In Plato’s dialogues, Socrates calls things like justice, piety, and largeness “forms.” In several of these dialogues, he makes clear that forms are very different from familiar objects like tables and trees. Why, exactly, does he think that they differ and how are they supposed to do so? This chapter argues that in the Phaedo Socrates does not assume that they are different, but rather, over five stages of the dialogue, provides an account of how and why they do so. To fully understand the claims made in the first stage, one must look to the next stage, and so on until the final stage. Socrates' ultimate reason for distinguishing forms from ordinary objects does not depend on our intuitions about things like justice and largeness, nor on t...
It is essential in any treatment of Plato\u27s Theory of Forms to determine what sort of thing a For...
It is essential in any treatment of Plato\u27s Theory of Forms to determine what sort of thing a For...
Plato’s Theory of Participation: Platonic Forms and the Making of Sense Objects It is correct to say...
In Plato’s dialogues, Socrates calls things like justice, piety, and largeness “forms.” In several o...
Plato believed that Forms were causes. Why? Philosophers since Aristotle have contended that Forms c...
Plato believed that Forms were causes. Why? Philosophers since Aristotle have contended that Forms c...
本論文は、二〇二一年十一月三日に開かれた京都哲学会講演会で発表した原稿を大幅に書き直したものです。This article addresses itself to two central and fu...
When we hear about Forms in the Phaedo, (74a-79b) Socrates makes it very clear that even though sens...
the section of the Phaedo that recounts Socrates ’ intellectual ‘au-tobiography ’ and culminates in ...
This paper argues that we can make best sense of four key passages as well as the Philebus as a whol...
This dissertation argues that in Plato’s Phaedo and Timaeus, the forms are active causes. By this I...
This paper argues that we can make best sense of four key passages as well as the Philebus as a whol...
Journal ArticleIn Phaedo 74b6-c6 Plato offers an important argument for the proposition that such th...
This dissertation systematically examines Plato\u27s Theory of Forms from different perspectives. It...
It is essential in any treatment of Plato\u27s Theory of Forms to determine what sort of thing a For...
It is essential in any treatment of Plato\u27s Theory of Forms to determine what sort of thing a For...
It is essential in any treatment of Plato\u27s Theory of Forms to determine what sort of thing a For...
Plato’s Theory of Participation: Platonic Forms and the Making of Sense Objects It is correct to say...
In Plato’s dialogues, Socrates calls things like justice, piety, and largeness “forms.” In several o...
Plato believed that Forms were causes. Why? Philosophers since Aristotle have contended that Forms c...
Plato believed that Forms were causes. Why? Philosophers since Aristotle have contended that Forms c...
本論文は、二〇二一年十一月三日に開かれた京都哲学会講演会で発表した原稿を大幅に書き直したものです。This article addresses itself to two central and fu...
When we hear about Forms in the Phaedo, (74a-79b) Socrates makes it very clear that even though sens...
the section of the Phaedo that recounts Socrates ’ intellectual ‘au-tobiography ’ and culminates in ...
This paper argues that we can make best sense of four key passages as well as the Philebus as a whol...
This dissertation argues that in Plato’s Phaedo and Timaeus, the forms are active causes. By this I...
This paper argues that we can make best sense of four key passages as well as the Philebus as a whol...
Journal ArticleIn Phaedo 74b6-c6 Plato offers an important argument for the proposition that such th...
This dissertation systematically examines Plato\u27s Theory of Forms from different perspectives. It...
It is essential in any treatment of Plato\u27s Theory of Forms to determine what sort of thing a For...
It is essential in any treatment of Plato\u27s Theory of Forms to determine what sort of thing a For...
It is essential in any treatment of Plato\u27s Theory of Forms to determine what sort of thing a For...
Plato’s Theory of Participation: Platonic Forms and the Making of Sense Objects It is correct to say...