PLATO

plāˈtō, 427?–347 b.c., Greek philosopher. Plato's teachings have been among the most influential in the history of Western civilization.

Life

After pursuing the liberal studies of his day, he became in 407 b.c. a pupil and friend of Socrates. From about 388 b.c. he lived for a time at the court of Dionysius the Elder, tyrant of Syracuse. On his return to Athens, Plato founded a school, the Academy, where he taught mathematics and philosophy until his death. His teaching was interrupted by two more visits to Syracuse (367 and 361 b.c.), which he made in the vain hope of seeing his political ideals realized in Sicily.

Works and Philosophy

Plato was a superb writer, and his works are part of the world's great literature. His extant work is in the form of dialogues and epistles. Some of the dialogues and many of the epistles attributed to him are known to be spurious, while others are doubtful. In the various dialogues he touched upon almost every problem that has occupied subsequent philosophers. The dialogues are divided into three groups according to the probable order of composition.

Early Works

The earliest group of dialogues, called Socratic, include chiefly the Apology, which presents the defense of Socrates; the Meno, which asks whether virtue can be taught; and the Gorgias, which concerns the absolute nature of right and wrong. These early dialogues present Socrates in conversations that illustrate his main ideas—the unity of virtue and knowledge and of virtue and happiness. Each dialogue treats a particular problem without necessarily resolving the issues raised.

Philosophical Themes and Mature Works

Plato was always concerned with the fundamental philosophical problem of working out a theory of the art of living and knowing. Like Socrates, Plato began convinced of the ultimately harmonious structure of the universe, but he went further than his mentor in trying to construct a comprehensive philosophical scheme. His goal was to show the rational relationship between the soul, the state, and the cosmos. This is the general theme of the great dialogues of his middle years: the Republic, Phaedo, Symposium, Phaedrus, Timaeus, and Philebus. In the Republic he shows how the operation of justice within the individual can best be understood through the analogy of the operation of justice within the state, which Plato proceeds to set out in his conception of the ideal state. However, justice cannot be understood fully unless seen in relation to the Idea of the Good, which is the supreme principle of order and truth.

It is in these dialogues that the famous Platonic Ideas (see realism) are discussed. Plato argued for the independent reality of Ideas as the only guarantee of ethical standards and of objective scientific knowledge. In the Republic and the Phaedo he postulates his theory of Forms. Ideas or Forms are the immutable archetypes of all temporal phenomena, and only these Ideas are completely real; the physical world possesses only relative reality. The Forms assure order and intelligence in a world that is in a state of constant flux. They provide the pattern from which the world of sense derives its meaning.

The supreme Idea is the Idea of the Good, whose function and place in the world of Ideas is analogous to that of the sun in the physical world. Plato saw his task as that of leading men to a vision of the Forms and to some sense of the highest good. The principal path is suggested in the famous metaphor of the cave in the Republic, in which man in his uninstructed state is chained in a world of shadows. However, man can move up toward the sun, or highest good, through the study of what Plato calls dialectic. The supreme science, dialectic, is a method of inquiry that proceeds by a constant questioning of assumptions and by explaining a particular idea in terms of a more general one until the ultimate ground of explanation is reached.

The Republic, the first Utopia in literature, asserts that the philosopher is the only one capable of ruling the just state, since through his study of dialectic he understands the harmony of all parts of the universe in their relation to the Idea of the Good. Each social class happily performs the function for which it is suited; the philosopher rules, the warrior fights, and the worker enjoys the fruits of his labor. In the Symposium, perhaps the most poetic of the dialogues, the path to the highest good is described as the ascent by true lovers to eternal beauty, and in the Phaedo the path is viewed as the pilgrimage of the philosopher through death to the world of eternal truth.

Late Works

Many of the late dialogues are devoted to technical philosophic issues. The most important of these are the Theaetetus; the Parmenides, which deals with the relation between the one and the many; and the Sophist, which discusses the nature of nonbeing. Plato's longest work, the Laws, written during his middle and late periods, discusses in practical terms the nature of the state.

Bibliography

See translation of the dialogues by B. Jowett, ed. by D. J. Allan and H. E. Daley (4 vol., 4th ed., rev. 1953); A. E. Taylor, Plato: The Man and His Work (1927); R. Bambrough, ed., New Essays on Plato and Aristotle (1965); G. Vlastos, Platonic Studies (1973); G. F. Else, Plato and Aristotle on Poetry (1987); Jacob A. Kline, A Commentary on Plato's Meno (1989); C. Hampton, Pleasure, Knowledge, and Being: An Analysis of Plato's Philebus (1990).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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...New Testament. 1 Though the influence of Plato has been continuous in antiquity, throughout...spreading throughout Europe, the praise of Plato has not been absolutely universal. The...have been writers needlessly inimical to Plato, unwilling or unable to discern their...
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Framing Theaetetus: Plato and Rhetorical (Mis)representation1 by Carol Poster I. Prolegomena: Plato and Rhetorical Scholarship How rhetoricians should interpret Plato is probably an unanswerable question. Innumerable commentators, including...
Plato on Identity, Sameness, and Difference...cases of sameness among different things that Plato postulates the existence of separate forms...instances of forms and the forms themselves that Plato is compelled somehow to take account of potentially...
Is There an Arche Kakou in Plato? by James L. Wood DOES PLATO ADMIT AN ARCHE KAKOU, a source or principle of evil...Or, is evil merely a human phenomenon? Just what does Plato understand by evil anyway? These questions have been repeatedly...
Altruism and the Art of Writing: Plato, Cicero, and Leo Strauss. by William...thereby attributing two distinct errors to Plato: the original mistake of defending justice...J. D. Mabbott attempted to absolve Plato by arguing that the return to the Cave...
Plato Writes on the Dangers of Writing. by Joan...address the apparent paradox of the claim by Plato, himself a writer and educator, that serious...after close discussion with wise confidants. Plato is quite definitive when he says, one should...
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Plato: Complete Works by Seth Benardete John M. Cooper, editor Plato: Complete Works. Hackett, 1,848 pages, $42.50 To have everything of Plato in one volume, regardless of whether or not it has been ascribed to him correctly, is a...
Plato Learning Life Science by John Drag Jr MIDDLE/HIGH SCHOOL SOFTWARE/WEB SITES PLATO Learning Life Science Company: PLATO Learning, Inc., 10801 Nesbitt Avenue South, Bloomington...
Plato Courses: History, Geography by Alice Kurtz Company: PLATO Learning Inc., 10801 Nesbitt Ave. South, Bloomington...Phone: 800/869-2000; Internet: http://www.plato. com/. Price: $110 per student, for one course for...
Plato as Statesman. by Mary Ann Glendon As Max Weber...there are many more like Weber, Tocqueville, and Plato, whose longings for influence in public affairs were largely unfulfilled. Plato was exceptionally unlucky in his attempts to take...
Plato, Romance, Self-Inquiry: If Philosophy...the Western philosophical tradition. And Plato often characterizes the psyche as a powerful...unloving life is hardly worth examining. Yet Plato has given us a choice text in the form of...
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Plato Set for Title Decider; Racer Jason Is in...for Championship. Byline: Zoe Burn JASON Plato will lead a four-way battle for supremacy...fifth in his Silverline Chevrolet Cruze, Plato had been embroiled in a five-way battle...
Eager Plato Cant Wait to Take a Shot at Leader Giovanardi; MOTORSPORT. Jason Plato has set his sights on race victories as he bids...in the final outing at the Norfolk circuit. But Plato hopes to put that right in Cheshire this weekend...
Warren Dean Schuring of Plato Township. The funeral service for Warren...Lutheran Church, 43W301 Plank Road, North Plato, with the Rev. Gerhard Mau officiating. Burial will be in North Plato Cemetery. Visitation will be from 3 to 8...
Motor Racing: Plato Grabs Initiative in Race for Title; TOURING...By Jon Charles at Donington Park Jason Plato tightened his grip on the Dunlop MSA British...Donington Park yesterday. SEAT driver Plato claimed two race wins to open a commanding...
Plato Misses out on Home Comfort. Jason Plato just managed to stay in touch with the British Touring Car Championship leaders despite a disappointing day at Croft yesterday. Plato had gone into the race weekend looking for victories to push...
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encyclopedia articles on: Plato  - 77 results

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PLATO pla to, 427? 347 b.c., Greek philosopher...tyrant of Syracuse. On his return to Athens, Plato founded a school, the Academy , where he...realized in Sicily. Works and Philosophy Plato was a superb writer, and his works are part...
ACADEMY school founded by Plato near Athens c.387 b.c. It took its...philosophy, covering the period from Plato through Neoplatonism under Proclus...Academy (until c.250 b.c.) of Plato, Speusippus , and Xenocrates ; the Middle...
...from certain dialogues of his disciple Plato and from the Memorabilia of Xenophon...Apology, the Crito, and the Phaedo of Plato. Philosophy Socratess contributions to...the highest form, the form of the good. Plato later elaborated this doctrine as central...
...variety of literary forms: dialogues (Plato, John Dryden), verse (Horace, Alexander...criticism has concerned philosophers. Plato raised the question of the authenticity...general principles about the value of art (Plato, Aristotle), and practical, which examines...
...mystical philosophy based on the doctrines of Plato . Plotinus and the Nature of Neoplatonism...into interpretations of the philosophy of Plato. Plotinus rejected the dualism of two...ideas were aspects of the later writings of Plato, particularly the Timaeus, and Stoicism...
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