Philosophy - Plato Flashcards
What does ‘a priori’ mean?
.Based on reason
.Knowledge that does not require experience or evidence
.The argument is prior to evidence as it is not required
.These statements already contain a conclusion that is logically necessary
Examples of ‘a priori’ knowledge
2+2=4
All bachelors are male
What does ‘a posteriori’ mean?
.Based on evidence
.Knowledge that is dependent on experience or evidence
.The argument is post-evidence, meaning after/following on from evidence (think post-mortem - which happens after death)
Examples of ‘a posteriori’ knowledge
It is sunny in August
My RE teacher has bad breath
What is empirical evidence?
Knowledge acquired through the sense
What did Plato believe about empirical evidence and the world around us?
.Empirical evidence cannot always be accepted as fact
.We should not trust our senses
.The world around us is not the real world
For Plato, what was knowledge of true reality?
‘a priori’
What does Plato believe about love and beauty?
Innate knowledge that is inherited
What is Plato’s theory of reality?
.Dualist
.Two forms of reality
.We are in the material one
.There is a perfect unchanging one known as the world of forms
Why does Plato have a problem with art? In particular statues?
They are imitations of imitations, even more imperfect than the things they are trying to copy - further from the perfect forms than we already are
What does Plato mean by ‘everything tangible flows’?
.Flow means move and change, it won’t remain the same
.Tangible is anything material that we can touch
.He is saying everything in our world will erode with time
.Whereas the world of forms isn’t tangible so it doesn’t change/flow/erode with time
.We can see this change/flow/erosion through our senses
How is Plato’s forms like gingerbread and cutter?
.The world of forms has the cutter, the original shape of the material things
.The imitation of these forms in the material world are the gingerbread men, formed from the cutter
.They are not the exact shape as the cutter, but a close imitation
.The gingerbread man is tangible and can change with time (eaten) but the cutter can not be
Why does Plato focus more on concepts like beauty, truth, and goodness rather than cats?
Plato focused more on concepts like beauty, truth, and goodness rather than cats because these concepts could be applied to many different scenarios (like a person, a piece of music or a landscape). This led him to suggest that there is a form of beauty where all these different ideas of it correspond to some extent.
How does Plato explain how we can recognize the forms?
Plato argues that all humans can recognize true forms since our soul before it was bound to our body, was connected to the world of forms. This means we have a dim recollection of the forms from the moment we are born, meaning we can easily recognize concepts like beauty and goodness.
State the hierarchy of Plato’s forms, including the religious interpretations of the theory
- The form of the good (Ultimate Being)
- The world of forms (Heavenly world
- The visible/material world (our world)
- Statues/images
Which is the most important form?
The form of good
What do all the ideal forms have in common?
The presence of good
Once you understand the form of good what can you do?
Understand all other forms
What does Plato say good is like? Why?
Plato says that good is like the sun, it illuminates everything else, the further you are from it the paler everything is
What is the highest knowledge humans are capable of? according to Plato
Knowledge of good
How can someone learn the truth behind the illusion of the material world?
Only the person who questions and investigates can learn the truth
What does the cave represent in Plato’s analogy of the cave?
This represents the material world. The world that contains the imitations of the true forms
What do the shadows represent in Plato’s analogy of the cave?
These represent the imitations of the forms in the material world
What do the prisoners represent in Plato’s analogy of the cave?
They represent society and how ignorant it is
What does the escape from the save represent in Plato’s analogy of the cave?
A person from society and his journey to enlightenment and knowledge
What does the sun represent in Plato’s analogy of the cave?
This represents the form of forms (the form of good) which is present in every form and makes things knowable and seen
What does the outside world represent in Plato’s analogy of the cave?
This represents the world of forms (the real world)
What does the return to the cave represent in Plato’s analogy of the cave?
This represents the enlightened peoples return to society and society’s stubbornness to learn the truth (links back to how they put Socrates to death for trying to teach them)
What does the freed prisoner represent in Plato’s analogy of the cave?
They represent enlightened people who have left the material world and learnt of the real world, for example philosophers
Where is the analogy of the cave?
In Plato’s Republic
For statements
‘If the cave dwellers are happy in their ignorance, it is better to leave them to it’
It is all they know, they can be happy like that
It hurts them to leave