Tuesday, May 28, 2019

Plato’s Theory of Ideas :: History of Philosophy

Topic Platos Theory of IdeasStudent Milena SadakDate december, 2001Authors introductionary remarkStill innocent and so nave, the common humane consciousness slowly began to raise itself, giving birth thereat to great men, who will forever remain in the hearts of the consecrated. whizz of those great men was Plato.Plato as a philosopher. Plato as an artist. Plato as the birth of concsiousness of its own limitedness. Plato as my own flight from reality.Being young and inexperienced, and having read wholeness sm solely but important part of Platos great treasury of dialogues, I stood lost and confused. It is impossible for a philosopher to believe in the existence of dickens simultaneous worlds. But that is what his words are saying to me. Did he truly believe that our souls had existed in that perfect world, prior to their birth? Being certain that Plato did non think so, and having realized the boundaries of my understanding, Ive consulted people who dedicated their lives to thi s great philosopher. I must admit that it was just then that my confusion reached its utmost point. I ready never seen so many confronted opinions on the same topic. Well, we have the dialogues right in front of us, what is the thing thats keeping us from realizing Platos legal opinion as it is, and at least reduce the number of confrontations? I know what my obstacle is youth, lack of experience, lack of knowledge, but what is theirs?CONCLUSION The young common human consciousness created a genius, but a young one, such as itself. Youth as such carries with it the impossibility of valid thought-word transmission. The space is too big. In time, the young common consciousness perfects itself. Its improvement implies the improvement of individual consciousness. The possibility to validly transmit thought-word is greater, therefore the interspace is reduce, and the number of dissacords in interpretations of philosophical works is reduced as well. Plato still belongs to the young com mon consciousness, therefore, we have inummerable explanations of one and the same thing.Theory of IdeasNowadays, Plato is rightfully considered the originator of idealism. To explain in details what the concept of idealism means represents a great difficulty and demands great effort, so I will merely define idealism as a philosophy which reduces all existence to forms of thought, or in Platos case, idea. The word idea originates from the Greek word eidos which literally means appearance, image.In Platos thought, idea represents the firstly principle, cause, form, shape, essence.

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