin Mellon Press. p. 148. ISBN 0-7734-7950-3. and see Hawley, Dr. Katherine (2001). How Things Persist. Oxford: Clarendon Press. Chapter 1. ISBN 0-19-924913-X.
  18. ^ For example, Timaeus 28: "The work of the creator, whenever he looks to the unchangeable and fashions the form and nature of his work after an unchangeable pattern, must necessarily be made fair and perfect ...."
  19. ^ "No sensible man would insist that these things are as I have described them..." (Phd. 114d).
  20. ^ "there is no Platonic 'elsewhere', similar to the Christian 'elsewhere'." (Iris Murdoch, "Metaphysics as a Guide to Morals" (London, Chatto & Windus 1992) 399).
  21. ^ Silverman, Allan (2022), "Plato's Middle Period Metaphysics and Epistemology", in Zalta, Edward N.; Nodelman, Uri (eds.), The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Fall 2022 ed.), Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University, retrieved 2023-02-10
  22. ^ Cratylus, paragraph 440.
  23. ^ Aristotle in Metaphysics Α987a.29–b.14 and Μ1078b9–32 says that Plato devised the Forms to answer a weakness in the doctrine of Heraclitus, who held that nothing exists, but everything is in a state of flow. If nothing exists then nothing can be known. It is possible that Plato took the Socratic search for definitions and extrapolated it into a distinct metaphysical theory. Little is known of the historical Socrates' own views, and the theory of Forms may be a Platonic innovation.
  24. ^ Kidder, D. S. and Oppenheim, N. D, (2006), The Intellectual Devotional, p. 27, Borders Group, Inc, Ann Arbor. ISBN 978-1-60961-205-4
  25. ^ Cratylus, paragraph 389.
  26. ^ Parmenides 131.
  27. ^ The name is from Aristotle, who says in Metaphysics A.IX.990b.15: "(The argument) they call the third man." A summary of the argument and the quote from Aristotle can be found in the venerable Grote, George (1880). "App I Aristotle's Objections to Plato's Theory". Aristotle: Second Edition with Additions. London: John Murray. pp. 559–560 note b. Grote points out that Aristotle lifted this argument from the Parmenides of Plato; certainly, his words indicate the argument was already well-known under that name.
  28. ^ Analysis of the argument has been going on for quite a number of centuries now and some analyses are complex, technical and perhaps tedious for the general reader. Those who are interested in the more technical analyses can find more of a presentation in Hales, Steven D. (1991). (PDF). Auslegung. 17 (1): 67–80. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-09-26. Retrieved 2007-09-26. and Durham, Michael (1997). "Two Men and the Third Man" (PDF). The Dualist: Undergraduate Journal of Philosophy (Stanford University). 4. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-11-10. Retrieved 2014-10-23.
  29. ^ Plato to a large extent identifies what today is called insight with recollection: "whenever on seeing one thing you conceived another whether like or unlike, there must surely have been an act of recollection?" – Phaedo, paragraph 229. Thus geometric reasoning on the part of persons who know no geometry is not insight but is recollection. He does recognize insight: "... with a sudden flash there shines forth understanding about every problem ..." (with regard to "the course of scrutiny") – The Seventh Letter 344b. Unfortunately the hidden world can in no way be verified in this world and its otherworldliness can only be a matter of speculation. Plato was aware of the problem: "How real existence is to be studied or discovered is, I suspect, beyond you and me." – Cratylus, paragraph 439.
  30. ^ Syrianus (2006). O'Meara, Dominic J.; Dillon, John M. (eds.). On Aristotle's Metaphysics 13-14. Bloomsbury Academic Press. ISBN 9780801445323.
  31. ^ a b Ross, Chapter XI, initial.
  32. ^ Pages 82–83.
  33. ^ Parmenides, paragraph 130c.
  34. ^ Posterior Analytics 71b.25.
  35. ^ Book III Chapters 3–4, paragraphs 999a ff.
  36. ^ Borghini, Andrea (March 22, 2018). "The Debate Between Nominalism and Realism". ThoughtCo.
  37. ^ Rodriguez-Pereyra, Gonzalo (2019). "Nominalism in Metaphysics". The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University.

Dialogues that discuss Forms edit

The theory is presented in the following dialogues:[1]

  • Meno: 71–81, 85–86: The discovery (or "recollection") of knowledge as latent in the soul, pointing forward to the theory of Forms
  • Phaedo
73–80: The theory of recollection restated as knowledge of the Forms in soul before birth in the body,109–111: The myth of the afterlife, 100c: The theory of absolute beauty
  • Symposium: 210–211: The archetype of Beauty.
  • Phaedrus: 248–250: Reincarnation according to knowledge of the true, 265–266: The unity problem in thought and nature.
  • Cratylus: 389–390: The archetype as used by craftsmen, 439–440: The problem of knowing the Forms.
  • Theaetetus: 184–186: Universals understood by mind and not perceived by senses.
  • Sophist: 246–259: True essence a Form. Effective solution to participation problem. The problem with being as a Form; if it is participatory then non-being must exist and be being.
  • Parmenides: 129–135: Participatory solution of unity problem. Things partake of archetypal like and unlike, one and many, etc. The nature of the participation (Third man argument). Forms not actually in the thing. The problem of their unknowability.
  • Republic
  • Book III: 402–403: Education the pursuit of the Forms.
  • Book V: 472–483: Philosophy the love of the Forms. The philosopher-king must rule.
  • Books VI–VII: 500–517: Philosopher-guardians as students of the Beautiful and Just implement archetypical order, Metaphor of the Sun: The sun is to sight as Good is to understanding, Allegory of the Cave: The struggle to understand forms like men in cave guessing at shadows in firelight.
  • Books IX–X, 589–599: The ideal state and its citizens. Extensive treatise covering citizenship, government and society with suggestions for laws imitating the Good, the True, the Just, etc. Metaphor of the three beds.
  • Timaeus: 27–52: The design of the universe, including numbers and physics. Some of its patterns. Definition of matter.
  • Philebus: 14-18: Unity problem: one and many, parts and whole.
  • Seventh Letter: 342–345: The epistemology of Forms. The Seventh Letter is possibly spurious.

Bibliography edit

  • Alican, Necip Fikri; Thesleff, Holger (2013). "Rethinking Plato's Forms". Arctos: Acta Philologica Fennica. 47: 11–47. ISSN 0570-734X.
  • Alican, Necip Fikri (2014). "Rethought Forms: How Do They Work?". Arctos: Acta Philologica Fennica. 48: 25–55. ISSN 0570-734X.
  • Cornford, Francis MacDonald (1957). Plato and Parmenides. New York: The Liberal Arts Press.
  • Dancy, Russell (2004). Plato's Introduction of Forms. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521037-18-1.
  • Fine, Gail (1993). On Ideas: Aristotle's Criticism of Plato's Theory of Forms. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-198235-49-1. OCLC 191827006. Reviewed by Gerson, Lloyd P (1993). "Gail Fine, On Ideas. Aristotle's Criticism of Plato's Theory of Forms". Bryn Mawr Classical Review.
  • Fine, Gail (2003). Plato on Knowledge and Forms: Selected Essays. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0-199245-59-8.
  • Grabowski, Francis A. III (2008). Plato, Metaphysics and the Forms. Continuum Studies in Ancient Philosophy. Continuum.
  • Matía Cubillo, Gerardo Óscar (2021). "Suggestions on How to Combine the Platonic Forms to Overcome the Interpretative Difficulties of the Parmenides Dialogue", Revista de Filosofía de la Universidad de Costa Rica, vol. 60, 156: 157–171.
  • Patterson, Richard (1985). Image and Reality in Plato's Metaphysics. Indianapolis: Hackett Publishing Company. ISBN 978-0-915145-72-0.
  • Rodziewicz, Artur (2012). IDEA AND FORM. ΙΔΕΑ ΚΑΙ ΕΙΔΟΣ. On the Foundations of the Philosophy of Plato and the Presocratics (IDEA I FORMA. ΙΔΕΑ ΚΑΙ ΕΙΔΟΣ. O fundamentach filozofii Platona i presokratyków). Wroclaw: WUWR.
  • Ross, William David (1951). Plato's Theory of Ideas. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0-837186-35-1.
  • Thesleff, Holger (2009). Platonic Patterns: A Collection of Studies by Holger Thesleff. Las Vegas: Parmenides Publishing. ISBN 978-1-930972-29-2.
  • Welton, William A., ed. (2002). Plato's Forms: Varieties of Interpretation. Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-7391-0514-6.

External links edit

  1. ^ See "Chapter 28: Form" of The Great Ideas: A Syntopicon of Great Books of the Western World (Vol. II). Encyclopædia Britannica (1952), pp. 536–541.

theory, forms, forms, redirects, here, band, forms, band, theory, forms, theory, ideas, platonic, idealism, platonic, realism, philosophical, theory, metaphysics, developed, classical, greek, philosopher, plato, theory, suggests, that, physical, world, real, t. The Forms redirects here For the band see The Forms band The theory of Forms theory of Ideas 1 2 3 Platonic idealism or Platonic realism is a philosophical theory of metaphysics developed by the Classical Greek philosopher Plato The theory suggests that the physical world is not as real or true as Forms According to this theory Forms conventionally capitalized and also commonly translated as Ideas 4 are the non physical timeless absolute and unchangeable essences of all things of which objects and matter in the physical world are merely imitations Plato speaks of these entities only through the characters primarily Socrates of his dialogues who sometimes suggest that these Forms are the only objects of study that can provide knowledge 5 The theory itself is contested from within Plato s dialogues and it is a general point of controversy in philosophy Nonetheless the theory is considered to be a classical solution to the problem of universals 6 The early Greek concept of form precedes attested philosophical usage and is represented by a number of words mainly having to do with vision sight and appearance Plato uses these aspects of sight and appearance from the early Greek concept of the form in his dialogues to explain the Forms and the Good Contents 1 Forms 1 1 Intelligible realm and separation of the Forms 1 2 Ambiguities of the theory 2 Evidence of Forms 2 1 Human perception 2 2 Perfection 3 Criticisms of Platonic Forms 3 1 Self criticism 3 2 Aristotelian criticism 3 3 Scholastic criticism 4 See also 5 Notes 6 Dialogues that discuss Forms 7 Bibliography 8 External linksForms editThe original meaning of the term eἶdos eidos visible form and related terms morfh morphe shape 7 and fainomena phainomena appearances from fainw phainō shine Indo European bʰeh or bha 8 remained stable over the centuries until the beginning of Western philosophy when they became equivocal acquiring additional specialized philosophic meanings Plato used the terms eidos and idea ἰdea interchangeably 9 The pre Socratic philosophers starting with Thales noted that appearances change and began to ask what the thing that changes really is The answer was substance which stands under the changes and is the actually existing thing being seen The status of appearances now came into question What is the form really and how is that related to substance The Forms are expounded upon in Plato s dialogues and general speech in that every object or quality in reality dogs human beings mountains colors courage love and goodness has a form Form answers the question What is that Plato was going a step further and asking what Form itself is He supposed that the object was essentially or really the Form and that the phenomena were mere shadows mimicking the Form that is momentary portrayals of the Form under different circumstances The problem of universals how can one thing in general be many things in particular was solved by presuming that Form was a distinct singular thing but caused plural representations of itself in particular objects For example in the dialogue Parmenides Socrates states Nor again if a person were to show that all is one by partaking of one and at the same time many by partaking of many would that be very astonishing But if he were to show me that the absolute one was many or the absolute many one I should be truly amazed 10 129 Matter is considered particular in itself For Plato forms such as beauty are more real than any objects that imitate them Though the forms are timeless and unchanging physical things are in a constant change of existence Where forms are unqualified perfection physical things are qualified and conditioned 11 These Forms are the essences of various objects they are that without which a thing would not be the kind of thing it is For example there are countless tables in the world but the Form of tableness is at the core it is the essence of all of them 12 Plato s Socrates held that the world of Forms is transcendent to our own world the world of substances and also is the essential basis of reality Super ordinate to matter Forms are the most pure of all things Furthermore he believed that true knowledge intelligence is the ability to grasp the world of Forms with one s mind 13 A Form is aspatial transcendent to space and atemporal transcendent to time 14 In the world of Plato atemporal means that it does not exist within any time period rather it provides the formal basis for time 14 It therefore formally grounds beginning persisting and ending It is neither eternal in the sense of existing forever nor mortal of limited duration It exists transcendent to time altogether 15 Forms are aspatial in that they have no spatial dimensions and thus no orientation in space nor do they even like the point have a location 16 They are non physical but they are not in the mind Forms are extra mental i e real in the strictest sense of the word 17 A Form is an objective blueprint of perfection 18 The Forms are perfect and unchanging representations of objects and qualities For example the Form of beauty or the Form of a triangle For the form of a triangle say there is a triangle drawn on a blackboard A triangle is a polygon with 3 sides The triangle as it is on the blackboard is far from perfect However it is only the intelligibility of the Form triangle that allows us to know the drawing on the chalkboard is a triangle and the Form triangle is perfect and unchanging It is exactly the same whenever anyone chooses to consider it however time only affects the observer and not the triangle It follows that the same attributes would exist for the Form of beauty and for all Forms Plato explains how we are always many steps away from the idea or Form The idea of a perfect circle can have us defining speaking writing and drawing about particular circles that are always steps away from the actual being The perfect circle partly represented by a curved line and a precise definition cannot be drawn Even the ratio of pi is an irrational number that only partly helps to fully describe the perfect circle The idea of the perfect circle is discovered not invented Intelligible realm and separation of the Forms edit Plato often invokes particularly in his dialogues Phaedo Republic and Phaedrus poetic language to illustrate the mode in which the Forms are said to exist Near the end of the Phaedo for example Plato describes the world of Forms as a pristine region of the physical universe located above the surface of the Earth Phd 109a 111c In the Phaedrus the Forms are in a place beyond heaven hyperouranios topos Phdr 247c ff and in the Republic the sensible world is contrasted with the intelligible realm noeton topon in the famous Allegory of the Cave It would be a mistake to take Plato s imagery as positing the intelligible world as a literal physical space apart from this one 19 20 Plato emphasizes that the Forms are not beings that extend in space or time but subsist apart from any physical space whatsoever 21 Thus we read in the Symposium of the Form of Beauty It is not anywhere in another thing as in an animal or in earth or in heaven or in anything else but itself by itself with itself 211b And in the Timaeus Plato writes Since these things are so we must agree that that which keeps its own form unchangingly which has not been brought into being and is not destroyed which neither receives into itself anything else from anywhere else nor itself enters into anything anywhere is one thing 52a emphasis added Ambiguities of the theory edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Plato s conception of Forms actually differs from dialogue to dialogue and in certain respects it is never fully explained so many aspects of the theory are open to interpretation Forms are first introduced in the Phaedo but in that dialogue the concept is simply referred to as something the participants are already familiar with and the theory itself is not developed Similarly in the Republic Plato relies on the concept of Forms as the basis of many of his arguments but feels no need to argue for the validity of the theory itself or to explain precisely what Forms are Commentators have been left with the task of explaining what Forms are and how visible objects participate in them and there has been no shortage of disagreement Some scholars advance the view that Forms are paradigms perfect examples on which the imperfect world is modeled Others interpret Forms as universals so that the Form of Beauty for example is that quality that all beautiful things share Yet others interpret Forms as stuffs the conglomeration of all instances of a quality in the visible world Under this interpretation we could say there is a little beauty in one person a little beauty in another all the beauty in the world put together is the Form of Beauty Plato himself was aware of the ambiguities and inconsistencies in his Theory of Forms as is evident from the incisive criticism he makes of his own theory in the Parmenides Evidence of Forms editHuman perception editIn Cratylus Plato writes 22 23 But if the very nature of knowledge changes at the time when the change occurs there will be no knowledge and according to this view there will be no one to know and nothing to be known but if that which knows and that which is known exist ever and the beautiful and the good and every other thing also exist then I do not think that they can resemble a process of flux as we were just now supposing Plato believed that long before our bodies ever existed our souls existed and inhabited heaven where they became directly acquainted with the forms themselves Real knowledge to him was knowledge of the forms But knowledge of the forms cannot be gained through sensory experience because the forms are not in the physical world Therefore our real knowledge of the forms must be the memory of our initial acquaintance with the forms in heaven Therefore what we seem to learn is in fact just remembering 24 Perfection editNo one has ever seen a perfect circle nor a perfectly straight line yet everyone knows what a circle and a straight line are Plato uses the tool maker s blueprint as evidence that Forms are real 25 when a man has discovered the instrument which is naturally adapted to each work he must express this natural form and not others which he fancies in the material Perceived circles or lines are not exactly circular or straight and true circles and lines could never be detected since by definition they are sets of infinitely small points But if the perfect ones were not real how could they direct the manufacturer Criticisms of Platonic Forms editSelf criticism edit One difficulty lies in the conceptualization of the participation of an object in a form or Form The young Socrates conceives of his solution to the problem of the universals in another metaphor 26 Nay but the idea may be like the day which is one and the same in many places at once and yet continuous with itself in this way each idea may be one and the same in all at the same time But exactly how is a Form like the day in being everywhere at once The solution calls for a distinct form in which the particular instances which are not identical to the form participate i e the form is shared out somehow like the day to many places The concept of participate represented in Greek by more than one word is as obscure in Greek as it is in English Plato hypothesized that distinctness meant existence as an independent being thus opening himself to the famous third man argument of Parmenides 27 which proves that forms cannot independently exist and be participated 28 If universal and particulars say man or greatness all exist and are the same then the Form is not one but is multiple If they are only like each other then they contain a form that is the same and others that are different Thus if we presume that the Form and a particular are alike then there must be another or third Form man or greatness by possession of which they are alike An infinite regression would then result that is an endless series of third men The ultimate participant greatness rendering the entire series great is missing Moreover any Form is not unitary but is composed of infinite parts none of which is the proper Form The young Socrates did not give up the Theory of Forms over the Third Man but took another tack that the particulars do not exist as such Whatever they are they mime the Forms appearing to be particulars This is a clear dip into representationalism that we cannot observe the objects as they are in themselves but only their representations That view has the weakness that if only the mimes can be observed then the real Forms cannot be known at all and the observer can have no idea of what the representations are supposed to represent or that they are representations Socrates later answer would be that men already know the Forms because they were in the world of Forms before birth The mimes only recall these Forms to memory 29 Aristotelian criticism edit nbsp The central image from Raphael s The School of Athens 1509 1511 depicting Plato left and Aristotle right Plato is depicted pointing upwards in reference to his belief in the higher Forms while Aristotle disagrees and gestures downwards to the here and now in reference to his belief in empiricism The topic of Aristotle s criticism of Plato s Theory of Forms is a large one and continues to expand Rather than quote Plato Aristotle often summarized Classical commentaries thus recommended Aristotle as an introduction to Plato even when in disagreement the Platonist Syrianus used Aristotelian critiques to further refine the Platonic position on forms in use in his school a position handed down to his student Proclus 30 As a historian of prior thought Aristotle was invaluable however this was secondary to his own dialectic and in some cases he treats purported implications as if Plato had actually mentioned them or even defended them In examining Aristotle s criticism of The Forms it is helpful to understand Aristotle s own hylomorphic forms by which he intends to salvage much of Plato s theory Plato distinguished between real and non real existing things where the latter term is used of substance The figures that the artificer places in the gold are not substance but gold is Aristotle stated that for Plato all things studied by the sciences have Form and asserted that Plato considered only substance to have Form Uncharitably this leads him to something like a contradiction Forms existing as the objects of science but not existing as substance Scottish philosopher W D Ross objects to this as a mischaracterization of Plato 31 Plato did not claim to know where the line between Form and non Form is to be drawn As Cornford points out 32 those things about which the young Socrates and Plato asserted I have often been puzzled about these things 33 in reference to Man Fire and Water appear as Forms in later works However others do not such as Hair Mud Dirt Of these Socrates is made to assert it would be too absurd to suppose that they have a Form Ross 31 also objects to Aristotle s criticism that Form Otherness accounts for the differences between Forms and purportedly leads to contradictory forms the Not tall the Not beautiful etc That particulars participate in a Form is for Aristotle much too vague to permit analysis By one way in which he unpacks the concept the Forms would cease to be of one essence due to any multiple participation As Ross indicates Plato didn t make that leap from A is not B to A is Not B Otherness would only apply to its own particulars and not to those of other Forms For example there is no Form Not Greek only particulars of Form Otherness that somehow suppress Form Greek Regardless of whether Socrates meant the particulars of Otherness yield Not Greek Not tall Not beautiful etc the particulars would operate specifically rather than generally each somehow yielding only one exclusion Plato had postulated that we know Forms through a remembrance of the soul s past lives and Aristotle s arguments against this treatment of epistemology are compelling For Plato particulars somehow do not exist and on the face of it that which is non existent cannot be known 34 See Metaphysics III 3 4 35 Scholastic criticism edit Nominalism from Latin nomen name says that ideal universals are mere names human creations the blueness shared by sky and blue jeans is a shared concept communicated by our word blueness Blueness is held not to have any existence beyond that which it has in instances of blue things 36 This concept arose in the Middle Ages 37 as part of Scholasticism Scholasticism was a highly multinational polyglottal school of philosophy and the nominalist argument may be more obvious if an example is given in more than one language For instance colour terms are strongly variable by language some languages consider blue and green the same colour others have monolexemic terms for several shades of blue which are considered different other languages like the Mandarin qing denote both blue and black The German word Stift means a pen or a pencil and also anything of the same shape The English pencil originally meant small paintbrush the term later included the silver rod used for silverpoint The German Bleistift and Silberstift can both be called Stift but this term also includes felt tip pens which are clearly not pencils The shifting and overlapping nature of these concepts makes it easy to imagine them as mere names with meanings not rigidly defined but specific enough to be useful for communication Given a group of objects how is one to decide if it contains only instances of a single Form or several mutually exclusive Forms See also editArchetype Analogy of the Divided Line Dmuta in Mandaeism Exaggerated realism Form of the Good Hyperuranion Idealism Jungian archetypes Map territory relation Nominalism Plotinus Problem of universals Substantial form Platonic solid Plato s unwritten doctrines for debates over Forms and Plato s higher esoteric theories Realism disambiguation True form Taoism Notes edit Modern English textbooks and translations prefer theory of Form to theory of Ideas but the latter has a long and respected tradition starting with Cicero and continuing in German philosophy until present and some English philosophers prefer this in English too See W D Ross Plato s Theory of Ideas 1951 The name of this aspect of Plato s thought is not modern and has not been extracted from certain dialogues by modern scholars However it is attributed to Plato without any direct textual evidence that Plato himself holds the views of the speakers of the dialogues The term was used at least as early as Diogenes Laertius who called it Plato s Theory of Ideas Platwn ἐn tῇ perὶ tῶn ἰdeῶn ὑpolhpsei Plato Lives of Eminent Philosophers Vol Book III p Paragraph 15 Plato uses many different words for what is traditionally called Form in English translations and Idea in German and Latin translations Cicero These include idea morphe eidos and paradeigma but also genos physis and ousia He also uses expressions such as to x auto the x itself or kath auto in itself See Christian Schafer Idee Form Gestalt Wesen in Platon Lexikon Darmstadt 2007 p 157 Chapter 28 Form of The Great Ideas A Syntopicon of Great Books of the Western World Vol II Encyclopaedia Britannica 1952 pp 526 542 This source states that Form or Idea get capitalized according to this convention when they refer to that which is separate from the characteristics of material things and from the ideas in our mind Watt Stephen 1997 Introduction The Theory of Forms Books 5 9 Plato Republic London Wordsworth Editions pp xiv xvi ISBN 1 85326 483 0 Kraut Richard 2017 Plato in Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Fall 2017 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University retrieved 2021 05 20 Possibly cognate with Sanskrit brahman See Thieme 1952 Brahman ZDMG vol 102 p 128 ZDMG online bha American Heritage Dictionary Fourth Edition Appendix I 2000 Morabito Joseph Sack Ira Bhate Anilkumar 2018 Designing Knowledge Organizations A Pathway to Innovation Leadership Hoboken NJ John Wiley amp Sons p 33 ISBN 9781118905845 Parmenides Kidder D S and Oppenheim N D 2006 The Intellectual Devotional p 27 Borders Group Inc Ann Arbor ISBN 978 1 60961 205 4 Cratylus 389 For neither does every smith although he may be making the same instrument for the same purpose make them all of the same iron The form must be the same but the material may vary For example Theaetetus 185d e the mind in itself is its own instrument for contemplating the common terms that apply to everything Common terms here refers to existence non existence likeness unlikeness sameness difference unity and number a b Mammino Liliana Ceresoli Davide Maruani Jean Brandas Erkki 2020 Advances in Quantum Systems in Chemistry Physics and Biology Selected Proceedings of QSCP XXIII Kruger Park South Africa September 2018 Cham Switzerland Springer Nature p 355 ISBN 978 3 030 34940 0 The creation of the universe is the creation of time For there were no days and nights and months and years but when he God constructed the heaven he created them also Timaeus paragraph 37 For the creation God used the pattern of the unchangeable which is that which is eternal paragraph 29 Therefore eternal to aidion the everlasting as applied to Form means atemporal Space answers to matter the place holder of form and there is a third nature besides Form and form which is space chōros and is eternal aei always certainly not atemporal and admits not of destruction and provides a home for all created things we say of all existence that it must of necessity be in some place and occupy space Timaeus paragraph 52 Some readers will have long since remembered that in Aristotle time and space are accidental forms Plato does not make this distinction and concerns himself mainly with essential form In Plato if time and space were admitted to be form time would be atemporal and space aspatial These terms produced with the English prefix a are not ancient For the usage refer to a 2 Online Etymology Dictionary They are however customary terms of modern metaphysics for example see Beck Martha C 1999 Plato s Self Corrective Development of the Concepts of Soul Form and Immortality in Three Arguments of the Phaedo Edwin Mellon Press p 148 ISBN 0 7734 7950 3 and see Hawley Dr Katherine 2001 How Things Persist Oxford Clarendon Press Chapter 1 ISBN 0 19 924913 X For example Timaeus 28 The work of the creator whenever he looks to the unchangeable and fashions the form and nature of his work after an unchangeable pattern must necessarily be made fair and perfect No sensible man would insist that these things are as I have described them Phd 114d there is no Platonic elsewhere similar to the Christian elsewhere Iris Murdoch Metaphysics as a Guide to Morals London Chatto amp Windus 1992 399 Silverman Allan 2022 Plato s Middle Period Metaphysics and Epistemology in Zalta Edward N Nodelman Uri eds The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Fall 2022 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University retrieved 2023 02 10 Cratylus paragraph 440 Aristotle in Metaphysics A987a 29 b 14 and M1078b9 32 says that Plato devised the Forms to answer a weakness in the doctrine of Heraclitus who held that nothing exists but everything is in a state of flow If nothing exists then nothing can be known It is possible that Plato took the Socratic search for definitions and extrapolated it into a distinct metaphysical theory Little is known of the historical Socrates own views and the theory of Forms may be a Platonic innovation Kidder D S and Oppenheim N D 2006 The Intellectual Devotional p 27 Borders Group Inc Ann Arbor ISBN 978 1 60961 205 4 Cratylus paragraph 389 Parmenides 131 The name is from Aristotle who says in Metaphysics A IX 990b 15 The argument they call the third man A summary of the argument and the quote from Aristotle can be found in the venerable Grote George 1880 App I Aristotle s Objections to Plato s Theory Aristotle Second Edition with Additions London John Murray pp 559 560 note b Grote points out that Aristotle lifted this argument from the Parmenides of Plato certainly his words indicate the argument was already well known under that name Analysis of the argument has been going on for quite a number of centuries now and some analyses are complex technical and perhaps tedious for the general reader Those who are interested in the more technical analyses can find more of a presentation in Hales Steven D 1991 The Recurring Problem of the Third Man PDF Auslegung 17 1 67 80 Archived from the original PDF on 2007 09 26 Retrieved 2007 09 26 and Durham Michael 1997 Two Men and the Third Man PDF The Dualist Undergraduate Journal of Philosophy Stanford University 4 Archived from the original PDF on 2014 11 10 Retrieved 2014 10 23 Plato to a large extent identifies what today is called insight with recollection whenever on seeing one thing you conceived another whether like or unlike there must surely have been an act of recollection Phaedo paragraph 229 Thus geometric reasoning on the part of persons who know no geometry is not insight but is recollection He does recognize insight with a sudden flash there shines forth understanding about every problem with regard to the course of scrutiny The Seventh Letter 344b Unfortunately the hidden world can in no way be verified in this world and its otherworldliness can only be a matter of speculation Plato was aware of the problem How real existence is to be studied or discovered is I suspect beyond you and me Cratylus paragraph 439 Syrianus 2006 O Meara Dominic J Dillon John M eds On Aristotle s Metaphysics 13 14 Bloomsbury Academic Press ISBN 9780801445323 a b Ross Chapter XI initial Pages 82 83 Parmenides paragraph 130c Posterior Analytics 71b 25 Book III Chapters 3 4 paragraphs 999a ff Borghini Andrea March 22 2018 The Debate Between Nominalism and Realism ThoughtCo Rodriguez Pereyra Gonzalo 2019 Nominalism in Metaphysics The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University Dialogues that discuss Forms editThe theory is presented in the following dialogues 1 Meno 71 81 85 86 The discovery or recollection of knowledge as latent in the soul pointing forward to the theory of Forms Phaedo73 80 The theory of recollection restated as knowledge of the Forms in soul before birth in the body 109 111 The myth of the afterlife 100c The theory of absolute beautySymposium 210 211 The archetype of Beauty Phaedrus 248 250 Reincarnation according to knowledge of the true 265 266 The unity problem in thought and nature Cratylus 389 390 The archetype as used by craftsmen 439 440 The problem of knowing the Forms Theaetetus 184 186 Universals understood by mind and not perceived by senses Sophist 246 259 True essence a Form Effective solution to participation problem The problem with being as a Form if it is participatory then non being must exist and be being Parmenides 129 135 Participatory solution of unity problem Things partake of archetypal like and unlike one and many etc The nature of the participation Third man argument Forms not actually in the thing The problem of their unknowability RepublicBook III 402 403 Education the pursuit of the Forms Book V 472 483 Philosophy the love of the Forms The philosopher king must rule Books VI VII 500 517 Philosopher guardians as students of the Beautiful and Just implement archetypical order Metaphor of the Sun The sun is to sight as Good is to understanding Allegory of the Cave The struggle to understand forms like men in cave guessing at shadows in firelight Books IX X 589 599 The ideal state and its citizens Extensive treatise covering citizenship government and society with suggestions for laws imitating the Good the True the Just etc Metaphor of the three beds Timaeus 27 52 The design of the universe including numbers and physics Some of its patterns Definition of matter Philebus 14 18 Unity problem one and many parts and whole Seventh Letter 342 345 The epistemology of Forms The Seventh Letter is possibly spurious Bibliography editAlican Necip Fikri Thesleff Holger 2013 Rethinking Plato s Forms Arctos Acta Philologica Fennica 47 11 47 ISSN 0570 734X Alican Necip Fikri 2014 Rethought Forms How Do They Work Arctos Acta Philologica Fennica 48 25 55 ISSN 0570 734X Cornford Francis MacDonald 1957 Plato and Parmenides New York The Liberal Arts Press Dancy Russell 2004 Plato s Introduction of Forms Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521037 18 1 Fine Gail 1993 On Ideas Aristotle s Criticism of Plato s Theory of Forms Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 198235 49 1 OCLC 191827006 Reviewed by Gerson Lloyd P 1993 Gail Fine On Ideas Aristotle s Criticism of Plato s Theory of Forms Bryn Mawr Classical Review Fine Gail 2003 Plato on Knowledge and Forms Selected Essays Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 199245 59 8 Grabowski Francis A III 2008 Plato Metaphysics and the Forms Continuum Studies in Ancient Philosophy Continuum Matia Cubillo Gerardo oscar 2021 Suggestions on How to Combine the Platonic Forms to Overcome the Interpretative Difficulties of the Parmenides Dialogue Revista de Filosofia de la Universidad de Costa Rica vol 60 156 157 171 Patterson Richard 1985 Image and Reality in Plato s Metaphysics Indianapolis Hackett Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 915145 72 0 Rodziewicz Artur 2012 IDEA AND FORM IDEA KAI EIDOS On the Foundations of the Philosophy of Plato and the Presocratics IDEA I FORMA IDEA KAI EIDOS O fundamentach filozofii Platona i presokratykow Wroclaw WUWR Ross William David 1951 Plato s Theory of Ideas Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 837186 35 1 Thesleff Holger 2009 Platonic Patterns A Collection of Studies by Holger Thesleff Las Vegas Parmenides Publishing ISBN 978 1 930972 29 2 Welton William A ed 2002 Plato s Forms Varieties of Interpretation Lanham Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 7391 0514 6 External links edit nbsp Look up eἶdos in Wiktionary the free dictionary Form Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed 1911 Cohen Marc 2006 Theory of Forms Philosophy 320 History of Ancient Philosophy University of Washington Philosophy Department Lesson Three Plato s Theory of Forms International Catholic University Ruggiero Tim July 2002 Plato And The Theory of Forms philosophical society com Philosophical Society com Silverman Allan Plato s Middle Period Metaphysics and Epistemology In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Balaguer Mark Platonism in Metaphysics In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy See Chapter 28 Form of The Great Ideas A Syntopicon of Great Books of the Western World Vol II Encyclopaedia Britannica 1952 pp 536 541 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Theory of forms amp oldid 1202257224, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.