Browse — tag · theory-of-forms
Tag: theory-of-forms
Pages tagged with theory-of-forms.
7 pages
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Anamnesis (Recollection)
Plato's doctrine that learning is recollection — the recovery of knowledge the immortal soul already possesses, not the reception of wholly new content. Introduced in the Meno to dissolve the paradox of inquiry, it is re-grounded in the Ph…
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Parmenides
Author: Plato · Year: c. 4th c. BCE (trans. Mary Louise Gill and Paul Ryan, Hackett 1997) · Type: dialogue
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Phaedo
Author: Plato · Year: c. 4th c. BCE (trans. G.M.A. Grube, Hackett 1997) · Type: dialogue
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The Divided Line
The second of the Republic's three images of the Good (509d–511e): a line cut into two unequal parts (visible / intelligible), each cut again "in the same ratio," yielding four segments that track degrees of truth and being matched to four…
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The Form of the Good
The capstone of Plato's metaphysics in the Republic (504a–509c): the Form of the Good (to agathon) is "the most important thing to learn" (megiston mathēma, 505a), the source of both the being and the intelligibility of the Forms — and yet…
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Theory of Forms
Plato's thesis that the truly real beings are Forms (eidē) — self-identical, invisible, unchanging realities such as "the Equal itself," "the Beautiful itself," "the Just itself" — of which sensible particulars are deficient, transient cop…
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Third Man Argument
The most famous objection to the Theory of Forms, pressed by the aged Parmenides against young Socrates in Plato's Parmenides (132a–133a): positing one Form over many instances generates an unlimited regress of Forms. If many large things…