1. Trang chủ
  2. » Giáo Dục - Đào Tạo

The Oxford Companion to Philosophy Part 75 pdf

10 396 0
Tài liệu đã được kiểm tra trùng lặp

Đang tải... (xem toàn văn)

THÔNG TIN TÀI LIỆU

Thông tin cơ bản

Định dạng
Số trang 10
Dung lượng 683,93 KB

Các công cụ chuyển đổi và chỉnh sửa cho tài liệu này

Nội dung

The early dialogues are our only worthwhile source forthe philosophy of Socrates.. He can achieve this neutral stance partly because he is writing dialogues, between Socrates and other s

Trang 1

difference between plagiarism and forgery is that a person

plagiarizes when he tries to pass off another’s work as his

own, but he forges when he tries to pass off his own work

as another’s Both are prima facie morally wrong, but the

more difficult question is the aesthetic one: Is there

any-thing prima facie aesthetically wrong with either (or

both)? Some have argued for a Yes answer on the basis of

the role that knowledge of authorship plays in aesthetic

perception and discrimination, while others have argued

for a No answer on the basis of the irrelevance of

plagiar-ism and forgery to aesthetic judgements respecting such

things as cheques and articles in reference works, such as

this one Now I wonder who the author of this article

There is very little philosophical literature on plagiarism, but

Denis Dutton (ed.), The Forger’s Art: Forgery and the Philosophy of

Art (Berkeley, Calif., 1983) contains a number of good papers on

forgery

Planck, Max (1858–1947) German physicist who

dis-covered the formula for black-body radiation Taking his

cue from Boltzmann’s statistical reformulation of the

second law of thermodynamics, he found that radiant

energy may be treated statistically as if it exchanged only in

discrete amounts involving a new constant h,

subse-quently known as Planck’s constant This prepared the

way for Einstein’s discovery that light could be treated as

both wave and particle, the two aspects being related

through Planck’s constant This constant took on a

uni-versal significance when physicists later extended the

the-ory from light to matter generally, proposing that energy

possessed by matter can be changed into radiant energy

only in integral multiples of quanta This set the

founda-tion for *quantum mechanics, which inaugurated a

revo-lutionary break with classical physics Planck was awarded

a Nobel Prize for his contribution to physics in 1918

The arrival of quantum mechanics gave rise to a variety

of philosophical problems; it presented difficulties for

*traditional logic, constituted a challenge to scientific

*real-ism, and undermined deterministic views of the universe,

with further repercussions in epistemology o.r.j

*determinism; determinism, scientific

Thomas Kuhn, Black-Body Theory and the Quantum Discontinuity

1894–1912 (Oxford, 1978).

Hilary Putnam, Mathematics, Matter and Method: Philosophical

Papers, i (Cambridge, 1975).

Plantinga, Alvin (1932– ) American philosopher known

for the way in which he applies results of his work in other

areas of analytic philosophy to traditional issues in

phil-osophy of religion In God and Other Minds (1967), he

defended the view that belief in *other minds and belief in

*God are, epistemically speaking, on a par: if the former is

rational, so is the latter In The Nature of Necessity (1974), he

used contemporary modal logic and metaphysics to

for-mulate a valid *ontological argument for the existence of

God and a rigorous freewill defence of the logical

consist-ency of the existence of God and the existence of *evil In

more recent work in epistemology, Plantinga has argued for the view that belief in God can, in certain circum-stances, be rational and warranted even if it is not based on

*philosophy of religion, problems of

A Plantinga, Warrant and Proper Function (New York, 1993).

J E Tomberlin and P van Inwagen (eds.), Alvin Plantinga

(Dor-drecht, 1985)

Plato(c.428–347bc) The best known and most widely studied of all the ancient Greek philosophers He was an Athenian, born into a noble family, and might have been expected to play a part in the politics of that city But in fact

he came under the influence of Socrates, who fired him with an enthusiasm for philosophy When Socrates was condemned to death and executed in 399, Plato gave up all thought of a political career, and left Athens in disgust It is said that he then travelled to various places, including Egypt, but we have no trustworthy information on this part of his life, until we come to his first visit to Italy and Sicily in 387 From that visit he returned to Athens, and soon after founded his *Academy, just outside the city This may be regarded as the first ‘university’ Apart from two further visits to Sicily, in 367 and 361, he remained at the Academy until his death in 347

It is often assumed that his first philosophical work was

the Apology; this purports to be a record of the speeches

that Socrates delivered at his trial Apart from this one example, all Plato’s philosophical works are dialogues They are standardly divided into three periods: early, mid-dle, and late On the usual chronology, the early period

includes Crito, Ion, Hippias minor, Euthyphro, Lysis, Laches, Charmides, Hippias major, Meno, Euthydemus, Protagoras, Gorgias Many of these dialogues are short They are listed here in order of length, from the Crito at 9 pages, to the Euthydemus at 36, the Protagoras at 53, and the Gorgias at 80.

No one is confident of their order of composition The

usual chronology for the middle period includes Phaedo, Symposium, Republic, Phaedrus, in that order The Republic

is very long, and is divided into ten books Some count the

Cratylus as belonging to this period (placed after the Republic); some count it as an early dialogue Finally, on

the usual chronology for the late period, it begins with

Parmenides and Theaetetus, and then (after a break) it contains Sophist, Statesman, Timaeus (and Critias), Philebus, Laws Again there is one work which is very long, namely the Laws, which is divided into twelve books The

orthodox view is that this may be counted as Plato’s last work, though in fact the evidence for this claim is very insecure Another important dispute concerns the

date of the Timaeus, which some would classify as a middle dialogue (after the Republic) A great deal of

work has been done, and is still being done, towards estab-lishing the order of the dialogues, but one cannot say that

a consensus has been reached (The above list simply omits all works whose authenticity may be considered doubtful.)

720 plagiarism

Trang 2

I The early dialogues are our only worthwhile source for

the philosophy of Socrates They illustrate his

preoccupa-tion with ethics, and his insistence that it is vitally

import-ant to find correct definitions for ethically significimport-ant

concepts, since otherwise we will not know how to live

No doubt Plato himself shared these views at the time But

he shows a more independent attitude to the Socratic

claim that virtue (*arete¯) is knowledge, and to its

associ-ated paradoxes, e.g that all wrongdoing must be due to

ignorance (so that no one does wrong on purpose), and

that all *virtues must somehow be the same (so that one

cannot have one but lack another) The dialogues show

Plato to be very interested in these claims, but he is not

clearly endorsing them On the contrary, he seems rather

to be exploring them, and recognizing the problems they

involve He can achieve this neutral stance partly because

he is writing dialogues, between Socrates and other

speak-ers, and we need not suppose that Plato believes whatever

he makes his character Socrates say; and partly because

most of the dialogues are anyway inconclusive They will

begin by propounding some problem for discussion, and

during the discussion several answers will be proposed,

but all will be rejected, so that officially no conclusion is

reached (Often one is tempted to read between the lines,

to find an answer that Plato is recommending, despite its

official rejection; but even so one should suppose that he is

recommending it for further consideration, not for

accept-ance.) In these early dialogues, then, Plato is mainly

con-cerned with Socrates’ philosophy, but he is trying out lines

of thought, and objections to them, and he is not confident

that he has found answers In a few cases (notably the

Meno and the Gorgias) one can see that his confidence is

growing, and that he has something to say which he very

much wants his audience to believe But that is because

the middle period is dawning

II In the middle period Plato’s interests broaden very

considerably, and we find the metaphysical and

epistemo-logical doctrines for which he is best known They now

form the background against which he works out his new

thoughts on how one ought to live, and on a number of

other topics, ranging from the true role of *love

(Sympo-sium, Phaedrus) to the structure of the physical world

(Timaeus—assuming that to be a middle dialogue) There

is space here only for a brief account of some of the

better-known doctrines Although Socrates remains the chief

speaker of these dialogues (except for the Timaeus), still

one can now be quite confident that the views put into his

mouth are Plato’s own views, and often they owe very

lit-tle to the historical Socrates

Knowledge and the Forms Socrates had insisted that we

must be able to answer the question ‘What is X?’ before we

can say anything else about X He understood this

ques-tion as asking for the one thing common to all the many

instances or examples of X, and he continued to stress its

importance for ethical inquiry, even though he never

found any answers that satisfied him One may conjecture

that this led Plato to ask why the search was yielding no

results, and that he came to the conclusion that it was

because even the supposed instances and examples of X

were unreliable At any rate, he certainly did come to hold that, in interesting cases such as *justice and goodness and

*beauty, every instance of X will also be an instance of the opposite to X But this provokes a problem, for instances

and examples seem to be crucial for language-learning That is, one could not come to understand the word ‘red’ if there were no examples of red things, nor if every example

of something red were at the same time an example of something non-red How, then, do we manage to attach any meaning at all to words such as ‘just’, ‘good’, and

‘beautiful’? This problem led Plato to suppose that there

must be an unambiguous example of justice, not in this

world but in some other, and that we must once have been acquainted with it This is what he calls the ‘Form’ of justice So his theory is that we are born into this world with a dim recollection of this Form, and that is why

we do have some conception of what justice is, though

it is only an imperfect conception, which explains why

we cannot now answer the Socratic question ‘What is justice?’

This is the theory of Phaedo 73–7 It significantly extends

a line of thought introduced earlier in the Meno, which had

noted that there is such a thing as *a priori knowledge (since mathematics is an example), and had offered to explain this as really recollection of what we had once

known in an earlier existence The Meno had hoped that

philosophical inquiry could yield similar knowledge of justice and the like, obtained by examination of what was already latent within us, but had offered no ground for

such a hope The Phaedo provides a ground, at the same

time adding a new conception of what it is that must be

known (or recalled), namely a paradigm example of X, a reliable and unambiguous guide to what X is, which the

perceptible things of this world ‘imitate’, but always ‘fall short of ’ These are the Forms Yet at the same time, and inconsistently, the Forms are thought of as themselves

being the answers to the question ‘What is X?’, i.e as being the one thing common to all the many instances of X,

that in which they all ‘participate’ In other words, the

Forms are both perfect paradigms and universals This

ambivalent conception is found in all the middle dialogues

(including the Timaeus) The associated theory of recol-lection (*anamne¯sis) is not so constantly mentioned;

in fact it is restated only once after the Phaedo, i.e at Phaedrus 249.

The Soul ( psukhe¯ or psyche) and Morality In the Apology

Socrates had been portrayed as agnostic on the

immortal-ity of the soul In the Phaedo he is convinced of it, and the

dialogue is as a whole a sustained argument for that claim

We find further arguments for the immortality of the soul

in Republic x and in the Phaedrus, but in those dialogues

there is also a more complex view of what the soul is

Whereas the Phaedo, like the early dialogues, had been

content with a simple opposition between soul and

body, in Republiciv the soul itself is divided into three

‘parts’, which roughly correspond to reason, emotion,

Plato 721

Trang 3

and desire (But in Republicviii–ix the ‘reasoning’ part is

associated with the desire for knowledge, the so-called

‘spirited’ part with the desire for honour and prestige, and

the ‘desiring’ part—itself recognized to be

‘many-headed’—is clearly confined to bodily desires.) An explicit

motive for this division is to allow for conflict within the

soul, and one consequence of this is that Plato is no longer

tempted by the Socratic claim that all virtue is knowledge,

and its associated paradoxes He does retain the early view

that virtue is a condition of the soul, but wisdom is now

viewed as a virtue of the reasoning part, whereas courage

is a virtue of the spirited part, and justice is explained as a

suitable ‘harmony’ between all three parts Another

con-sequence of the threefold division of the soul is that Plato

seems to have become uncertain how much of the soul is

immortal (Republic x 611–12 is deliberately evasive;

Phaedrus 245–9 clearly claims that the team of all three

parts is immortal; Timaeus 69–72 is equally clear in its

claim that only the reasoning part is immortal.) Plato

thinks of the immortal soul as subject to reincarnation

from one life to another Those who live virtuous lives

will be somehow rewarded, but the detail differs from one

treatment to another

Political Theory In the Republic Plato sets out his ‘ideal

state’ It is very decidedly authoritarian He begins from

the premiss that only those who know what the good is

are fit to rule, and he prescribes a long and rigorous period

of intellectual training, which he thinks will yield this

knowledge In a famous analogy, it will loose the bonds

that keep most men confined in a *cave underground, and

allow us to ascend to the ‘real’ world outside, which is a

world of Forms, available to the intellect but not to the

senses This is to be accomplished by a full study of

math-ematics, which will turn one’s attention towards the

Forms, since it is an a priori study and does not concern

itself with what is perceptible; and after that a study in

*‘dialectic’, i.e in philosophical debate Those who

com-plete this training successfully, and so know what the

good is, will form the ruling élite From time to time they

will be required to give up their intellectual delights and

go back into the cave to govern it They will govern with a

view to maximizing the happiness of the state as a whole,

but Plato thinks that the way to achieve this is to impose a

strict censorship to prevent wrong ideas being expressed,

to ensure that each person sticks to his own allotted job, so

that he does not meddle with affairs that are not his

con-cern, and so on Plato was firmly against democracy, and

seems to have seen no connection between happiness and

individual liberty

III The late dialogues open with two criticisms of the

the-ories of the middle period, in the Parmenides and the

Theaetetus The Parmenides is concerned with

meta-physics, and its first part raises a series of objections to the

middle period’s theory of Forms The most famous of

these is the so-called *third man argument, which

evi-dently exploits the fact that Forms are supposed to be both

universals and perfect paradigms Scholars differ in their

view of how Plato himself reacted to these objections

Provided that the Timaeus is regarded as a middle

dia-logue, one can hold that Plato saw that the objections depend upon Forms being both universals and paradigms, and thereupon ceased to think of them as paradigms But

if the Timaeus is later than the Parmenides, as stylometric

studies appear to indicate, then one is forced to conclude that Plato made no such modification to his theory The

second part of the Parmenides is a riddle It draws a

bewil-dering array of contradictory conclusions, first from the hypothesis ‘The One is’ and then from its negation ‘The One is not’, and then it just ends without further com-ment There have been many attempts to extract a serious moral that Plato may have intended, but none have won general approval

As the Parmenides attacks the metaphysics of the middle dialogues, so the Theaetetus attacks their epistemology,

but again the attack has its puzzling features The middle

dialogues (and in particular the Timaeus) claim that

per-ceptible things are not stable, and for that reason there can

be no knowledge of them; rather, only Forms can be

known The first part of the Theaetetus, however, argues

that it is self-refuting to ascribe such radical instability to perceptible things, and it proceeds to assume that we do know about them But it nevertheless insists upon distin-guishing this knowledge from perception, on the ground that knowledge requires belief (or judgement) while mere perception does not The second part of the dialogue then professes to be exploring the claims that knowledge is to

be identified with true belief, or with true belief plus an

‘account’ But what is puzzling about this discussion is that

it appears to focus not upon knowledge of facts (savoir) but upon knowledge of objects (connaître), and on the face

of it the latter does not involve belief or judgement at all Again, the solution to this puzzle is a matter of controversy

Although the late dialogues begin with two enigmatic and self-critical pieces, in which Plato’s own position is once more unclear, in subsequent writings he has evi-dently recovered the confidence of his middle period In

the Sophist he gives us a new metaphysics and a more

sophisticated investigation of language, in the course of a long investigation of ‘not being’ This includes the import-ant point that even in the simplest sentences one may dis-tinguish two expressions, *subject and predicate, that

have different roles to play In the Statesman he reaffirms

his view that ruling is a task for experts, and argues that the expert should not be bound either by law or by the wishes

of the people But it is admitted that law is a second best, where no expert is available Of constitutions bound by law he considers that monarchy is best, oligarchy in the middle, and democracy worst But in the absence of law

this order is reversed In the Philebus he once more weighs

the claims of knowledge and of pleasure to be the good, and at the same time undertakes a full examination of what pleasure is He does not award victory to either con-testant, arguing instead for the mixed life, but knowledge

is ranked higher

722 Plato

Trang 4

In all three of these dialogues Plato pays much attention

to what he calls the method of ‘collection and division’ At

an earlier stage he had recommended the different

method of ‘hypothesis’ This is introduced in the Meno,

apparently as a device which allows us to make progress

with philosophical problems without first having to

answer the awkward question ‘What is X?’ Then in the

Phaedo and the Republic it receives a much fuller

expos-ition, and becomes Plato’s account of how a priori

know-ledge is possible This method makes its final appearance in

the Parmenides, and one way of reading the second part of

that dialogue is as a prolonged demonstration of its

inad-equacy Meanwhile, the new method of ‘collection and

division’ has been introduced in the Phaedrus, and it is then

both preached and practised at some length in the Sophist

and the Statesman It is presented as a method of finding

definitions, though it is clear from what those dialogues

say about it that it must be handled very carefully if it is not

to lead us astray The version in the Philebus introduces

some new, and very puzzling, considerations concerning

‘the indefinite’ This appears to connect with what

Aris-totle tells us about Plato’s so-called ‘unwritten doctrines’,

but that topic is too obscure to be pursued here

Finally, in the Laws we find Plato again building an ideal

state, but now in a very different mood from that of the

Republic and the Statesman He is now much more ready to

compromise with principle in order to find something

that will work in practice, and he puts a very high value on

the law In fact the work is remarkable for proposing a

great deal of extremely detailed legislation But Plato’s

general attitude remains very authoritarian, and he still

pays no attention to individual *liberty It is justly said that

the ‘Nocturnal Council’, which turns out to be the

supreme authority in this state, would certainly not have

tolerated the subversive ideas of Socrates, from which

*Platonism; Good, Form of the; knowledge; psyche

greek text

Platonis Opera, ed J Burnet (5 vols., Oxford Classical Texts

1900–7)

translation

E Hamilton and H Cairns (eds.), The Collected Dialogues of Plato

(New York, 1961)

commentary

I M Crombie, An Examination of Plato’s Doctrines, 2 vols

(Lon-don, 1962–3)

G M A Grube, Plato’s Thought, 2nd edn (London, 1980).

T Irwin, Plato’s Moral Theory (Oxford, 1977).

R Krant (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Plato (Cambridge,

1993)

R Robinson, Plato’s Earlier Dialectic, 2nd edn (Oxford, 1953).

W D Ross, Plato’s Theory of Ideas (Oxford, 1951).

N P White, Plato on Knowledge and Reality (Indianapolis, 1976).

Platonism.‘Platonism’ refers to (1) the doctrines held by

Plato; (2) some central doctrine of Plato, especially the

the-ory of Forms, or Ideas, or a doctrine relevantly similar to it,

such as the view (contrasting with ‘constructivism’) that

logical and/or mathematical entities subsist independently both of the empirical world and of human thought (Frege); (3) the tradition of thinkers claiming allegiance to Plato, whether or not their doctrines were in fact held by him Plato’s literary career spanned fifty years, and, apart from some letters of doubtful authenticity, he wrote only dialogues in which he himself never appears, but is, at best, represented by a leading participant, usually, but not invariably, Socrates The dialogues are commonly placed

in three groups: (1) The early dialogues consider a ques-tion such as how we are to define virtue or whether it is teachable, and examine various answers to it, but do not usually endorse a positive conclusion; these dialogues and their characteristic procedures are commonly known as

‘Socratic’ rather than ‘Platonic’ (2) The middle dialogues,

such as the Republic, expound metaphysical, political, and

psychological doctrines It is these doctrines which are most usually associated with Plato and known as

‘Pla-tonic’ (3) The late dialogues, such as the Sophist, reassess

and modify the doctrines of the middle period

Even within each of the two latter periods, dialogues dif-fer significantly in method and doctrine Thus it is not easy

to extract from Plato’s works a single consistent set of doc-trines (The Neoplatonist Olympiodorus reports that Plato dreamt that he had become a swan which flew from tree to tree, eluding the arrows of its hunters This means that Plato eludes his interpreters, and his works must be ‘under-stood in many senses, both physically, and ethically, and theologically, and literally’.) But it is tempting to suppose that Plato had a coherent view on the questions asked and the doctrines expounded by his characters, or at least more tempting than it is to suppose that Shakespeare had a coherent doctrine that can be extracted from the

utter-ances of his characters Many interpreters have attempted

to elicit a system from Plato, among them Hegel, who, regarding (unlike Schleiermacher) the dialogue form as inessential, attributed to him a tripartite system consisting

of *dialectics, philosophy of nature, and philosophy of spirit Most ‘Platonists’ have seen themselves as such by reason of their adherence to supposedly Platonic doctrines rather than to Plato’s methods or his dialogue form But different thinkers stress different aspects of his legacy Platonism as a tradition falls into six broad periods: (1) the Old Academy; (2) the Hellenistic (‘Middle’ and ‘New’) Academy; (3) ancient *Neo-platonism; (4) medieval Pla-tonism; (5) the Renaissance; (6) the modern period

1 After Plato’s death, his nephew Speusippus (405–335 bc) became head of the *Academy, and he was succeeded

in 339 by Xenocrates (396–314 bc) (The reason why Plato’s most distinguished pupil, Aristotle, did not suc-ceed him is probably that, as a non-citizen, he was unable

to own property in Athens, rather than, as Anscombe sug-gests, his heterosexuality.) They continued to work, in the manner of Plato’s later work, on metaphysics, logic, and mathematics

2 Under its sixth head, Arcesilaus, the Academy espoused *scepticism and deployed it especially against

Platonism 723

Trang 5

Stoicism Carneades continued and extended this

approach Academic scepticism stressed its continuity

with the early aporetic dialogues, and persisted for two

centuries Augustine’s Contra Academicos (ad 386) is

directed against the scepticism that he knew from Cicero’s

Academica, but he attempted to reconcile this with the

Neoplatonism he had learned from Plotinus by arguing

that the Academy had a secret doctrine which they did not

reveal to outsiders Under Antiochus of Ascalon (c.130–68

bc) the Academy abandoned scepticism and adopted a

synthesis of Platonism, *Stoicism, and *Aristotelianism

3 Antiochus prepared the ground for so-called ‘Middle

Platonism’, represented by, among others, the

anti-Christian Celsus (late second century ad) In the second

century Numenius of Apamea attempted to purge

Platon-ism of later accretions and regarded the result as identical

to *Pythagoreanism But the greatest Middle Platonists

were in Alexandria: Philo (c.25bc–ad 50), who combined

Platonism with Judaism, Clement (c.ad 150–215) and,

later, Origen (185–254), who, like Plotinus, was a pupil of

Ammonius Saccas (c.175–242), generally regarded as the

founder of Neoplatonism (The distinction between

Mid-dle Platonism and Neoplatonism is not, however, sharp:

from the first century bc Platonism was transformed into a

metaphysical or theological system, involving, for example,

ideas as thoughts in God’s mind, the ideal of assimilation

to God, and demonic intermediaries between men and

God; the aporetic element in Plato was ignored.) The

Alexandrians became Christian, and were less inclined to

theurgy than the pagan Athenians Plotinus, the greatest

of the Neoplatonists, was not a member of the Academy,

nor was his follower Porphyry (c.232–304), the author of

an introduction (Isagoge) to Aristotle’s Categories, which in

Boethius’ Latin translation, became a standard medieval

work, nor Iamblichus (d c.330) Iamblichus was

responsi-ble for many of the concepts, especially the triads, that

appear in Proclus The Academy was closed by Justinian in

ad 529 (whereas the Alexandrian school survived the Arab

conquest of 641), but through the works of Augustine

(Plotinus) and pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite (Proclus)

Neoplatonism entered medieval Christianity

4 Platonism persisted in the three main spheres of the

medieval world: Islam, Byzantium, and the Latin West Its

impact on the Arabs, with their predominantly scientific

interests, was less than that of Aristotle But al-Fa¯ra¯bı¯ was

influenced not only by the ideal state of Plato’s Republic,

but also by the entirely apolitical Plotinus His follower

Avicenna developed Neoplatonism further In

Byzan-tium, Plato’s dialogues continued to be read, and the

revival of Platonism by Michael Psellos (1018–78/96)

pre-pared the way for the later champions of Plato against

Aristotle, Basilius Bessarion (1403–72) and Georgios

Gemistos Pletho (c.1355–1450) They propagated

Platon-ism in Italy, and Pletho inspired Cosimo dei Medici to

found a new Platonic Academy in Florence in 1459 It was

headed by Marsilio Ficino (1433–99) and attracted Greek

refugees from Constantinople, who brought with them

hitherto unknown Platonic texts It lasted until 1521 In

the West, the philosophical works originally available

were Platonic: Plato’s Timaeus, Boethius, Apuleius (the author of works on Socrates and Plato, as well as of The Golden Ass), and Augustine Later John Scotus Eriugena (c.810–77) translated Dionysius (That The Divine Names

etc were not the work of the Athenian converted by

St Paul was suspected by Lorenzo Valla (1405–57) and finally established by Erasmus Earlier it was widely believed that Platonists such as Proclus had stolen his ideas.) But by the thirteenth century, despite more trans-lations of Plato and Proclus, Aristotle eclipsed Platonism

5 In the Renaissance, Plato became a focus of rebellion against scholasticism, and the need was felt for direct acquaintance with his texts Eventually, though not imme-diately, this tended to undermine the so-far-unquestioned Neoplatonic interpretation of Plato Petrarch (1304–74), though he had ‘no Greek’, championed Plato, ‘the prince

of philosophy’, against Aristotle Ficino translated Plato, Plotinus, and Hermes Trismegistus (the supposed author

of a body of early post-Christian writings, which Ficino believed to be the work of an ancient Egyptian priest and one of the sources of Platonism) He produced a sustained defence of Plato’s doctrine of the immortality of the soul, and regarded him as a forerunner of Christianity, in a tradition of ‘pious philosophy’ extending from Zoroaster

to Nicholas of Cusa Pico della Mirandola was also influenced by, among others, Plato, and was associated with Ficino’s Academy Platonism migrated to England through Erasmus, Thomas More (1478–1535), and others, giving rise to the *Cambridge Platonists, who, as Coleridge observed, could as well be called the ‘Cam-bridge Plotinists’, since they revered Plotinus and did not doubt his interpretation of Plato

6 In Ficino’s day the only rival to the Neoplatonist interpretation of Plato was the persistent, if sometimes muted, tradition that Plato was a New Academic sceptic This view, backed by the authority of Cicero, revived in the late fifteenth century: among its adherents were the Lutheran reformer Philip Melanchthon (1497–1560) and the French sceptic Michel de Montaigne (1533–92) But a third view now began to form, namely that Plato had a positive doctrine, distinct from Neoplatonism, and that this could be discerned from his original texts This view appealed to Protestants, who deplored the Neoplatonic influence on Christianity but often found Plato himself more tolerable One of its pioneers was Jean de Serres (Ioannes Serranus) (1540–98), a Calvinist Huguenot, who contributed a Latin translation and an introduction to Henricus Stephanus’ famous 1578 edition of Plato Its most distinguished adherent was Leibniz, who on several occasions bemoaned the tendency to read not Plato but his commentators: we can recover such valuable doc-trines as the theory of Ideas and recollection only if we remove the Neoplatonic covering This view was con-firmed by the history of philosophy, which emerged, especially in Germany, as a distinct discipline, alongside theology and philosophy itself: Jakob Brucker (1696–1770), Dietrich Tiedemann (1748–1803), Wilhelm

724 Platonism

Trang 6

Tennemann (1761–1819), and Hegel, whatever the faults

of their own attempts to reconstruct Plato’s doctrines,

finally demolished the Neoplatonic interpretation (Like

Friedrich Schleiermacher (1768–1834), Hegel dismisses

Tennemann’s view—which still finds supporters—that

Plato had an *‘esoteric’ system which he did not commit

to writing.) The discovery of the ‘real’ Plato also put an

end to Platonism as a distinct and credible large-scale

doc-trine, partly because the dialogues cannot be plausibly

read as advocating a definitive creed, and partly because

they are usually interpreted as presenting a primitive

ver-sion of some more developed modern philosophy, such as

Kantianism (Tennemann) or Hegelianism (Hegel), which

the interpreter believes in preference to Plato himself

However, Plato provides an ingredient, often an

essen-tial ingredient, in much of subsequent Western

philoso-phy Galileo, for example, was a Platonist, not in the sense

that he endorsed the mathematical theories of the

Timaeus, but because he distinguished between the

appearances of nature and its true mathematical

struc-ture, the latter being the object of true knowledge

Quasi-Platonic ideas play an important role in Kant and

Schelling In Schopenhauer ideas are what art, apart from

music, portrays, and (contrary to Plato’s own intentions)

Plato has often been of service both to artists and to

philosophers of art Moreover, even in modern times

Plato is often seen as containing in embryo the whole of

Western philosophy; thus any serious philosopher must

come to terms with him, whether as an ally or as an

oppon-ent J F Ferrier (1808–64) claimed that ‘all philosophic

truth is Plato rightly divined; all philosophic error is Plato

misunderstood’, and Whitehead saw later philosophy as a

series of *footnotes to Plato Nietzsche regarded Plato in

this light (e.g ‘Christianity is Platonism for the people’),

but since he rejected Plato’s claim to a non-perspectival

insight into true being, he saw his own thought as

‘inverted Platonism’ For Heidegger, Plato initiated the

decline of truth from ‘unhiddenness’ to ‘correctness’, and

thus gave rise to the metaphysics and humanism that

afflicted all later philosophy, including Nietzsche’s He

also lectured, in 1924–5, on Plato’s Sophist, in preparation

for his revival of the ‘question of *being’ Jaspers

inter-preted Plato in terms of his own thought, and saw him as

the ‘representative of philosophy in general’, an

open-ended thinker more concerned with philosophizing as a

way of life than with the advocacy of specific doctrines

(Sartre’s Being and Nothingness, by contrast, refers only

fleetingly to Plato’s Sophist; but his early story Er the

Armenian was inspired by the Myth of Er in the Republic.)

While Platonism as a full-scale doctrine is no longer a live

option, modern philosophers, including analytical

philosophers such as Ryle, have often developed their

own ideas, and their powers of argumentation and

inter-pretation, in interaction with Plato m.j.i

M J B Allen, The Platonism of Marsilio Ficino (Berkeley, Calif.,

1984)

V Goldschmidt, Platonisme et pensée contemporaine (Paris, 1970).

E N Tigerstedt, The Decline and Fall of the Neoplatonic Inter-pretation of Plato: An Outline and Some Observations (Helsinki,

1974)

J.-L Vieillard-Baron, Platon et l’idéalisme allemand (1770– 1830)

(Paris, 1979)

C M Woodhouse, Gemistos Plethon: The Last of the Hellenes

(Oxford, 1986)

Platonism, Neo-: see Neoplatonism.

plausibility.A weaker counterpart to *truth It turns on a claim’s credibility via the acceptance-justifying backing that a duly weighty source (human, instrumental, or methodological) can provide Thus if we think of informa-tive sources as being graded by reliability, then the plausi-bility of a contention is determined by the best authority that speaks for it A proposition’s plausibility accordingly depends on its probative status rather than on its specific content in relation to alternatives In this regard it differs crucially from *probability The plausibility status of a group of conjoined propositions (unlike its probability sta-tus) is that of the least plausible of its members: plausibility

is a chain that is as exactly strong as its weakest link n.r

George Polya, Patterns of Plausible Inference (Princeton, NJ, 1954) Nicholas Rescher, Plausible Reasoning (Amsterdam, 1976).

pleasure.Philosophers have discussed the nature of pleas-ure from an interest either in *hedonism, or in *philoso-phy of mind The former was the main interest up to the mid-twentieth century

Ancient Greece A popular early view was to see pleasure as

the replenishment of a natural lack; for instance, quench-ing thirst This was modified by addquench-ing that the replenish-ment must be noticed It was then realized that some pleasures involved no replenishment, as those of anticipa-tion, or enjoying the exercise of abilities Aristotle came to see pleasure as the perfect actualization of a sentient being’s natural capacities, operating on their proper objects This, however, is the account of ‘real’ pleasure, and other pleasures are approximations to this on the part

of beings not in perfect condition With humans, Aristotle holds that those who enjoy something are aware of that fact This makes it natural to suppose that those who experi-ence pleasure believe that they are actualizing in good condition—correctly in the case of those who are, falsely

in other cases The Stoics, taking familiar pleasures as their model, thought of pleasure as such a belief, and as false

Later These views set the parameters for later discussions

up to the time of Descartes The latter’s sceptical argu-ments led the Empiricists in particular to concentrate on the inner data of the mind as what we really know Since it seems that subjects know what they enjoy, it seemed nat-ural to class pleasure as one of the inner givens of the mind To English-speakers this seemed the more natural because pleasure would be classified as a feeling Pleasure now becomes the experience of a feeling from some source or other Then either all these feelings feel alike, or

pleasure 725

Trang 7

they share some hedonic tone, or they have the

character-istic of being wanted for their own sake, or preferred

Early to Modern In the early period there is no sharp

dis-tinction made between an interest in the concept of

pleas-ure and in what it is that occurs when pleaspleas-ure occurs The

latter, however, seems to predominate By the time of

Hume matters are muddier In the twentieth century,

interest shifted to philosophy of mind, to whether

attribu-tions of pleasure are attribuattribu-tions of publicly accessible

facts or of inner events Given that the attributions are in a

public language, philosophers have turned to consider the

meanings of various pleasure-expressions, with the

assumption that criteria for their application will be

pub-licly accessible Attributing pleasure has been variously

thought to be attributing a manner of indulging or a

rela-tion of the indulgence to a subject’s desire or preference

The discussion has been complicated by distinctions

between enjoyment and pleasure, and the variety of

pleas-ure-expressions There are methodological problems:

how do we determine that the expressions cover the same

concept? or that different uses of the same expressions are

genuine examples of the concept?

None of the above questions have won agreed answers,

but the answers clearly affect one’s attitude to hedonism

Different answers on the nature of pleasure give

hedon-ism a different air; different selections of

pleasure-expression give arguments for different forms of

*pain; pushpin and poetry; happiness; well-being

Roger Crisp, Mill on Utilitarianism (London, 1997).

Fred Feldman, Pleasure and the Good Life (Oxford, 2004).

J C B Gosling, Pleasure and Desire (Oxford, 1969).

—— and C C W Taylor, The Greeks on Pleasure (Oxford, 1982).

Gilbert Ryle, The Concept of Mind (London, 1949).

John Skorupski, John Stuart Mill (London, 1989).

Plekhanov, Georgii Valentinovich (1856–1918) The

leading Russian Marxist theoretician in the two decades

before 1914, Plekhanov is chiefly known as the teacher of

Lenin and the first to have given serious formulation to

the doctrine of *dialectical materialism In his major work

The Development of the Monist View of History, he gave an

account of modern social and philosophical thought as

culminating in Hegel and Marx and seen through the

materialism of Feuerbach, for whom Plekhanov had a

high regard He consistently applied this dialectical

materialist method to all branches of human knowledge,

thus helping to create the subsequent philosophical

orthodoxy of the Soviet Union d.mcl

S Baron, Plekhanov: The Father of Russian Marxism (London,

1963)

plenitude, principle of ‘If a proposition P is possible then

at some time P is true.’ The principle, accepted by Aristotle,

clashes with a common intuition that the non-realization

of a *possibility does not imply that the possibility did not

exist The question how to interpret Aristotle’s principle

in such a way that it squares with the common intuition has proved a fertile debating-ground a.bro

Arthur O Lovejoy, The Great Chain of Being (Cambridge, Mass.,

1936)

Plotinus(204/5–270) Platonist philosopher, initiator of what we call *Neoplatonism We do not know his origins

He studied for over eleven years at Alexandria Then he joined a Roman military expedition to the East, in order to learn from Persian and Indian philosophers (so says his editor and biographer Porphyry) But the expedition was aborted, and he came to Rome, aged 40 There he earned court patronage and spent the rest of his life teaching From the age of 50 he wrote in Greek a series of essays and shorter articles, chatty in style but at the same time diffi-cult and earnest, and enriched with superb similes After his death Porphyry chopped them up and gathered them

into six groups of nine, the Enneads.

Plotinus was a contemplative, who sought contact with

a supreme principle, the Good, or One He tells us that he often achieved momentary success Religious rites were useless for the purpose; what was needed was an ascent of the soul, away from bodily things It demanded personal goodness—and Plotinus appears to have been conscien-tious and competent in his help and advice to friends, though he deprecated involvement in public affairs It also demanded hard philosophical inquiry

His teaching defended the metaphysics that made this ascent desirable, and to the defence he brought a good scholar’s knowledge of the state of his subject and also a good teacher’s willingness to share and examine his pupils’ difficulties on a footing of equality Even his defer-ence to Plato, whom he used only selectively but revered

as faultless, does not really imprison Plotinus’ thought, though it sometimes strains the ingenuity of his interpret-ations He takes no notice of Christianity

The essence of his metaphysics is: It is only possible to make things by thinking them, and to think things as a maker by being them (It is backwards to regard thinking

as imagining; it is realizing what the manufacturer then

makes an image of.) Bodies are phantoms (*‘idols’), pre-sent in matter as an image is in a mirror, and the realities behind them are Forms But even a thinker will produce only an idol unless the Forms he thinks are in him, and thus collectively are him Original thought, which does not reason from previous thoughts, Plotinus calls Intel-lect So Intellect is a maker But there is no process in its making, only the timeless activity of thinking the intelligi-ble Forms that it is

Everything that has power must exercise it, by what he calls emanating (or ‘beaming’) something less powerful Such ‘procession’ (as it is also called) accounts for the exist-ence of the perceptible ‘here’ (our world), beamed from the intelligible ‘there’ ‘Here’ contains *souls as well as bodies, because many bodies—including the perceptible universe itself—are alive (i.e ensouled), and their souls have spontaneously descended from, and can return to,

‘there’ Human souls have parts, and the highest part is

726 pleasure

Trang 8

still linked with Intellect ‘there’ We humans choose

which part our souls shall ‘incline’ to, and thereby we gain

different future lives as plants or animals or demons (in no

bad sense) or gods These future lives will reward and

pun-ish us, so keeping the moral balance in our necessarily

imperfect but providentially ordered ‘here’

Soul is the lowest of Plotinus’ three universal principles,

or ‘hypostases’ It depends on Intellect, which in turn

depends on the One, or Good The One himself is ‘beyond

being’, because attribution of being or any other predicate

would make him more than One The other hypostases

are multiple (for example, the thoughts that Intellect is are

composite), and therefore could not exist independently

of this Unity Desire to touch him is the pang of being

smitten by ‘beauty above beauty’ c.a.k

A H Armstrong (ed.), The Cambridge History of Later Greek and

Early Medieval Philosophy (Cambridge, 1967), chs 12–16.

L Gerson (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Plotinus (Cambridge,

1996)

D J O’Meara, Plotinus (Oxford, 1993).

J M Rist, Plotinus: The Road to Reality (Cambridge, 1967).

pluralism:see monism and pluralism.

pluralism, political A condition marked by the

multipli-city of religions, ethnic groups, auto-nomous regions, or

functional units within a single state; or a doctrine that

holds such a multiplicity to be a good thing The

alterna-tive is a unitary state where one religion or ethnicity is

dominant and the central government rules everywhere

Pluralism can be an adaptation to an existing and

unavoid-able multiplicity for the sake of peace (*toleration) or it

can be a programme aimed at sustaining cultural

differ-ence, conceived as a good in itself or as the legitimate

product of communal *self-determination A considerable

variety of institutional arrangements are consistent with

pluralism in either of these senses, including decentralized

government (federalism), functional autonomy

(particu-larly with regard to education and family law), and

volun-tary association

The hard questions posed by political pluralism mostly

have to do with its limits It isn’t only a multiplication of

groups but also of loyalties that pluralism legitimizes And

in the case of individual men and women, multiplication is

also division Attachment and obligation are both divided:

what then is the individual to do when their various

versions come into conflict? At what point is division

incompatible with a common citizenship? States

commit-ted to pluralism will set this point fairly far along the

con-tinuum that extends from unity to disintegration None

the less, they are likely to defend some significant

com-monalities: a single public language or a civic education

for all children or a ‘civil religion’ with its own holidays

and ceremonies

Political pluralism also refers to the existence of legal

opposition parties or competing interest groups in a

unitary state, where what is pluralized is not culture or

religion but political opinions and conceptions of material

interest The ruling group, whatever its character, con-cedes that its ideas about how to govern are not the only legitimate ideas and that its understanding of the common good must incorporate some subset of more particular

*liberalism

Arthur Bentley, The Process of Government (Chicago, 1908).

W Kymlicka (ed.), The Rights of Minority Cultures (Oxford, 1995) Arend Lijphart, Democracy in Plural Societies (New Haven, Conn.,

1977)

D Miller and M Walzer (eds.), Pluralism, Justice, and Equality

(Oxford, 1995)

David Nichols, The Pluralist State (New York, 1975).

plurality of causes A term sometimes used where more than one cause is required for a particular effect, e.g igni-tion plus oxygen for an explosion, or (more frequently) where alternative causes can produce the same (type of ) effect, e.g poisoning or decapitation cause death Arguably, such cases are only apparent, and further analy-sis would indicate the ‘true’ causal relationship, which is claimed to be always one–one The latter view—not required by counterfactual analyses of *causality—encour-ages, for example, monetarism in economics a.j.l

J L Mackie, The Cement of the Universe (Oxford, 1974).

pneuma.Breath, sometimes equated by the Greeks with air, the breath of the cosmos Aristotle thought that heat in

the pneuma enables the transmission of sensitive soul to

the embryo, and that it is located near the heart in the mature organism, serving to mediate movement and per-ception The Stoics thought of it as a fine, subtle body forming the *soul of the cosmos, and explaining growth, behaviour, and rationality Descartes used the Latin

equivalent, spiritus, from which come ‘spirit’ and ‘sprite’

*psyche

Martha Craven Nussbaum, Aristotle’s De Motu Animalium

(Princeton, NJ, 1978)

poetry.No satisfactory single-concept theory of poetry has been produced: a poem is not essentially a representa-tion, or essentially expression, or essentially a formal or

‘organic’ unity Not because none of these functions is relevant to poetry, but because no one of them does justice to its complexity and many-levelled nature Poetry can indeed represent or describe: but it may also celebrate, praise, mourn, present alternative worlds It certainly expresses, but it can also transform, the emo-tions of ordinary life, and display emoemo-tions with more than usual precision, not least because of the discipline

and constraints of poetic form.

Distinctive of poetry at its best is an ‘all-in’, maximally dense, simultaneous deployment of linguistic resources— sound and rhythm as well as sense, the bringing-together

of numerous strands of meaning, through metaphor and other figures, through ambiguities (often unresolved),

poetry 727

Trang 9

controlled associations and resonances, allusions: all of

these contributing to a well-integrated, unified effect

The reference a poem makes to the world is often given

a heightened, pregnant character through symbolical or

allegorical or mythical language—in some cases the

per-sonal mythology of the poet (William Blake and W B

Yeats are notable examples.)

Given the total dependence of the poem’s meaning and

effect on the precise words in their order, any attempt at

paraphrase must become ‘heresy’ A poem is not a

dispos-able wrapping for a detachdispos-able and re-expressible message

Now, this emphasis on the thinglike integrity of a poem

makes for suggestive analogies between poems and

non-linguistic artefacts (a vase, sculpture, or melody): hence a

claim like ‘A poem should not mean but be’ (MacLeish)

But this exaggerates: meaning is indispensable—as is

ref-erence to the world beyond the poem—if poetry is not to

be impoverished: and, in any case, the sound of words can

hardly work in sustained disregard of their sense

The subject-matter of poetry is limitlessly varied Often

enough a poem presents some vividly imagined concrete

particular, a momentary, fugitive sensory impression or a

recollected emotion, but also—and no less legitimately—

its concern may be with abstract ideas and relationships,

or with a wide-ranging religious or metaphysical

perspec-tive Crucial here is the absence of any hierarchy of poetic

subject-matter: ‘ontological parity’, in Justus Buchler’s

phrase: ‘All appearances are realities for the poet.’

The relevance to philosophy of the study of the

lan-guage of poetry is already obvious enough But there is

more to note Poetry is forever fighting against the

pres-sures and seductive power of ordinary language to falsify

experience in easy, slack cliché Poetry feels itself often up

against the ‘limits of language’, and forced to modify,

maybe do violence to, normal syntax Theory of

know-ledge and philosophy of religion cannot ignore poets’

claims to ‘timeless (visionary) moments’—‘epiphanies’

That is easy to say: but to distinguish veridical from

illu-sory in this area is notoriously hard r.w.h

*expression; music; representation

Justus Buchler, The Main of Light (New York, 1974).

Poincaré, Jules Henri (1854–1912) A leading contributor

to the brilliant French tradition of applied mathematics

and physics, Poincaré also wrote extensively on

*method-ology and the philosophy of science, in which he is usually

classified as a conventionalist He regarded scientific

struc-tures as containing conventional elements which either

are principles held to be true by definition or are selected

from competing alternatives on pragmatic grounds of

*simplicity and convenience But science must also be

empirically adequate, and so Poincaré could also be called

a metaphysical realist, since science is based on a belief in

the unity and simplicity of nature, and it is the (endless)

task of science to discover the most general order But like

Duhem, Poincaré distinguished sharply between

scien-tific and metaphysical claims Although never fully

developed, Poincaré’s ideas were influential on scientists like Einstein and on later positivist and pragmatist

*conventionalism; pragmatism; Duhem

Peter Alexander, ‘The Philosophy of Science 1850–1910’, in D J

O’Connor (ed.), A Critical History of Western Philosophy (New

York, 1964)

polar concepts When a pair of *concepts opposite in meaning is such that neither of the pair can be understood unless the other is understood also, as with ‘genuine– counterfeit’, ‘straight–crooked’, ‘up–down’, they are said

to form a ‘conceptual polarity’ Ryle used the notion in an attempt to refute scepticism by arguing that if, as the scep-tic’s argument requires, we understand the concept of error, we must also understand that of being right; which Ryle thought proved that we must sometimes be so Ryle misses the sceptical point, however The sceptic can grant that we might have to understand the concep-tual polarity ‘error–correctness’ in order to understand the concept of error, but simply demands how we know

on any given occasion that we are not in error And the sceptic need not even grant so much: he can point to apparent polarities which are such that one of the poles has no clear application, as in ‘mortal–immortal’, ‘per-fect–imperfect’, ‘finite–infinite’, where we can only be said properly to understand one of the poles, the other being merely its indefinite negation, possessed of no

*scepticism

Gilbert Ryle, Dilemmas (Cambridge, 1954), 94 ff.

Polish notation Logical symbolism devised by Łukasiewicz Propositional constants represented by

cap-ital letters: Kpq is ‘p and q’, Apq is ‘p or q’, Cpq is ‘If p, q’, and

so on Similar devices are used for quantifiers and modal-ities Because *constants are written before their

*argu-ments, the ambiguity of expressions like ‘p and q or r’ is removed without using brackets: ‘(p and q) or r’ is AKpqr, while ‘p and (q or r)’ is KpAqr. c.w

A N Prior, Formal Logic, 2nd edn (Oxford, 1962).

Polish philosophy.Political philosophy, especially con-cerning nationhood, and formal logic—these have been two areas of distinction for Polish philosophy Although philosophy in Poland goes back to the thirteenth century and Witelo, famous for his works on optics and the meta-physics of light, its real academic life began at the Univer-sity of Cracow (established in 1364) in the fifteenth century Subsequently all the controversies of medieval philosophy were addressed in Poland Jan of Głogów, Michał of Wrocław, Jan of Stobnica, and Benedykt Hesse were among the most important Polish schoolmen Con-ciliarism became a dominant position among writers working on political matters Paweł Włodkowic (Paulus Wladimirus) was perhaps the most famous Polish thinker

of that time He developed the concept of just war, which

728 poetry

Trang 10

influenced the development of international law

Accord-ing to Paweł, it is prohibited by natural law to convert

pagans to Christianity by war

During the *Renaissance (the golden period of Polish

culture), Copernicus was the nation’s most remarkable

thinker Although he was not particularly interested in

typical philosophical questions, his astronomical work

had obvious philosophical sources His mathematical

approach to astronomy had its roots in Padua in Italy,

where he studied and became influenced by Platonism

He combined this view with the Aristotelian empiricism

of his Cracow teachers A famous controversy as to

whether he was an instrumentalist or realist in his

approach to heliocentric astronomy influenced many

sub-sequent scientific discussions The Polish Renaissance was

also a period of intensive development in political and

social philosophy Andrzej Frycz-Modrzewski wrote a

treatise De republica emendanda (1551) in which he

pro-posed a deep programme of reforms of the state, church,

and society Similarly, as in Western European countries,

the Renaissance brought a revival of *Stoicism in Poland

(Dialectica Ciceronis by Adam Burski is a particularly

valu-able work in this tradition)

The Reformation brought into being another

import-ant stream of philosophical thought, namely

Socinian-ism, a movement established by Faustus Socius, who

came to Poland (then the most tolerant country in

Europe) from Italy, and developed by the Polish Brethren

Joachim Stegmann, Samuel Przypkowski, and Andrzej

Wiszowaty contributed to Socinian philosophy: they

focused on ethics and social philosophy, basing their

doc-trines on the ideals of non-violence, justice, and tolerance

The Counter-Reformation policy forced the Socinians to

emigrate from Poland They moved to the Netherlands

and England, and influenced several great European

philosophers, including Grotius and Locke The early

post-Renaissance period in Poland was marked by the

return of *Aristotelianism with Sebastian Petrycy of

Pilzno, the first translator of Aristotle into Polish

The period of 1650–1750 witnessed a deep political and

cultural crisis in Poland The *Enlightenment brought a

major change It happened in close connection with

attempts to save Polish independence, which was

imperilled by Russia, Prussia, and Austria Stanisđaw

Staszic and Hugo Kođđổtaj were the most important

polit-ical thinkers in Poland in the eighteenth century Their

ideas considerably influenced the content of the 3 May

Con-stitution (1791), the second conCon-stitution in nation’s history

A type of *positivism ( Jan SỄniadecki) was the most popular

philosophy of the Polish Enlightenment, but *Kantianism

and *Scottish philosophy were also fairly influential

Poland finally lost its independence in 1795

Subse-quent philosophy was largely a response to the national

tragedy, deepened by the defeat of the national uprising in

1830–1 The philosophy of this period (approximately

until 1863) is called the Polish national philosophy This

philosophy was related to *Romanticism and to German

*idealism Polish Messianism, which originated with Jụzef

Hoene-WronỄski (also a famous mathematician) and was represented by great Polish national poets (notably Adam Mickiwicz and Juliusz Słowacki), attributed to Poland a special historical role as the Christ of nations and promised a new era Jụzef Gołuchowski, Jụzef Kremer, Karol Libelt, Bronisław Trentowski, and August Cieszkowski (he invented the term ‘Historiosophie’) developed other kinds of the Polish national thought, more akin to academic philosophy The defeat of the national uprising (1863–4) led to a strong criticism of the national philosophy in Poland It was accused of unrealis-tic and irresponsible poliunrealis-tical claims, harmful to nation and individuals The group of Warsaw positivists, influ-enced by the ideas of *Comte, *Mill, and *Spencer, demanded that Polish thought be sober and strongly rooted in reality Polish positivism recommended a pro-gramme of foundational work in all domains important for society

Philosophical life in Poland intensified at the turn of nineteenth century, and this continued in independent Poland after 1918 Kazimierz Twardowski, a student of Brentano, established an analytic movement at the Uni-versity of Lvov, and between 1918 and 1939 the Lvov group grew into the Lvov–Warsaw School, in which the main figures were Jan ·ukasiewicz, Stanisđaw LesỄniewski, and *Alfred Tarski Polish mathematical logic developed partly as a result of Twardowski’s programme of *analytic philosophy, partly out of the interests of Polish math-ematicians in set theory and topology Its innovations included many-valued logic, general metamathematics, the *semantic definition of truth, LesỄniewski’s systems, and Chwistek’s systems The Lvov–Warsaw School had affinities with the *Vienna Circle, but eschewed its anti-metaphysical radicalism and was more sympa-thetic toward the philosophical tradition *Kazimierz Ajdukiewicz and *Tadeusz KotarbinỄski were other distin-guished exponents of Polish analytic philosophy *Phe-nomenology flourished in Poland—it was *Roman Ingarden who introduced Husserl’s ideas and developed a realistic version of phenomenology Neo-Thomism was also influential

Afyer 1945 Poland became part of the Communist bloc While Marxism was dominant, other currents persisted in Polish philosophical life, and this phenomenon, unique in Eastern Europe, contributed to the anti-Communist revolt in 1989 At present, analytic philosophy, phenom-enology, and Catholic philosophy are the main features of the philosophical map But pluralism, respect for logic, and sensitivity to the essential problems of national life remain characteristic of Polish philosophy In spite of honouring idealistic Messianism as the glorious past, most Polish philosophers are inclined to realistic and

J Czerkawski, A B StępienỄ, and S Wielgus, ‘Philosophy in

Poland’, in E Craig (ed.), Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy

(London, 1998)

G Krzywicki-Herburt, ‘Polish Philosophy’, in P Edwards (ed.),

The Encyclopedia of Philosophy (New York, 1967).

Polish philosophy 729

Ngày đăng: 02/07/2014, 09:20

TỪ KHÓA LIÊN QUAN

🧩 Sản phẩm bạn có thể quan tâm