socrates - ethics

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    Philosophy

    Socrates Ethics

    How should I live?

    The unexamined life is not worth living.

    Clever Acquiring knowledge

    Wisdom How to use the knowledge according to your needs.

    Socrates did not believe in the written word.

    Spoken word vs. written word

    Spoken word DialogueWritten word Repetitive, misinterpretation, No possibility of defending one self

    against misinterpretation of text.

    Philosophy was meant to be done through dialogue. Whatever we know about

    Socrates is through his student, Plato.

    Symposium (love) One of Platos Dialogues

    Socrates Plato

    Dialogues Early Dialogues Later Dialogues

    Reasons why Plato wrote about Socrates in his Dialogues:

    1. Rebellion Plato kept Socrates alive by means of his dialogues

    2. Plato fulfilled Socrates request His ideas in writing will remain alive forever

    Socrates was faithful to his belief.

    Socrates considered dialogue as the most appropriate medium for doing philosophy. It

    is not an ordinary dialogue but it is a dialogue which is in a form of question andanswer. The person who is asking the question knows were the dialogue is leading to.

    Dialogues of Plato

    Laches

    Euthypho

    Laches Euthypho

    What is courage? What is holiness?

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    Universal Definition

    For Socrates certain truths such as what is courage and what is holiness, can be known

    with certainty.

    This method adopted by Socrates is known as Elenchus (examination). To be able to adefine something.

    The Dialogue between Socrates and the General.

    There was a good relation between Socrates and the General.

    1. Question What is courage?

    2. Answer is taken as a starting point for another question and so on...

    3. When a definition is found, it acquires universal status.

    4. Universal status It is knowledge that can be applied to all individuals any

    time or place.

    Socrates will help the General discover within himself what true courage is. This is

    known as the theory of Innatism.

    For Socrates knowledge of these three definitions should be found within us. These

    prejudices do not allow us to express these true definitions.

    Socrates insists that definitions should tell us what is essential or unique about the

    thing being defined. To explain his theory, Socrates enters in a dialogue with a slave.

    The slave discovered that he had knowledge of geometry even though we never learnt

    geometry.

    Moral Optimism

    What is courage?

    For Socrates the importance of a definition lies in the fact that once we succeed in

    finding the definition of something, the definition requires the status of knowledge.

    The correct definition becomes a universal standard that is over and above the

    speakers personal preferences or particular set of cultural preferences/conditions.

    For Socrates there is only one true definition of justice.

    Absolute Knowledge Universal Knowledge

    Absolute Knowledge Relative Truth

    For Socrates if you knew what courage is you simply couldnt not be courageous? If

    you knew what justice is you simply couldnt not be just.

    Knowledge Virtue

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    Socrates overrates the role of reason in our decision making. A person can know what

    the right thing to do is and that person can still choose to do the opposite.

    I. Speech and Writing

    II. Truth

    III. Moral Optimism

    Sophists

    Protagoras Man is the measure of all things.

    Thrasymachus

    Gorsins

    These were Itinerant Teachers

    (Itinerant Travel)

    There is no universal value.

    Universal value Equal important by all countries

    Truth is relative to a culture.

    Relativism Values are relative to a culture that is one culture can give importance to

    certain values and another country can give importance to other values.

    Plato didnt like this:

    o

    They denied that there are universal truths.o They asked to be paid for their teaching.

    o They offered their skill of persuasive speaking.

    The Art of persuasive speaking Rhetorical

    Protagoras - Man is the measure of all things

    For the Sophists Man is the measure of all things.

    For Socrates Universal Reason is the measure of all things.

    The Sophists offered an education and expected to be paid.

    The art of persuasive speaking (manipulation) requires intelligence.

    The Sophists used to practise Anti-Logic

    For anything one could persuade others to accept both sides of an argument.

    Colour of Box

    Blue Not Blue

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    Dialogue between Socrates and Thrasymachus (Sophist).

    The Sophists encouraged people to be corrupt (the truth was to be used at their own

    convenience).

    The Sophists made a distinction betweenPhusis (Physis) Nomos

    Another word for Phusis Physics or Nature

    Another word for Nomos Customs

    This distinction was applied to laws. Which means that rules of behaviour which were

    to be found in a particular society.

    Gorgias Negative Sophist (extreme)

    He questioned the idea that usually if you want to acquire something you have to waituntil its your turn. He questioned whether it might be the case that an importance

    should be given to Might is right.

    The strongest should be served first.

    For the sophists

    Wearing a helmet

    This is a law for which you will be fired.

    Rules made up by man Can be undone by other man

    Law related to property

    Nature vs. Nurture

    Reality Culture

    Plato

    For Plato, Women and Men are equal.

    Plato opened the first institute of learning The Academy

    Compete Philosophical Programme

    Metaphysics (early Philosophers)

    Ethics (Socrates and Others)

    Politics, Education, Aesthetics (Plato)

    From an artistic perspective most of Platos writings institute works of art combining

    use of metaphors and myth with the analysis of concept.

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    Metaphysical Theory

    A distinction between two worlds, world of ideas/forms concepts/mind and world of

    illusion.

    For Plato there is only one circle.

    Ideas Understood (reason)

    Copies of Ideas (ordinary world) Perceived (senses)

    Description of the ANALOGY OF THE CAVE

    The analogy of a cave

    There are Prisoners, chained in a cave. They can only look in front of them. Behind

    them there is a wall. Behind the wall there is a race passage. The prisoners can only

    see the shadows of the things and people behind the wall.

    Somehow, the prisoners get unchained and are able to move around in the cave. One

    of the prisoners decided to leave the cave and he started to explore around him. Once

    he gets out of the cave, he gets blinded by the sunlight. The other prisoners didnt like

    the idea of change. They were afraid of what could happen to them if they went

    outside, so they stayed inside the cave. The prisoner which went outside was

    gradually getting used to the sunlight. Once he did, he was able to see the

    surroundings. He started to admire nature,

    After some time he decided to go back inside the cave and he tried to persuade the

    other prisoners to get out of the cave and explore for themselves. The prisoners didnt

    want to listen to him. They got fed up of him trying to convince them about

    something that they were 100% sure about. As a result, the prisoners killed him.

    Interpretation

    1. The cave represents the world of illusion or the visible world.

    2. The Prisoner who leaves the cave represents the philosopher.

    3. The other Prisoners represent the majority of man kind who unfortunately

    remain in the world of illusion.

    4. Outside the cave The world of ideas/hopes.5. The Sun The idea of GOOD

    6. The Journey from inside of the cave to the outside of the cave represents a

    persons search for the truth (optional). The journey from ignorance

    Knowledge, Illusion Reality.

    An Analogy is a means of explaining something which appears to be complex in a

    way that can be understood.

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    Simile of the sun

    Visible World The Sun Intelligible World The Good

    Source of growth and light Source of reality and truth

    Visibility to objects of sense Intelligibility to objects of thought

    The power of seeing to the eye The power of knowing to the mind

    The perfect idea/form The good

    Just as the sun makes objects of sense visible for me too see them, the form of the

    good makes all the other forms available for me to understand.

    The form of good gives me the power to understand the forms.

    Just as it is right to think of light and sight as being like the sun but not the sun itself,

    so it is right to think of knowledge and truth as being like the good but not the good

    itself.

    THE ANALOGY OF THE DIVIDED LINE.

    Objects Modes of Thought

    The Good (forms)

    (Intelligible world Understanding)

    Knowledge (knowledge)

    Mathematical Objects

    (Intelligible world Understanding)

    Thinking (knowledge)

    Things

    (Visible world Perception senses)

    Belief (opinion)

    Images

    (Visible world Perception senses)

    Imaginings (opinion)

    The bigger the separation is, the more one is directed to the truth.

    For Plato, mathematical thinking is good mental training to understand the forms. Inthis he was strongly influenced by Pythagoras.

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