
Plato’s Theories
Introduction
- Lecture 1: Plato’s intellectual and political hinterlands.
- Lecture 2: Plato’s Dialogues—aporetic beginnings to grand syntheses.
- Lecture 3 focus: Plato’s animating core—his metaphysics, epistemology, and the big idea behind Platonism.
- Approach: via negativa—we define Plato’s vision by contrast with modern philosophical “-isms.”
I. The Modern Opponents of Platonism
Plato stands in opposition to nearly every modern doctrine of knowledge and reality.
🧪 Empiricism
- From empeiria (“experience”).
- Truth = what can be verified through sense experience.
- Locke, Hume, Berkeley.
- Plato’s critique: Sense experience is unstable. It belongs to the world of Becoming, not Being.
🧠 Constructivism
- Meaning is made, not discovered.
- There’s no reality beyond our conceptual schemes.
- Plato: No—truth exists outside us, not merely in language or thought.
🔍 Positivism
- Associated with Auguste Comte.
- “What you see is all there is.”
- No natural law, no transcendent moral order—only human law and facts.
- Legal, scientific, and logical positivism all deny a higher reality.
- Plato: There is a moral universe. Law should reflect it.
🧬 Evolutionism as Metaphysics
- Evolution explains everything—not just biology, but ethics, beauty, consciousness.
- Plato: No. Evolution explains change, but not eternal truths.
II. The Masters of Suspicion
Modern thinkers who reduce truth to power, bias, or unconscious drives.
- Karl Marx: Morality is bourgeois ideology—used to control the proletariat.
- Friedrich Nietzsche: Morality is slave revolt—used by the weak to control the strong.
- Sigmund Freud: Morality is repression, reason is a mask for buried desires.
All three cast suspicion on reason—but exempt their own philosophies from the same doubt.
III. The Transcendent World of Plato
What is a Form?
- Greek: ἰδέα (idea), εἶδος (form).
- Not mental constructs—not “just an idea.”
- Forms are more real than physical objects.
- They are eternal, objective, non-physical essences.
🧮 Example: Numbers
- Think about the number 2.
- Did it begin with the Big Bang? Will it die with the heat death of the universe?
- If not, then you already believe in transcendent reality.
- If the number 2 exists, infinite transcendent objects exist.
“Finitude demands explanation. Infinity does not.”
IV. Plato’s Three Big Pictures (Republic)
1. ☀️ The Sun
- Just as the sun is the source of all light and life in the physical world,
- So the Form of the Good is the source of all truth and being in the metaphysical world.
- The Good doesn’t just have goodness—it is goodness itself.
“Candlelight is borrowed. Sunlight is not.”
2. 📊 The Divided Line
A visual metaphor for Plato’s entire philosophy.
Vertical Line (degrees of reality and knowing):
| Knowing | Reality |
|---|---|
| Contemplation | The Good |
| Reasoning | Mathematical Forms |
| Belief | Physical Objects |
| Imagination | Shadows & Images |
Horizontal Line: Divides the World of Becoming (below) and the World of Being (above).
Modern world puts science and sense at the top.
Plato flips it: the visible is the lowest tier of reality.
3. 🕳️ The Cave (Allegory of the Cave)
- Prisoners are chained, watching shadows on a wall, mistaking them for reality.
- One escapes, blinded by the sun (truth), slowly adjusts, and returns to free others.
- They reject him—too used to the shadows.
This allegory captures Plato’s metaphysics, ethics, epistemology, and political philosophy all in one.
V. The Role of Beauty
- Plato sees beauty as a pathway to transcendence.
- In the Symposium: Beauty awakens desire (eros) for the Form of Beauty.
- Beautiful things participate in the Form of Beauty—they’re not beauty itself.
“Beauty is not anywhere in another thing… but itself, by itself, with itself.”
VI. Universals and Particulars
- How can different things be called the same (e.g., all blue shirts)?
- Plato’s answer: They participate in a Universal—a Form.
- Modern logic struggles to explain resemblance without some version of this.
VII. The Sacred and the Ineffable
“Some truths are not provable—they must be felt.”
- The Sacred points to what lies beyond the cave.
- Postmodernists want proof by the standards of the cave.
- But some intuitions—the divine, beauty, love—break through the cave walls.
“You either see it or you don’t.”
VIII. Final Image: C.S. Lewis
“They are only the scent of a flower we have not found, the echo of a tune we have not heard, news from a country we have never yet visited.”
—
Key Takeaways
- Plato believes in a transcendent reality—a world of Forms.
- Truth, beauty, and goodness are real, not invented.
- The Good is beyond Being. It is the source of all meaning.
- Philosophy = a way out of the cave.
- Plato’s goal: educate the soul to see the real world, not the shadows.
Next Lecture: Plato and the City – Philosophy Meets Politics