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@@ -176,3119 +176,8 @@ speak, philosophy happens.}
\defpnote{1.70}{i.e., it is in all probability not a posthumous
edition.}
-CHAPTER III
-THE DOCTRINE OF THE DIALOGUES
-
-
-Introduction
-
-
-In the foregoing chapter, the chronology of the
-dialogues according to reputable scholars was presented.
-
-
-The conclusion that the Iimaeus is a late dialogue was
-
-
-reached by these scholars by utilizing several criteria,
-including stylistic interpretations, biographical information, agreement among some of the ancients, and certain
-
-
-relevant information which Plato set down in his Seventh
-
-
-Letter. It 1s now the task before us to confirm this
-
-
-cgnelusion by appeal to doctrinal development in the
-dialogues which precede the Timaeus. This will be done by
-showing that there are significant themes in the dialogues
-which precede the Timaeus, which are gradually modified
-
-
-and expanded until they are treated in a new way in the
-Timaeus.
-
-It is obviously impossible in these few pages to
-present a detailed summary of all of the philosophical
-doctrines which Plato treated in each of the dialogues to
-be discussed. Therefore, only those themes which specifically culminate in the Timaeus will be passed in review.
-
-It 1s assumed that no significant distortion of Plato's
-philosophy will be made by selecting three themes which
-
-
-Plato discusses together in the Timaeus, and that no
-
-
-
-distortion will be introduced by tracing these themes as
-Plato develops them in the dialogues which intervene
-
-
-between a logical starting point and the Timaeus.
-
-
-The first problen, then, is to determine a logical
-
-
-point to begin our investigations. The Timaeus itself gives
-
-
-us the starting point because it begins with a recapitulation of certain themes in the Republic. This seems to be a
-clear indication that the investigation of Plato's later
-philosophy must include some sort of comparison with the
-Republic and the doctrines of the so-called middle period.
-In the discussion which follows, it will be assumed that
-the doctrines of the Republic may fairly be taken as
-representative of the doctrines of the entire middle
-period, and that reference to the other dialogues of the
-middle period will be made only when it seems clearly
-necessary. Thus little mention will be found of the Phaedo,
-
-
-Phaedrus, and Symposium, and our inquiry will focus mainly
-
-
-on the Republic.
-The Parmenides and the Theatetus constitute a special
-
-
-group of dialogues, as Ritter has observed. In these
-dialogues a special critique of the doctrines of the middle
-period is undertaken by Plato himself. Thus, if one plans
-to trace the development of certain doctrinal themes by
-starting with the Republic and continuing through the late
-dialogues, one ought to interpose between the Republic
-
-
-and the "late" dislogues, the Parmenides and the Theatetus,
-
-
-
-and their respective doctrines, insofar as they discuss
-the themes in question.
-
-In the subsequent discussion of the doctrines of
-the late dialogues, it will be shown that the critique of
-the middle doctrines by the Parmenides and Theatetus had
-
-
-brought Plato to the recognition of a need for new doctrinal formulations. Thus, it will not only clarify the doctrine
-of the Republic but it will shed light on the Sophist,
-Statesman, and Philebus if we examine carefully the critique made by the Parmenides and Theatetus. In this way, one
-May examine the sequence of doctrinal modifications which
-Plato made as he matured, and one may discuss both the
-doctrines and the doctrinal advances as one treats each
-succeeding dialogue.
-
-
-Certain confirmations of the view that the Timaeus
-
-
-reformulates old doctrines in a new way will be sought
-
-
-in relevant passages from the Critias and the Laws, but
-
-
-these are only taken as lateral confirmations, and not as
-
-
-indices, of the extent to which the Timaeus contains
-
-
-significantly new doctrinal formulations. They form, as
-it were, testable corollaries of the main hypothesis.
-
-The three themes which I have selected to focus upon
-are the themes of eternity, image, and time. It should be
-noted that the words eternity, image, and time are not
-technical terms for Plato, and that their meaning will be
-found to change as the sequence of dialogues approaches the
-
-
-Le
-
-
-
-
-
-Timaeus. For this reason, I prefer to call them themes and ;
-
-
-not terms or ideas or doctrines.
-
-I have also made a methodological choice. It would
-be possible to select the passages from each of the dialogues which discuss eternity, image, and time, and by placing
-them together, one could discuss each theme separately. But
-there is another way, which seems more faithful to Plato's
-own method, and that 18 to pass each dialogue in review,
-and, in passing, point out those passages which are relevant to the themes of eternity, image and time. This latter
-method has been adopted.
-
-In the chapters which follow the present one, a more
-or less interlinear commentary will be offered on those
-
-
-passages of the Timaeus which are relevant to the three
-
-
-themes I have selected for study. In this way, the gradual
-advance of Plato's thought is given what I feel is an
-appropriately developmental context.
-
-I maintain, then, that in the middle period, i.e., in
-the Republic, Plato formulated a doctrinal position with
-respect to the relations of eternity, image, and time,
-
-
-that he began a critique of this position in the Parmenides
-
-
-and Theatetus, and that he began a new formulation in the
-Sophist, Statesman, and Philebus, which reached a new
-height in the Timaeus. The reader is asked to judge for
-himself in what follows whether this claim is credible.
-
-
-
-
-
-The Republic
-In the Republic, Plato retains the doctrine of the
-
-
-Forms, and seeks particularly to find the Form of Justice,
-its nature and origin (357 d). However, this is a hard
-task which can only be performed by those whose eyesight
-(for the Forms) is particularly good (368 d). For this
-reason, it is decided that perhaps the method of inquiry
-had better be adapted to those whose sight is not so
-perfect, so that, instead of attempting to gaze directly
-on the Form of Justice, it will be better to adopt a
-"shortsighted" method, namely, seeing Justice where it is
-writ large, in the state (369 a). This will bring about an
-unfortunate mutilation of pure vision, but it is inescapable. Moreover, it is a better method than the one adopted
-by such "story tellers" as Hesiod and Homer who rather tell
-lies than avoid distortion (377 e). These authors do not
-realize that "children" do not know the difference between
-allegory and fact. It were better that the truth be not
-told at all than told badly, yet the problem of representing
-truth in images is not a small one. The primary requirement
-is that truths must be represented, if at all, ina true
-way, worthy of their contents (379 b). "Because we do not
-know the truth of ancient traditions, we make falsehoods
-as much like the truth as we can, and there is no use in
-this."(382 4d)
-
-Here in the opening passages of Book II, Plato tells
-
-
-us that one encounters difficulty in attempting to reveal
-
-
-
-those truths which have been seen by one's excellent eyesight, to those with less than perfect vision. Images of
-truth are, for such men, dangerous, and should be avoided.
-
-Nevertheless, Plato does not stop the process of
-inquiry. Reluctantly, he will try to see the truth of the
-Form of Justice as it is writ large in the state. This
-tells us that the whole Republic is, in its own way, an
-allegory, designed not so much to spell out the legal
-machinations of a polis as to take a shortsighted view of
-the Form of Justice. We know this interest in Justice to be
-a lifelong concern of Plato. It is cited here to document
-the fact that even in the middle dialogues, Plato is not
-unaware of the danger of misrepresenting the gods, and
-that at this point in his development he uses a short-e
-sighted method. He makes the decision to undertake a vision
-of Justice in the state despite his awareness that his
-description of the state will only imperfectly incarnate
-Justice in an image, which in this case, is an allegory (%9
-a). The problem is that allegories only imperfectly imitate the Form of Justice, which Plato tells us next in the
-famous allegory of the guardians and their education. It
-is necessary for the guardians to know the Forms, or else
-their guidance shall be lacking in some perfection, yet
-they are surrounded in their youth by "images of moral
-deformity (401 b)." Physicians, like judges, must cure by
-
-
-use of mind, and "a virtuous nature, educated by time, will
-
-
-
-acquire a knowledge of both virtue and vice (409 e)."
-
-
-Thus, it will be necessary for the guardians to be exposed
-to both perfect and imperfect images of Justice, and, if
-they are strong, and if their souls are in harmony (410 e),
-they will rule well, despite the limitations which mere
-images of Justice impose on their thought.
-
-This limitation of images is termed the "royal lie"
-and the "audacious fiction" (414 b). It is recognized that
-the sights of youth are like dreams, and that their
-education is an acquaintance with "appearance," but youth
-ie in a process of formation in the womb of the earth.
-Perhaps it might not be possible to so educate the guardians in the first generation, but in the next, their sons
-will probably adopt this view (415 b). Here Plato anticipates the difficulty that a new set of laws may not be
-accepted with open arms by a generation of men, but the
-need is great; new laws must be found and promulgated. Yet
-the basis for new laws, i.e., a clear sight of the Forms,
-is impossible. It is as if Plato were scandalized by the
-need to speak the truth of the Forms in a language of
-imagery and allegory, yet, the political necessity (the
-need to know the truth) cannot be denied. Eventually, the
-guardians will see through the mere images of their
-education if they are instructed in these matters "and
-others not mentioned (423 e)." For that reason, there is
-
-
-no need to legislate about particulars, since these will
-
-
-
-flow from the character of the institutions (425 c).
-
-In order to legislate about the "greatest and noblest"
-institution (427 b) the one which deals with temples and
-sacrifices, Plato introduces the "method of residues"
-which we would call the method of gradual elimination.
-
-By presenting the given activities, which are presumed to
-
-be known, and by eliminating all the unacceptable ones,
-Plato arrives at a list of virtues which ought to characterize the guardians (428 a). (As we shall see, this method
-
-of residues is by no means the same as the method of
-division in the Sophist). Then, by eliminating lesser
-virtues, Plato arrives at the conclusion that the guardians
-ought to be temperate, wise, courageous, and just (432 b).
-And by further use of the method of residues, it is
-
-decided that Justice 1s the ultimate basis of the perfection
-of the state (435 a). As we shall see, this conclusion will
-be expanded in the Timaeus, where Time, not Justice is
-
-said to be the basis of perfection.
-
-Justice itself is said to be "the having and doing
-what is a man's own, and belongs to him (435 b)." If a
-man does what he does, and does not attempt to do what
-others do, then Justice will have introduced harmony into
-the relations of the citizens.
-
-Just as the classes of the state are to be in harmony
-with each other, so the soul's virtues will be in harmony
-
-
-with each other, if education proceeds correctly. Yet
-
-
-TT
-Socrates confessed that he does not understand this notion
-of harmony too well. The technical insight into music and
-the harmony of string lengths is best left to the musician,
-as the matter of gymnastic is best left to the gymnast.
-Socrates relates the need for harmony in the soul; the
-images of this harmony in the particular instances of
-music and gymnastics are not directly his concern.
-
-'This is true because it behooves a man, and a state,
-to be a unity, whereas a skill in a large number of
-particulars strains unity. 'thus, each class in the state
-has one and only one function, just as each man in the
-state will have one and only one occupation. Thus for the
-shoemaker to fight will be unjust, just as the fighter
-should not make shoes.
-
-However, Socrates begins to doubt that his method of
-residues is working very well. He reminds us that we are
-seeking a knowledge of Justice and that we are trying to
-achieve it by seeing Justice writ large in the state, but
-the discussion seems to be bogging down in particulars.
-However, he hopes to "strike a spark" and in that way
-release a vision of his subject (434 e). He says:
-
-I must confess that the method we are employing
-
-seems to be altogether inadequate to the accurate
-
-solution of this questions for the true method is
-another and a longer one. Still, we may arrive at
-
-a@ solution not below the level of the previous
-
-Anquiry (435 a)."
-
-This is the same intractable necessity to reveal
-
-
-visions of a more perfect eye to those with less than
-
-
-Toes
-
-
-
-perfect vision. However, the method of employing images
-aoes reveal a "shadow" of Justice, and therefore, it is
-useful (443 c). So, on this basis he traces out the
-division of labor in a society, showing that each man who
-fulfills his appointed task is just only insofar as he does
-not encroach upon the appointed task of another. To do what
-another ought to do is a double injustice, both to oneself
-and to the other. The solidarity of the "imaginary commonwealth" (456 d) rests on this Justice, and, in the same way,
-the soul of the man who tries to cross his line of responsibility will be unjust. The relation of these divided
-responsibilities is injustice. We must assume this to be
-so, for we are reminded that the allegorical investigation
-of the Form of Justice is like dreamers feasting on a
-dream, and that the state here investigated is ""imaginary (458 a)."
-
-Does unity, achieved by the harmony of each individual (soul or class) performing his one task, really work.
-"The inquiry has yet to be made whether such a community
-will be found possible...and in what way...(471 c)."
-
-To answer this, we must inquire what is the least
-change to be introduced into the state which would bring
-about the imaginary harmony we seek. The philosopher-~
-king is the person who will accomplish this. Why do we
-need the philosopher-king? Because it is he who sees the
-Forms in their direct "Beauty" (476 b) and he knows the
-
-
-
-difference between knowledge of something and knowledge of :
-nothing. When one knows, he knows something, and this is
-true knowledge. When one knows nothing, he is in "ignore
-ance" (477 b). The realm of opinion is in between, where
-what one knows both is and is not. True knowledge is of
-the immutable and the eternal, and only this is rightly
-called knowledge (478 e). this sort of knowledge and this
-sort alone should characterize the philosopher-king, and
-all those who deal in opinions about the Justice of this
-or that or the Beauty of this or that occupy some intermediary region which will not fit them for ruling, nor for
-introducing into the atate the least change which will
-make it a just state. Only knowledge of the eternal and
-immutable is knowledge. And yet, as Galileo remarked in
-another age, it moves: the dialogue which castigates mere
-images continues on its allegorical way.
-
-Not only is it true that Knowledge which deserves
-the name is eternal and immutable, but further, those who
-dwell in the realm of opinion are called Sophists, whose
-cant and mere talk is subject to every whim and caprice of
-opinion, changing from day to day and from speech to
-speech. Such men cannot deserve the honor of navigating
-at the helm of state, for they follow the fancies of the
-demanding crew, whom they are supposed to lead (488 a).
-Just as most do not possess the clarity of vision to see
-
-
-Justice, these men do not know how sweet philosophy is.
-
-
-LL
-
-
-
-
-
-Few know this (496 c). For this reason, there has never
-been a state ruled by the philosopher king, and none exists
-at the present (499 a). We see how necessary it is to
-found the state on justice yet we have confronted the
-supreme difficulty of revealing justice to the inhabitors
-of the realm of opinion. It is confessed to be impossible,
-and for that reason, rather than try to show the Sophist
-the form of justice, we had better imagine a state where
-youths are educated from the start to see through the
-dreams which characterize the realm of opinion.
-
-If then, in the countless ages of the past or at
-
-the present hour in some foreign clime which is
-
-far away and beyond our ken, the perfect philosopher
-
-4s or has been or shall be hereafter compelled by a
-
-superior power to have charge of the state, we are
-
-ready to assert to the death that this our
-constitution has been, is, and yea, will be at
-
-any time, only when the muse of philosophy is
-
-queen. Neither is there any impossibility in
-
-this: the difficulty we do not deny (499 4).
-
-Here is a striking juncture, for in it, Plato tells
-us that the vision of the eternal and immutable Form of
-Justice is only to be had by philosophers, that images are
-not completely satisfactory (since the Sophists deal in
-them), but that there is no impossibility in imagining the
-philosopher-king performing his role, perhaps in the past,
-perhaps at present, or perhaps in the future. The themes
-of eternity, image, and time, are joined in one passage.
-The eternal realm of Forms is the domain of the philosopher,
-not the Sophist, who dwells in the realm of opinion and
-
-
-changing imagery. At present, we have no philosopher-king,
-
-
-
-
-
-but, since he is not impossible, he may be sought in
-another time; perhaps past, perhaps future, or perhaps in
-the present somewhere far away.
-
-What will be the task of the philosopher-king.
-
-eoeHe will look at Justice and Beauty as they are
-
-in nature and again at the corresponding quality
-
-in mankind, and then inlay the true human image,
-
-moulding and selecting out of the various forms
-
-of life: and this He will conceive according to
-
-that other image, which, when existing among
-
-men, Homer calls the form and likeness of
-
-God" (501 b).
-
-It will be his task to see the forms and to legislate
-in such a way that men are made in him image. To do so
-requires a very high wisdom indeed, and the education of
-the guardians must therefore by truly philosophical. They
-will not be allowed to take the shortsighted path: theirs
-will be the "long way." To this astonishing exhortation, it
-is objected: is there a higher form than Justice, and the
-still more astonishing answer is: yes. This is the idea of
-the Good and the Beautiful (504 ad).
-
-The Good and the Beautiful are not to be represented
-on the same level as Justice. For them, nothing short of
-the most perfect representation suffices (504 e). Yet,
-even the best opinion is only like a blind man hoping to
-find his way along a straight road (506). To discuss the
-4dea of the Good is too much of a task for the present,
-but Socrates deigns to discuss the "child of the good";
-
-
-he warns his hearers to be on guard lest he render a false
-
-
-account, although he has no intention of deceit (506 e).
-
-
-
-
-
-What follows is an extended metaphor concerring
-sunlight, the eyes, and the things seen, in which Socrates
-explains that the sun is not sight but the source of sight,
-
-he whom I call the child of the Good, whom the
-
-Good begat in his own likeness, to be in the
-
-visible world in relation to sight and the
-
-things of sight what the Good is in the
-
-intellectual world in relation to mind and
-
-the things of the mind" (508 b).
-
-This is the immediate prelude to the famous allegory
-of the divided line, in which the ambivalence which Plato
-seems to show with respect to images is somewhat clarified.
-It emerges that there are two sorts of images, those which
-pertain to the visible world and those which pertain to the
-intelligible world. In the intelligible sphere, reason
-apprehends the Forms, understanding apprehends images of
-the Forms. In the same way, there are divisions in the
-visible world: the reflections of the Forms in the visible
-world, when perceived truly, are reflections and images,
-but when they are not perceived truly, are mere shadows
-and opinions (510 a). In the intelligible realm, images
-function as hypotheses, suggesting but not confirming
-the Forms and the ideas.
-
-Perhaps the most famous of all philosophical allegories is the next image which Socrates presents, the allegory
-of the cave (514 a). We are told that the divided line can
-be seen more concretely in the cave allegory. Going from
-the lowest to the highest of knowledge, we first have
-
-
-shadows, then the objects which cast the shadows, themselves
-
-
-
-
-only images of the Forms. Then, the understanding captures .
-images of the Forms and finally, reason sees the Form (515e).
-It is noteworthy, despite the familiarity of this allegory,
-to point out that the path of philosophical knowledge is
-laden with two difficulties: the first is the blinding
-clarity of the Forms when first seen: the second is the
-need to readapt one's eyes to the dark of the cave upon
-redescending (516 e). However, since the soul likes to
-climb, and prefers not to descend back into the cave, the
-guardians will have to point out that the whole state
-suffers if the enlightened ones do not redescend to
-enlighten in turn their former fellows (519 c).
-
-Here we again confront two kinds of images, or
-rather two levels of images. This is an advance beyond
-the first books of the dialogue, where all images were
-weve copies, dangerous and to be avoided. But, Plato has
-not brought the realm of the Forms any closer: rather, he
-has added a small measure of validity to the images of the
-Forms. It is no longer true that no truth whatever can be
-had in the visible wordl: now, some images are valid,
-others are not. It is still true, however, that images do
-not perfectly reveal the Forms.
-
-There is one further step in the treatment of images
-in the Republic which deserves emphasis. After Socrates
-describes the visible universe and the starry heaven as
-
-
-the most beautiful and perfect of all visible things (on
-
-
-
-this basis the guardians are to be instructed in geometry
-and astronomy) he says that these sciences are not to be
-learned for their own sake, but because they contain
-instructive images of the "divine" (532). The unfortunate
-thing is that those who study the number of stars do not
-look for number itself, and even those who study numbers
-themselves do not reflect upon why some numbers are
-harmonious and some are not: they ignore the "images of
-the divine," not knowing that what they study is only
-like the truth, but is not the truth (533 c).
-
-The seeds of a new insight are here, but it would
-be stretching the point to say that we are now fully
-4nstructed in it. It becomes true to say that for every
-level of truth, the level just beneath it "images" it.
-For this reason, there are two kinds of image in the
-divided line: from the higher vantage point of perception,
-mere sensation is only a shadow, the lowliest kind of image.
-From the point of view of reason, understanding is only an
-image. Similarly, every perception, from the higher point
-of view of understanding, is only an image. Image is thus
-a relative term, not necessarily opprobrious, since to
-advance from a shadow to an image is an advance in the
-right direction, i1.e., toward greater insight.
-
-This is an important doctrine in several respects,
-not the least of which is the new validity which images
-
-
-have been given. It is also important to stress the
-
-
-
-relativity of images to the respective truths which they
-reveal, because it is just this function of revealing the
-
-
-higher truth which the Timaeus develops in a new way. In
-
-
-the Republic, Plato admits the functional role of images
-with some hesitation. In the Timaeus, this hesitation is
-
-
-gone, and images are said to be perfectly appropriate
-revelations in themselves, since they are proportional
-to their paradigms.
-
-Next we are given a Pythagorean myth of the origin
-and outcome of strife in the state, in which the diameters
-and circumferences of circles are described by means of
-the numbers for which the Pythagoreans are famous. The
-perfect stpirelede circle is one whose diameter is a
-perfect number; i.e., one which is the sum of its divisors,
-as six is divided by and is the sum of 1, 2, and 3.
-Unevenly divided circles introduce strife in the state.
-This 1s the sort of tale the muses tell, and Homer speaks
-their language (545 e). However, while these tales are true
-in their way, Plato says that there are more pressing
-investigations, and little is made of the whole procedure.
-It is quickly introduced and quickly abandoned. Suffice it
-here to note that in this Pythagorean allegory time is
-represented by a revolving sphere, and, like a sphere, has
-a beginning, a middle and an end, so that the forms of
-government which correspond to the periods of time have a
-definite sequence. One might extract here a whole political
-_philosophy of history in the Pythagorean idiom, but it can |
-
-
-
-be shown by a discussion of the Timaeus, that a philosophy
-of political forms and their temporal sequence along
-Pythagorean lines is far from the sort of treatment Plato
-can give to this subject.
-
-Plato resorts once again to an image of the soul,
-but this time it 1s an ideal image, the best possible.
-The soul is pictured as consisting of one part polycephalous beast, one part lion, and one part man (588 c), just
-as the state consists of three classes, one of knowledge,
-one of ambition, and one of money (580 da). Having discovered this as a result of the inquiry into the state as the
-image of the justice of the soul, Socrates says now that
-the ideal city is a pattern laid up in heaven, and "he who
-desires may behold this, and beholding, govern himself
-accordingly. But whether there really is or ever will be
-such a one is of no importance to him, for he will act
-according to the laws of that city and no other" (592 b).
-
-The last book of the Republic again takes up the
-problem of representing this ideal realm in images which
-the short-sighted might be able to see. Here Plato rejects
-imitative poetry as mere copy-making, so that even the
-painter, who paints new images which did not exist before,
-4s an inferior kind of creator, for when he copies the bed
-which the carpenter makes of wood, even the wooden bed is
-only an imitation of the Form of all beds. The painter
-copies, the carpenter copies, but the idea of the bed is
-
-
-ie
-
-
-
-original and is not a copy of any thing or of any idea.
-
-Thus, the doctrine of the Republic, insofar as it
-concerns the realm of Forms, describes this realm as a
-sphere in which what is remains what it is, and does not
-become something else. These Forms are the archetypes of
-the visible world, which, from the point of view of the
-Forms, consists of images and copies of the Forms. Images
-are subject to time in the guises of generation and corrup~
-tion, and are changeable, and, therefore, are not truly
-real, since they are not immutable and eternal.
-
-One last doctrinal theme of the Republic remains to
-be cited before we pass on to the next dialogue. It is the
-Myth of Er. Like the small Pythagorean allegory which
-purported to explain the origin of strife, it represents
-an attempt on Plato's part to plumb not only the depths
-of things but to discern their origins. The Myth of
-goes beyond the Pythagorean myth of political philosophy
-in that it is meant to be a brief cosmogony, not just the
-origin of this or that political form. ''o those who search
-the Republic for a literal political philosophy and its
-correlations with the soul, it might seem strange that
-the Republic should end on a note of myth. However, to
-those who see that the Kepublic is an allegorical attempt
-to portray the realm of Justice, (which is timeless) in
-terms which the shortsighted can comprehend, (namely, the
-
-
-images of the changing present) it comes as no surprise
-
-
-tote)
-that the Republic ends in a myth. In fact, since the whole
-Republic itself, 1s confessedly only a short-sighted
-representation of an eternal realm, there should be no
-jarring of consciousness when the Myth of Er is presented.
-The whole dialogue reads like an attempt to say what seems
-unsayable to those who think that saying things means they
-are true.
-
-However, there are certain characteristics of the
-Myth of Er which ought to be singled out, in addition to
-its cosmogonical character,
-
-The Myth of Er recounts the alleged journey of a
-slain warrior into the world after death, where he is
-allowed to see what happens to the souls who perish. Some
-are doomed to wander beneath the earth for ten times the
-normal lifespan (reckoned as ten times one hundred) and
-others are allowed to spend their time in a realm of
-""4nconceivable Beauty." Thereafter, the souls are allowed
-to choose from a wide assortment of lives those they think
-they would enjoy in their next mortal period on earth.
-
-The more interesting feature of this myth is the
-description of the stars and planets spinning in their
-relative spheres around the spindle of Necessity; the
-Fates, daughters of Necessity, may interrupt these revolutions momentarily or give them direction. The fates
-represent the tenses of time, one for the present, one
-for the past, and one for the future. Here is the circular
-
-
-image of time again, in which the revolutions of the
-
-
-
-spheres of the heavens is taken to be the meaning of time: /
-that is, the spinning of the spheres is the motion we call
-time. Notice, however, that here in the Republic, time
-derives from necessity. As we shall see, this is quite
-different from the doctrine of the Timaeus.
-
-One of the most provocative features of this myth,
-48 the perpetual recurrence which 1s said to characterize
-life, and the circular imagery in which this doctrine is
-cloaked. For, if it is taken seriously as a myth, it tells
-us that the number of souls must be a constant, and the
-careers of men are predetermined by their former lives.
-How could the experience of such a realm elude our conscious
-thought in the mortal portion of life? We are told that the
-souls must drink of the "waters of forgetfulness and negligence" before they return to a mortal abode (621 a).
-
-this is a strange metaphor, especially when coupled
-with the doctrine of reminiscence, or with the description
-
-
-of the after-life in the Phaedo. What is the meaning of
-
-
-the "water of forgetfulness"? It pertains to the theme we
-have been describing throughout the Republic: the eternal
-realm of Forms, the visible world of time, and the strange
-distance between them which makes the truth of the eternal
-realm almost impossibly unintelligible to the visible life.
-Here in the Myth of Er the souls who have lived for a
-thousand years in the realm of "inconceivable Beauty" are
-made to forget this experience by imbibing the waters of
-
-
-ES
-
-
-
-forgetfulness. In this way, a mythical answer is made to
-the problem of the difficulty of remembering the realm of
-Forms, the true home of the soul. Since the soul has been
-in the realm of the Forms, this former life is the basis of
-the soul's subsequent recognition of copies of the Forms in
-this life. This accounts for Socrates' constant attempt to
-be the midwife of insight. He hopes that a particularly
-well-chosen image might awaken the soul's memory of the
-eternal realm. His whole pedagogy is based on this premise.
-
-On the one hand, this elevates philosophic discourse
-to a very high level. On the other hand, it puts the whole
-responsibility of achieving insight into the Forms on a
-lesser and inferior type of insight. This contradiction
-did not escape Plato, but he did not resolve it in the
-Republic. We shall have to look to succeeding dialogues for
-its resolution.
-
-Summary of the Republic
-
-We have seen that the Republic presents an attempt to
-gain insight into the eternal realm through the investigation of Justice as it is in the state, that this is an
-allegorical attempt to see the Form of justice in the soul,
-and in that way to see Justice itself. However, we are told
-repeatedly that one needs good vision for this, and that not
-everyone has good vision. Further, even those with good
-vision have a difficult time communicating with those who
-have less than perfect vision. This forces him who has seen
-
-
-ithe Form of Justice to resort to images and copies of the
-
-
-
-
-Form of Justice, which, unfortunately results ina .
-Mutilation of the truth of the Form. We are forced to rely
-on myths which are like the truth but are not the truth.
-They bring us close to the truth but not close enough.
-The height and distance of the Forms is the reason for this
-difficulty, and it is only partially diminished by the use
-of imagery, which is unfortunately always changing, becoming, and passing away. We must have the truth as it is,
-yet we cannot, for the realms of eternity and time are too
-discrete. While time derives from necessity, the Forms
-derive from eternity, and images constitute an in-between
-realm of compromise.
-The Parmenides
-
-It is generally agreed that the Parmenides and the
-Theatetus must be placed midway between the middle and the
-
-
-late dialogues. If it is true that Plato gradually develop=
-ed his doctrines, one should expect to find in the Parmenides some criticism of the Form-theory as it was developed
-in the Republic, and some sort of further development of
-doctrine. In order to present the details of this hypothesized development, it is now necessary to examine the
-
-
-doctrines of the Parmenides which pertain to the themes of
-
-
-eternity, image, and time, and to see how Plato modifies
-his view of the relation of these themes to each other
-and in what way the meaning of these themes in themselves
-
-
-is changed. As we shall see, the eternal realm of the Forms
-
-
-
-and the relation of this realm to the realm of visible
-things, as described in the Republic, is brought face to
-face with some sharp criticisms, in the light of which
-Plato modifies the positions he took in the Republic.
-
-It 18 also generally agreed that one may logically
-divide the Parmenides into two parts, the first of which 1s
-a dramatic introduction and the second of which constitutes
-the body of doctrine. In this second part, Plato divides
-his subject into a series of eight hypotheses. Before we
-discuss them, it might be wise to describe what the word
-
-
-hypothesis means as Plato uses it in the Parmenides.
-
-
-First, Plato does not mean by hypothesis what is
-usually meant by this word in contemporary usage in our
-own day. We are accustomed to the provisional character of
-hypotheses and we regularly expect them to be written in
-the form of if-then propositions. Thus for example, we
-usually begin an investigation by asserting that, if a
-given theoretical view is true, then we should expect to
-find the certain conditions to obtain. Then we seek out
-the conditions, describe them as impartially and fairly as
-we can, and thereafter determine with what accuracy the
-conditions resemble those we predicted would obtain.
-
-But Plato's method in the Parmenides is different
-from the methods just described. He proceeds in a similar
-but not identical way: for he first decides to examine
-
-
-whether a given proposition is true or false and then,
-
-
-ee
-
-
-
-first assumes the truth and then the falsity of the
-proposition in question, which he follows with a demonstrae
-tion of the logical consequences of these assumptions. If
-he arrives at an absurd consequence by assuming the
-proposition to be false, he begins again by logically
-deducing the consequences of assuming the proposition to
-be true. In short, Plato asks what are the consequences of
-assuming a given proposition to be true or false, and it
-is these propositions which he calls hypotheses. His method
-differs from our own in that we are accustomed to confront
-our hypothetical propositions with observations which may
-or may not agree with predicted observations. Plato examines
-the logical consequences of a given view; we predict which
-observations shall be made if the hypothesis is true.
-
-While these two methods have much in common, they are
-obviously not identical.
-
-The eight hypotheses which Plato discusses in the
-Parmenides are not equally relevant to the themes of eternity, image and time, so that the short summary of the
-doctrine of the Parmenides which follows should not be
-regarded as an attempt to summarize the entire significance
-of the dialogue.
-
-The dialogue begins with a recitation of a youthful
-work of Zeno's, which asserts that the existence of the
-many leads to logical absurdities even more ridiculous than
-the alleged absurdities which are said to flow from the
-
-
-tes
-
-
-
-assertion of the existence of the One. The basis for this
-assertion of absurdity is the statement that the many
-would have to be both like and unlike, and that therefore
-the Like would be Unlike and the Unlike Like, i.e., since
-there are both like and unlike things, both Like and Unlike would have to be said of them (127 e).
-
-Socrates asks whether it is possible to assert that
-there is a Form of Like and a Form of Unlike, and that,
-instead of saying that each thing is both Like and Unlike,
-perhaps things share in these Forms, and in that way,
-things will only share in these Forms and will not have to
-be both like and unlike in themselves (129 a). While it
-would not be difficult to think that things shared in the
-Forms in this dual way, it would of course be impossible to
-assert that the idea of Like and the idea of Unlike themselves shared in a dual way in some higher Form, A thing
-might participate in the One and in the Many and in that
-way it could share in both of them without being both of
-them, and thus different from itself. In the same way,
-things could share in both Rest and Motion, Same and
-Different, and other pairs of opposites (129 e).
-
-Parmenides and Zeno smile in admiration at this
-view, as if they were amused at the craft of this philosophical child named Socrates, who, at the time of this
-dialogue, 1s said to be no more than twenty years old (130).
-
-
-Parmenides elicits from Socrates the admission that
-
-
-i 95
-his method leads to the assertion of a Form for the Just, :
-the Good, and the Beautiful, and of all that class of
-notions (130 a). Therefore, there must be a Form of man,
-of fire, of water, etc. Similarly, there must be a Form of
-hair, dirt, mud, etc.
-
-eeevVisible things such as these are as they appear
-
-to us, and I am afraid that there would be an
-
-absurdity in assuming an idea of them, although I
-
-sometimes get disturbed and begin to think that
-
-there is nothing without an idea; but then again
-when I have taken this position, I run away,
-
-because I am afraid that I may fall into a bottonmless pit of nonsense, and perish; and I return to
-
-the ideas of which I was just now speaking, and
-
-busy myself with them (130 d).
-
-Parmenides responds that this is due to Socrates’ youth,
-and that a time will come when philosophy will have a
-firmer grasp.
-
-Parmenides then puts the issue squarely: are there
-or are there not Forms in which things participate, and in
-that way come to have the qualities of the Forms. Socrates
-says there are (131 a). Here we have the central problem
-of the Parmenides posed with exact precision: are there
-Forms and is there an eternal unchanging realm where they
-abide. This realm and its characteristics are assumed to
-exist so that they can be examined in a new way. The
-problem of the manner in which the Many participate in the
-One is chosen as the topic by which this issue is best
-focused, and they agree to discusa it. .
-
-The first ob jection Parmenides offers to this view is
-
-
-the problem of accounting for the way in which a Form could
-
-
-
-be said to be in the many and yet remain one Forn. For, .
-if the Form were in the many, it would seem to be divided
-among them, and hence, not one Form, but many. Nor is it
-possible for the whole idea to be in each of the many for
-then the idea itself would be many (131 c).
-
-The second objection Parmenides raises is as follows:
-if the Idea of Greatness (or Oneness, or Justice, etc.)
-arises as the Idea under which the many are comprehended,
-must not an Idea of the Idea arise which is the source
-both of the Idea and of its distribution in the many, and
-then an Idea of it, and so on, until an infinite regress
-4a reached (1352 b)?
-
-Socrates attempts to evade this by asking whether
-the Idea may not be only a mental unity assigned to the
-class. Parmenides shows that even such an Idea would be
-subject to the same critique, for an Idea of the Idea
-would have to arise to give meaning to the first idea, and
-so on.
-
-Socrates then attempts to say that the Ideas are
-really patterns fixed in nature, and that things resemble
-them. This is subjected to the same critique: another Idea
-would have to arise in which both the pattern and the
-thing would be like.
-
-"The theory, then, that other things participate in
-the Ideas by resemblance has to be given up, and some
-
-
-other mode of participation has to be devised" (133 a).
-
-
-
-
-These are not even the gravest objections which can
-be raised against the theory of the Forms. Even worse
-consequences follow once one perceives that the Ideas
-cannot exist in us or be known by us so long as they remain
-where they are said to be, for then they are there and not
-here with us. And if we cannot know them, is there any
-basis of intelligibility: how can we know, and what can we
-know (133 b). Parmenides asserts that only a long and
-laborious demonstration can remove this difficulty, which
-necessitates much training, (not good eyesight alone).
-
-Parmenides begins then, by facing directly the
-problem which the Republic began to examine; i.e., if there
-is a realm of Forms separated from the realm of things,
-the relation of one realm to the other seems impossible, and
-with that impossibility of separation, partially bridged by
-the reluctant admission of images, the basis of true
-knowledge (and Justice, Good, Beauty, etc.) disappears.
-One falls thereafter into a "pit of nonsense." The further
-consequence is that anyone who might have knowledge of the
-Forms would be unable to have knowledge of us, since we are
-in a different realm (134 e). Separated realms leads to
-nothing less than the destruction of reason (135 c). All
-this arises out of the youth of Socrates, and his lack of
-training.
-
-Parmenides holds out a hopes he says that there is
-more truth to be found, if, after affirming the hypothesis
-
-
-,of separated realms and inapecting its logical results,
-
-
-
-
-
-the hypothesis is also denied, and the results of this
-denial are similarly subjected to logical investigation.
-One should further test this method by both affirming and
-denying such hypotheses as the existence and non-existence
-of the One and the Many, Rest and Motion, Like and Unlike,
-Generation and Destruction (136 b).
-
-Notice the characteristics of this method. The
-existence and the non-existence, Rest and Motion, Generation and Destruction, are to be tested. Both sides of the
-argument are to be followed. Nowhere has the question yet
-been asked whether there are two sides. It is assumed. As
-we shall see, it is this assumption of a dualism running
-through the nature of Forms, Ideas, things, perceptions,
-etc., which Plato is subjecting to the light of his
-analysis.
-
-
-So much for part one of the Parmenides. In the next
-
-
-portion Parmenides employs his method of affirmation and
-denial in eight hypotheses. In them, he subjects nothing
-less than the basis of the theory of Forms to a searching
-critique.
-
-The first hypothesis of the eight is said to be
-Parmenides’ own One; if this sort of One is, it cannot be
-many (137 c). From this it follows that it has no parts,
-no beginning, middle, end, is not like or unlike itself or
-another, is neither same nor different, is neither at rest
-nor in motion, is neither great nor small, limited not
-
-
-(unlimited, equal or unequal. The relation of the One and
-
-
-
-time is set forth as follows:
-
-The One cannot be older, or younger, or the same age
-as itself, because that would imply Likeness, which it was
-shown not to have (140 a). Therefore it cannot exist in
-time at all (141 a). "And if the One 1s without participation in time, it never has become, or was becoming, or was
-at any former time, or has now become or is becoming, or is
-or will become, or will have become or will be hereafter."
-
-"Most true.
-
-"But are there any modes of being other than these?
-
-"There are none.
-
-"Then the One cannot possibly partake of being.
-
-"That is the inference.
-
-"Then the One is not. (14%)
-
-"But can all this be true about the One?
-
-" I think not" (142 a).
-
-The result of the first hypothesis is clear: starting on the assumption of the One as unrelated, it follows
-that nothing can be said about it, not even that it is
-One. Assuming the logic to be impeccable, the hypothesis
-leads to its own contradiction. Such an hypothesis is
-untenable. Therefore, all the things which we tried to
-predicate of it, and found ourselves unable to predicate of
-it, are not predicable of it @f it 18 what we assumed it to
-be), that is, unrelated. If it is unrelated, it is unspeakably other. Therefore, we must seek for other ways to
-speak intelligently about it.
-
-Here is the first clear attempt to close the gap
-
-
-between the unreachably eternal and the irrevocably temporal, a gap which 1s now clearly faced and admitted to
-
-
-te
-
-
-
-present an obstacle to intelligent thought. The One,
-therefore, cannot be in a completely separated eternal
-realm. It must somehow be in some sort of relation to the
-temporal realm. The ways in which the One is so related are
-the topics of the next hypotheses.
-
-The second hypothesis (142 e=155 a) begins with a
-different assumption. It affirms that if the One is, its
-unity and its being are different. Therefore, it is a
-vhole of two parts, unity and being. Each part, furthermore,
-is a one (142 d). Therefore, the One of hypothesis II
-contains division within it, and therefore becomes the
-recipient of the predicates which its former indivisibility
-made impossible. It is now, however, susceptible of both
-sides of the pairs of contraries which were formerly
-inapplicable. It is now One and Many, Infinite in number
-and Limited in number, Same and Other, in itself and in
-another, at Rest and in Motion. Further, these predicates
-are both applicable by affirmation, but, because each pair
-is contradictory, they are also inapplicable.
-
-If the One is a One of parts, it partakes of time,
-which is always moving forward (152 a). Therefore, the One
-becomes older, younger, and is the same age as itself. Yet,
-Since it is the same age as itself, it is neither older nor
-younger than itself (152 e).
-
-In the same way, it is younger, older, and the same
-age as the Other and the Others (153 e). And, in the same
-
-
-ls
-
-
-
-way, it is not older, younger, or the same age as the
-Other or the Others (154 a).
-
-Therefore, since the one partakes of time, and
-partakes of becoming older and becoming younger than itself
-and the Others, and neither is nor becomes older or younger
-than the Others, the One is aid wee and will be, and was
-becoming, 1s becoming, and will be becoming. "And, if we
-are right in all this, then there is an opinion and science
-and perception of the One" (155 da).
-
-Two conclusions may be drawn from the second hypothesis. First, the One, by hypothesis, is no longer so
-separate and so isolated that nothing can be known or said
-of it, so that it is now said to be in time and becoming,
-and not in time and becoming. Second, it is, by the same
-
-
-token, both like and unlike itself. But this is far from
-
-
-the final doctrine of the Parmenides.
-
-
-In the first hypothesis, the One was indivisibly One
-and nothing could be said or known of it. In the second
-hypothesis, the One is divisible and therefore, everything
-can be said and known of it. But this is nor more satisfactory than before. Previously, we avoided contradictory
-predications at the expense of knowledge; now, we have
-knowledge, but it pays the price of contradictory predications. Since it ia no more helpful to say everything of it
-
-
-than it is to say nothing of it, another way must be found
-to discuss the One intelligently.
-
-
-Hypothesis IIA interposes another method by which
-
-
-
-the One can be intelligently discussed. The One cannot be
-the bare unity of hypothesis I nor the divided unity of
-hypothesis II. Hypothesis IIA tries to see whether one can
-avoid the scandal of contradiction by making predications
-of the One at different instants, so that there will be no
-one time at which the contradictory predicates of hypothesis
-II need to be applied simultaneously. In its own way, it
-introduces some considerations of not-being, which, as we
-shall see, are pursued further in subsequent dialogues,
-especially in the Sophist.
-
-If, as hypothesis II asserts, the One is divided,
-and partakes of time, it cannot both be and not be at the
-same time (155 6). (This is precisely what is to be proved).
-Therefore, there must be an instant between the instant
-when the One is (said to be anything) and the One is not
-(said to be anything) (156 a). Similarly, there must be an
-instant between its generation and its corruption. In the
-same way, there must be an instant between the instant
-when the One is in motion and the instant when the One is
-at rest, when it is like and when it is unlike, etc. The
-strange instant between the instants at which predication
-may be asserted is a very peculiar sort of instant, for,
-if the predicates which we assert of the One are asserted
-of the One insofar as it is in time, the instant between
-these instants cannot be in time, and might therefore be
-called not-time. Plato does not use this term. He calls it
-
-
-_\& "queer instant" and says that the divided One of
-
-
-
-hypothesis II leads to the conclusion of contradictory :
-predicates, and that these cannot be simultaneously
-asserted (157 a). But if they cannot be asserted at the
-same instants, perhaps they can be asserted at different
-instants. Yet at any given instant, if we do not assert
-both sets of predicates and neither, (1i.e., both affirm
-and deny them) this instant cannot be in time at all.
-
-Hypothesis IIA may be called the "linear" hypothesis,
-by which is meant that in it, time is examined as if it
-consisted of a series of instants, a sort of Zenoism of
-time, an imaginary line. Plato here applies the third
-man argument to a linear image of time, a series of
-instants, yet, if time is a series of instants, a third
-inatant will always be found between the two surrounding
-4netants at which predication is made. It seems that Plato
-here asserts that time cannot consist of a series of
-4nstants and that predication is made impossible by so
-viewing it.
-
-If becoming, motion, change, generation, alteration,
-and locomotion are in time, and their contraries are also
-in time, we cannot avoid the difficulty of contradictory
-predication by assuming that time is a series of instants,
-nor can we say that the pairs of predicates switch over
-from one instand to another in an interstitial instant.
-For, if a predicate is asserted of the first instant and
-the contradictory predicate is asserted of the third
-
-
-iinstant, at the point of the second instant, nothing can
-
-
-
-be asserted, and we are back to hypothesis I where we can
-neither affirm nor deny anything of the One. However, this
-philosophical gymnastic has not been unfruitful. We know
-now that the need to make intelligent statements about
-the One is not satisfied by assuming that it is a completely separate One. We know that we cannot say that it is
-completely divided, for then it is really a Two. And we
-know that we cannot insert the instant between the One and
-the Two in order to fasten predicates on either end and
-allow the middle to be the transition, for then the middle
-ie neither One nor Two.
-I hope it does no violence to the spirit of philosophical continuity to say at this juncture that the remainder of the Parmenides may be briefly summarized. The
-
-
-Parmenides does not attempt to solve its problem within
-
-
-itself, but leads one beyond it. The third hypothesis
-points out that parts in their multiplicity, and parts in
-their relation as parts of a whole, must be distinguished,
-and on this basis, their limitation and relative infinity
-can overcome the contrariety they seem to suggest. In this
-way we avoid the contradiction of saying that the parts
-are both limited and unlimited and therefore cannot be
-predicated of the One. In fact we must say that the parts
-participate in the One as parts, but that parts by them
-selves are merely unlimited.
-
-The fourth hypothesis considers the relation of the
-
-
-(One to Others, that 1s, each part, as a One, has some of
-
-
-
-the properties of the Other insofar as it is a part. The
-fifth hypothesis considers the need to understand how the
-One, the parts, and the Others limit each other. (This
-point will be pursued at some length in the Philebus). The
-
-
-sixth hypothesis examines the characteristic of the Other
-insofar as it is only other. The seventh hypothesis considers the result of assuming the existence of the many
-without assuming the existence of the One. This is said to
-result in mere opinion, which is inadequate precisely
-insofar as it sees only the many as many and ignores the
-many as parts of the whole. The elgth hypothesis points
-out that the assumption of the existence of the Many
-without the One results in a contradiction because without
-the One there is no Many.
-Summary
-
-I would like to summarize the doctrine of the
-Parmenides insofar as it pertains to the hypothesis of this
-study. It is, I think, an examination of the naive assumption that the realm of the Forms in its bare unrelated
-purity renders intelligent predication, and therefore, all
-intelligent discourse, impossible. It asks how and in
-what way we may both speak of the Forms and speak of
-appearances without separating their respective realms.
-It states that the realms are related (in some way-hypothesis III) but it never really reveals this way with any
-precision or clarity.
-
-
-However, for the purposes of this study, an important,
-
-
-
-conclusion has been stated. We saw in hypothesis IIA,
-that it is not possible to regard time as a series of
-instants strung out along an imaginary line, and that the
-instant is, in some way, not-time, a "queer instant."
-
-As we shall see, in one of the next dialogues, the
-Sophist, the generalization of this problem of not-time is
-examined: i.e., the problem of not-being. A new method of
-division of predicates is introduced in the Sophist and
-developed in the Statesman. The question of limit and
-
-
-measure is examined in the Philebus, and, finally, the
-
-
-divisions of becoming and the nature of time are examined
-
-
-in the Timaeus.
-
-
-However, between the Parmenides and the Sophist
-
-
-there is another dialogue which intervenes, the dialogue
-
-
-which is generally agreed to follow the Parmenides. It
-
-
-seems to be the task of this next dialogue to examine the
-protagonists of hypothesis VII, in which it is said that
-there are those who hold that the Many exist and can be
-known. This is the subject of the Theatetus.
-
-
-The Theatetus
-This dialogue sets itself the problem of examining
-
-
-knowledge, and asks itself to answer such questions as
-
-"do we know," "how do we know," and "are there kinds of
-knowledge." Where the Parmeyides focused on the consequences of hypothesizing that the realm of Forms is completely
-
-
-separated from the realm of things, the Theatetus inquires
-
-
-,into the basis of knowledge from the other direction,
-
-
-
-namely, it focuses on the world of things and seeks the :
-basis for speaking of it intelligently and knowingly.
-
-In the interests of brevity, only those portions of
-the Theatetus which are directly relevant to the analysis
-
-
-of the themes of eternity, image, and time will receive
-comment in what follows, and no implication should be drawn
-that the entire significance of the dialogue consists in
-these portions to the exclusion of other important aspects
-of the dialogue. It is the business of the following
-comments to focus on the significance of the problem of
-knowledge and the attendant problem of error to show that
-the Theatetus constitutes something of an advance over the
-Parmenides precisely because it takes some of the conclusions of the Parmenides into account.
-
-
-Theatetus suggests that knowledge is perception (151e).
-Socrates reminds Theatetus that this position makes all
-knowledge infallible, and that this same doctrine fits
-Heraclitus, Empedocles, and Homer, indeed, fits a whole
-tradition, with the single exception of Parmenides.
-According to this tradition,all things are in a perpetual
-becoming, and therefore we may not say that things are
-being or something, because they are all in flow and flux
-(152 6). In perception as well as in matters of the soul,
-motion, not rest, is the source of health, according to
-
-these philosophers.
-
-
-Socrates then reaches the conclusion that whatever
-
-
-
-
-
-appears can only be while it is appearing. He remarks
-"Let us follow out our recent statement and lay it down that
-there is no single thing that is in and by itself" (153 e),
-as if Socrates were testing the hypotheses of the Parmenides
-in the realm of perception. Thus we read "...nothing can
-become greater or less either in size or in number, so
-long as it remains equal with itself" (155 a). Again, we
-find "...a thing to which nothing is added and from which
-nothing is taken away is neither diminished nor increased,
-but always remains the same in amount" (155 a). And
-",.emust we not say...that a thing which was not at an
-earlier instant cannot be at a later instant without
-becoming, and being in process of becoming" (155 b)? On
-the basis of these axioms, things both change and do not
-change and are perceived and are not perceived. "The
-conclusion from all this, is, as we said at the outset,
-that nothing is one thing by itself but is always in
-process of becoming for someone, and being is to be ruled
-out altogether" (157 b). All is flux, each is flux.
-Socrates wants to make sure that the point has been firmly
-made so he asks: "Once more, then, tell me whether you
-like this notion that nothing is but is always becoming
-good, or beautiful, or any of the other things we mentioned" (157 a).
-
-The bearing these questions have on the three themes
-of eternity, image, and time which we are pursuing is,
-
-
-ibriefly, this; perception deals with appearance and the
-
-
-
-
-
-world of appearance is a fluxion in which all things are
-becoming. Therefore, the forms cannot be located in a
-completely separate eternal realm which guarantees knowledge. Yet we seem to know. The question is, are the images
-which perception furnishes us true because they are neither eternal nor mere appearance? Plato is again posing
-
-the problem: how can the visible world participate in the
-eternal world? In the Theatetus, the question becomes: do
-the images which perception gives us make possible a knowledge of the eternal? .
-
-Socrates reminds us that the "men of flux" constitute
-only one group, which is opposed by another group, consisting of Parmenides and Melissus, who hold that "all things
-are a unity which stays still by itself, having no room to
-move in. How are we to deal with all these combatants? For,
-little by little, our advance has brought us, without our
-knowing it, between the two lines..." (180 e). Socrates
-says that the inquiry will succeed best if the flux
-doctrine is examined, and if the re-examination of the
-forms is postponed (183 A).
-
-But let us not be deceived by the atatement that
-Parmenides' view is to be postponed. For, no sooner has
-Socrates said it, than he enters into discussion of what
-is known, and, asks whether all the things that we say we
-know are perceived by sense. We say, for example, that a
-flower is white and that the flower is. Surely the faculty
-
-_that says it is white and no white and the faculty that
-
-
-J
-
-
-
-says it is and is not, surely these cannot be the same
-faculty.
-
-You mean existence and non-existence, likeness and
-unlikeness, sameness and difference, and also unity
-and numbers in general as applied to them; and
-clearly your question covers even and odd and all
-that kind of notions. You are asking through what
-part of the body our mind perceives these (185 c)?
-Socrates congratulates Theatetus on reaching the conclusion
-that the mind is its own instrument in perceiving, since it
-saves him a long argument (185 e). Thus, we go beyond the
-statement that knowledge is perception, for we know the
-existence of a thing not by perception but by the mind's
-reflection on something perceived (186 e). And this
-reflection is temporal, for all those qualities of which
-we spoke (the Parmenidean pairs of contraries) "seem to me
-above all to be things whose being is considered, one in
-comparison with another, by the mind, when it reflects
-upon the past and present with an eye to the future" (186a).
-Such reflections upon perception only come, if they come at
-all, to those who go through a long and troublesome process
-of education (186 c). For, if one cannot reach the existence of a thing, he cannot reach the truth (186 c).
-Welcome as it seems, this statement only pushes the
-difficulty further back. If the mind's reflection on
-itself is like two voices of the mind speaking to each
-other, why do we assume that the voices always agree.
-
-
-Cannot the voices of the mind disagree; in short, are all
-
-
-judgments necessarily true? We dismissed Protagoras because
-
-
-tes
-
-
-
-he made all perceptions infallible: are we to say we have
-gone beyond his position only to assert that all judgments
-are infallible (187 a). |
-
-The suggested approach to the problem of false
-judgment is the famous allegory of the wax tablet (191b ff.).
-We are asked to imagine that the mind contains a wax
-tablet and that ite quality varies in different people:
-some have good, clear, firm, wax, others have unclear,
-muddy, soft, wax, and so the images which perception
-imprints on the tablet vary. In addition, the strength of
-the imprint varies. Images are the gifts of Memory, so that,
-in any act of knowledge, we must now distinguish the memory
-image, the perception (the present image) and the mind's
-knowledge (reflection on images with "an eye to the
-future").
-
-Notice that the basis of this division is temporal,
-and not a static hierarchy. Images are not discarded merely
-because they are "low," and knowledge is not better merely
-because it is "high": we are now asked to see that false
-judgments can arise out of faulty matching of remembered
-images, present images, and reflections on images with
-"an eye to the future." This is a significant advance
-over the Republic.
-
-The discussion of knowledge is further complicated
-because we may confuse past images with present images,
-past perceptions with present perceptions, past knowledge .
-
-
-.with present knowledge, and each of these may be faulty
-
-
-
-both by reason of faulty wax, varying strengths of impres- 7
-sion, or mismatching. Even Theatetus complains of the
-complexity. In addition, we have again only pushed the
-difficulty further back, because we are assuming that the
-mind is infallible, and that is just the problem we wanted
-to investigate. "That was the very ground on which we
-were led to make out that there could be no such thing as
-false judgment: it was in order to avoid the conclusion
-that the same man must at the same time know and not know
-the same thing" (196 c).
-
-Socrates reminds Theatetus that the whole conversa~
-tion assumes both that we know, and that we do not know,
-what we say. If we do not assume that we can know, convergation is impossible (197 a); If we do not assume that we may
-not know, all knowledge is infallible.
-
-Another allegory is introduced to supplement the
-wax tablet. It is the allegory of the Aviary. Where the
-allegory of the wax tablet was concerned with images and
-the possibilities of conflict between images and reflections
-on images, the allegory of the Aviary is concerned with
-flying birds, which symbolize reflections i.e., thoughts.
-Although reflection upon images gives rise to thoughts,
-these thoughts soar and must be recaptured in recollection
-4f we are really to know. Here again we are shown that
-there is a temporal emphasis to be placed on the acts of
-
-
-knowledge, for, in a sense, knowing is relearning what we
-
-
-
-
-'knew before (198 e). Yet, if we ask whether some of these
-recollections might not also be false, we see that the
-criterion of true knowledge remains to be found (200 b).
-
-Perhaps there is no way to define knowledge, and we
-must content ourselves with the statement that perception
-gives rise to true belief and opinion.
-
-Socrates shows that this conclusion is due to an
-inaccuracy. For example, he says, the syllable was not,
-until the letters were combined in just that fashion; it
-
-
-4s a one after its parts become parts of it (204 a). Here
-
-
-is another recapitulation of the arguments of the Parmenides. It is the same with number: a sum is not a sum
-until its component integers are added, and only thereafter
-is it one sum (204 e). But this 1s the distinction to be
-made (as it was made in the Parmenides): the whole consists
-of the parts; not just any parts, considered in themselves,
-as unrelated ones, but parts as related. In other words,
-the difficulty is only apparent, and it vanishes as soon
-as we see that the whole and the parts are not two different things in isolation but related aspect of a One (205 b).
-
-To conclude, then; if, on the one hand, the
-
-syllable is the same thing as a number of
-
-letters and is a whole with the letters as
-
-parts, then the letters must be neither
-
-more nor less knowable and explicable than
-
-syllables, since we made out that all the
-
-parts are the same thing as the whole (205 a).
-Therefore, Socrates concludes that those who hold that the
-elements or the whole are more or less knowable than each
-
-
-Other, are playing with us. We can know the elements, as
-
-
-
-parts, and therefore, an opinion with an account is
-knowledge.
-
-But what is an account (logos)? It cannot be only an
-enumeration of parts as isolated parts (207 e). The other
-meaning might be "the image of thought spoken in sound"
-or language (208 c). This is the problem, not the answer.
-Perhaps marking off a thing and distinguishing it from all
-others constitutes a good account (208 d). An account will
-then mean putting the thing's "difference" into words. (209a)
-But Socrates quickly shows that we must first know the
-common to distinguish the different, which begs the question of knowledge. (209 e) Therefore it does not seem true
-to say that knowledge is opinion with an account of
-difference, unless we already know the common on the basis
-of which we distinguish the difference. (Although this is
-what we do, it 1s not a definition of knowledge since it
-includes "knowing the common" in its "definition").
-
-| The dialogue ends a few lines later with Socrates
-saying that all the definitions of knowledge so far
-adduced are mere "wind-eggs" (210 b). Theatetus is told
-that the mid-wife's art is a heavenly gift which Socrates
-uses on those in whom beauty resides, and that as a result
-of this gymnastic they have engaged in, Theatetus will
-thereafter be better enabled to know what knowledge is.
-The conclusion, on the surface, is that we know, but cannot
-
-
-define what knowledge is. Actually, we have said several
-
-
-
-
-'things about what it is not, and therefore Theatetus has
-made progress along the "long way" which is required for
-this sort of knowledge. That is why the last words of the
-dialogue are "But tomorrow morning, Theatetus, let us
-meet again" (210 d).
-Summary
-
-What have we learned about eternity, moving images,
-and time? A great deal, it seems. And what we have learned
-cannot be separated from the doctrines of the dialogues we
-
-
-have considered so far. We see in the Theatetus that some
-
-
-of the positions of the Republic and of the Parmenides have
-
-
-been reexamined and certain modifications have taken place.
-We know now that knowledge must include, but is not
-exhaustively defined by, moving images of thought, (birds);
-that we cannot refer to parts in isolation but must discuss
-them as they are related in a One; that the mere enumeration
-of elements does not comprise an explanation; and, above all,
-that we know, but do not know how we know. In addition,
-
-and perhaps this is the most striking conclusion of all,
-
-we have seen that the mind can be viewed as conversing
-
-with itself, and that this internal dialogue consists of
-
-the attempt to put images and reflection on the past,
-present, and future in their right order. We have advanced
-far beyond the naive view that the mind is a static camera
-whose job it is to escape the transient shadows of perception in a flight to eternal forms. We are now told that it
-
-
-1 :
-
-
-
-is the task of mind to discern the right temporal order of
-ita ingredients, so to speak. However, even after all
-these things have been done, we still do not have a
-definition of knowledge. The important point to notice is
-
-
-that the steps and hypotheses of the Theatetus are no
-
-
-longer regarded as inferior but as necessary preliminaries
-in the "long way" which the mind must take to true knowledge.
-
-Somehow, we have found, not what knowledge is, but
-what complete knowledge is not. This insight, namely, that
-somehow what is not, in some way, must be included in what
-is, will be examined in the next dialogue, the Sophist,
-which can, from certain points of view, be regarded as a
-triumphant breakthrough into another whole way of philosophizing.
-
-The Sophist
-
-We enter now into the series of dialogues unanimously regarded as the late group, in which Plato's evolved
-reflections are to be found. The Sophist begins with a
-dramatic introduction which includes the participants of the
-Theatetus, but now we meet an additional person, an Eleatic
-Stranger. This scems to be the fulfillment of the Theatetus'
-promise to consider the Parmenidean approach to truth
-after the Theatetug dealt with the "men of flux." It is
-further interesting to note that the Stranger begins the
-whole dialogue by using a method which is unavailable to
-_the men of flux, namely, the method of division, which
-
-
-
-seemed to the men of flux to presume knowledge, not to
-
-
-seek it. (This point will be expanded in the Statesman).
-
-
-The Stranger does not allude to this hypothetical difficulty, and he employs the method without question. This confirms the hint that we are now to inspect the heritage of
-
-
-the Parmenides, not in the manner of the Theatetus, nor
-
-
-exactly in the manner of the Parmenides, but in some new
-way to deal with philosophical inquiry. And, as we shall
-see, we are told new things about eternity, images, and time.
-
-It is agreed that a trial run of this method should
-be had before the Sophist is defined, and they agree to
-use an easy example, the angler one familiar to them all.
-This is important because it assumes the results of the
-Theatetus; the angler is at once a familiar experience but
-an undefined reality.
-
-The definition of the Angler is reached, and the
-method of "halving" is satisfactorily put to the test.
-What is of special interest to us here is the difference
-between this kind of division, and the method of elimination which Plato had previously used in the Republic.
-
-In the sort of dividing which Plato accomplishes here, it
-4a necessary for the divider to proceed very carefully and
-to divide the subject into exact halves, so that only
-what actually pertains to the subject is retained and
-what ta found not to pertain to the subject nevertheless
-
-
-reveals something about the subject (221 b). If the
-
-
-
-division is not well made, the remainder will contain too
-much, that is, the definition will remain too vague. Only
-by carefully determining what something is not can one
-reach a precise knowledge of what something is. Thus it is
-incorrect to equate the method of division which we find
-in the Sophist to the method of residues which we confronted
-in the Republic. The latter proceeds by eliminating classes
-of objects, the former by dividing within a class of
-objects.
-
-It 4s necessary to notice, however, that the Stranger
-provides the divisions, and that Plato passes over the
-fact that in some way the Stranger knows what divisions are
-most helpful. It is almost as if the Stranger already has a
-higher wisdom. In other words, he does not draw his
-distinctions from appearance, but somehow draws them from
-a higher kind of knowledge. It 1s important to emphasize
-this point because it is in strong contrast to the method
-advocated by the men of flux in the Theatetus.
-
-Having defined the Angler, Socrates now attempts to
-define the Sophist. To those he convinces, the Sophist
-seems to know all things, and to be versed in every art,
-but such competence is impossible. Now we approach the
-central concern. For the Sophist cannot truly be what he
-claims to be, yet he certainly appears to be. Appearance
-and reality cannot be the same, yet the question is, how
-
-
-do they differ. This question might be called the most
-
-
-
-important question in all of Plato's dialogues so far. The —
-definition of the Sophist, then, is a case in point: we
-are to investigate this partisuien gentleman, as we
-investigated the Angler, in order to discover how reality
-is, and what appearance seems to be; in the language of
-this study, how the eternal forms are related to the temporal world.
-
-The Stranger asserts that the Sophist is an imitator,
-and that sufficient division of the imitative art will
-reveal him. Just as imitation may be divided in two kinds,
-so the images which imitation produces are of two kinds;
-some images (eikastike) are like reality in that they are
-faithful to the proportions of the original (235 da); others
-distort the proportions of the reality, and these we shall
-call fantasies (phantastike) (236 b). But now the problem
-becomes even greater, because to distinguish the image
-from the reality we have to say that the image is not the
-reality. How can @ man say what is not true, or assert the
-existence of what is not. The word which Parmenides forbade
-Must be uttered - not-being (237 a). No sooner do we
-distinguish the image from the reality than we distinguish
-notebeing from being. At this point, Plato leaps beyond the
-level of Parmenides’ and of his own earlier philosophy, and
-reaches out into virgin territory. And at this point,
-Plato's most crucial discussion of the meaning of the word
-
-
-image is begun.
-
-
-
-
-Surely, the Stranger asserts, we cannot just say
-that what ia, is not. Yet we say "notebeing" as if it were
-a singular; we say "not-beings" in the plural. We agree
-that not=being is unutterable and inconceivable, and yet
-we speak the words; in short, in the act of saying we
-cannot say it, we are saying it (238 c). This is the dark
-hole into which the Sophist retreats when we try to refute
-him, for, if we say that an opinion of his is false, we
-assert that it 4s-not true, and in so doing, we assert
-that it isenot, and he therby chides us on this contradiction (239 a). This is precisely what happens if we ask
-him what an image is. "How can I describe an image except
-as another made in the likeness of the true" (240 a). But
-1f it is other than the true, it is other than what is, and
-
-
-hence it isenot. The Stranger then begs not to be accused
-of patricide, for, if they are to catch the Sophist in their
-dialectical trap, the philosophy of Parmenides must be put
-to the test (241 a). In a certain sense, we must say that
-notebeing is, and being is-not.
-
-The Stranger then says that the predicament in which
-they now find themselvea is due to the fact that the former
-philosophers treated their hearers with disdain, as if
-dealing with children. They followed their arguments whereever they led and left the children to wonder at their
-meanings, because they spoke in myths, among which he
-classes the One and the Many (242 e), the myths of strife
-
-
-
-and peace, the three principles at war in the soul, the
-moist and the dry, and includes in this group the Ionian
-and Sicilian explanations in mythical garb (242 da). He
-says that a discussion of most of these myths may be
-deferred to a later occasion; at present, the chief of
-iheus will be discussed; the myth of the One and the Many.
-
-The Stranger proceeds to recapitulate several of the
-
-
-points made in the Parmenides, citing this as the main
-
-
-difficulty among all those presented by the myth~makers.
-He shows that both the unity and the existence of a One
-cannot be the same parts, nor can any of the pairs of
-predicates be reduced to a simple identity, since, if one
-of a pair is chosen as being, the other must then be other
-than being, i.e., notebeing (245 a).
-
-The materialists who claim that only the tangible
-exists are then subjected to a critique. Their opponents
-are also brought forward, and these are the "friends of the
-Forms," who disolve tangible realities in a sea of corruption and generation. None of these schools, Plato tells us,
-are able to deal intelligently with the question now before
-them: the question of notebeing. Having reached this point,
-Plato can no longer choose from existing alternatives. The
-Stranger says "Let us improve them, if we can" (245 e).
-
-The doctrine he develops to accomplish this improvement is
-the doctrine for which this dialogue is noted, the doctrine
-
-
-of notebeing. It must be shown how justly this doctrine may
-
-
-
-
-
-be said to constitute an advance, by comparing and
-contrasting it to earlier philosophies. For example, if,
-
-on the one hand, the materialists were to admit that there
-is a difference between things and thoughts, they would
-
-be forced to admit that there are some incorporeal
-existences, and if this were admitted, they could be asked
-Whether being is common to both. If pa the other hand, the
-friends of the Forms distinguish between what is and what
-is generated, both being and generation will have to share
-in something common, just as the materialists had to admit
-that something was common to things and thoughts (248 e).
-Now both the materialists and the friends of the Forms are
-caught. As soon as the friends of the Forms admit that
-knowing and being known are different, that one is active
-and one is passive, they will see that one is powerful, the
-other is not. Thus the Stranger suggests that Being is
-Power. If the friends of the Forms deny this, by claiming
-that knowing is only a motion as in generation, there will
-be no knowledge at all. So there must be motion in knowing.
-"and, Oh Heavens, can we ever be made to believe that
-motion and life and soul and mind are not present with
-Being. Can we imagine Being to be devoid of life and mind,
-and to remain in awful unmeaning and everlasting fixture" (248 e)? Clearly, they cannot. Therefore, "We must
-include motion under being, and that which is moved" (249b).
-
-
-As we shall see, this is an important anticipation
-
-
-
-of the Timaeus. And yet, if all things are in motion, there
-can be no sameness or permanence or relation to the same.
-The philosopher must be equally deaf to those who say all
-is in motion and to those who say there is no motion. Somehow, we must have both, yet somehow we can have neither
-alone. Further, if we have only a third, this third will
-not be either nor will it be both (250 b).
-
-This is not the place for a long discussion of the
-Stranger's solution to this difficulty. We are interested
-only in its relevance to the themes of eternity, image, and
-time. Suffice it to say that, in the following brief
-summary, I am all too aware of the danger of flatly stating
-the results of a long philosophical process. However,
-brevity must be attempted.
-
-We see, then, that being and notebeing are equally
-perplexing. The Stranger suggests that we try to work out
-the doctrine of not-being, in the realm of predication. Can
-we say that all of the Forms indicated by names, of which
-there are thousands of pairs, can be mixed with each other,
-or only that some forms mix, or must we say that no forms
-mix (251 d).
-
-These tentative conclusions are tested on the
-examples of grammar and music, where we see now that only
-some letters go with certain others, and only certain
-notes go with certain others. Similarly, he who develops
-
-
-the art which knows which of the forms go with which other
-
-
-
-forms, is truly the philosopher, and the art of division
-is his art and his alone.
-
-The philosopher knows that Rest and Motion, Same and
-Other, are the most general divisions of being, although he
-is hard to see by excess of light (254 a). (As we saw in
-the Republic cave). Rest and Motion do not communicate with
-each other, but being communicates with them both. Same and
-Other do not communicate with each other, but being
-communicates with them both. But Motion and Rest communicate
-with Same and Other, and therefore, Motion is both Same
-and Other than being. In other words, Motion is both
-being and notebeing. And Rest is both being and not-being.
-And Same is both being and notebeing. "Every class, than,
-has plurality of being and infinity of notebeing" (256 e).
-And
-
-Whereas, we have not only shown that things which
-
-are not exist, but we have also shown what form
-
-of being notebeing is; for we have shown that the
-
-nature of the other exists and is distributed over
-
-all things in their mutual relations, and when each
-part of the other is contrasted with being, that is
-precisely what we have ventured to call note
-
-being (258 e).
-
-There is one last refuge, the realm of images, into
-which the Sophist will now try to escape. The Sophist will
-contend that only some images partake of falsity, but the
-ones that he uses do not. Images are again divided, as
-before, into two sorts, the images which are like the
-
-
-original in proportion, and the others, which are fantasies
-
-
-and distortions. If the art of philosophical division will
-
-
-
-be applied to images, the Sophist will be deprived of his
-last refuge (264 e).
-
-Since images are either divinely produced or humanly
-produced (265 b), the Stranger himself suggests that they
-discuss divinely produced images at greater length.
-
-Looking now at the world and all the animals and
-
-plants which grow upon the earth from seeds and
-
-roots, and at inanimate substances which form
-within the earth, fusile or non-fusile, shall we
-say that they come into existence, not having
-existed previously, in any way but by creation
-
-of God, or shall we agree with vulgar opinion
-
-about them (265 c)?
-
-Notice that the creation of the world is spoken
-in @ context of a division of images, not of Forms. Plato
-will expand on this point at much greater length when he
-reaches the Timaeus, but now, since Theatetus agrees with
-him the Stranger says he will postpone this extended
-discussion: right now he wants to trap the Sophist, once
-and for all.
-
-We now confront, yet again, a divided line. But,
-like the previous discussion of images, it is a more
-developed doctrine than it was in the Republic. Having
-divided image-making into human and divine, we now must
-divide images into genuine images and fantasies (266 e).
-Thus, there are both human and divine images, and human
-and divine fantasies. As an example of divine images
-which are genuine, we have the whole world of things. As
-
-
-an example of fantasies, we have shadows caused by things
-
-
-interrupting firelight, as in the analogy of the cave.
-
-
-
-
-Human images can be seen in those genuine imitations which
-preserve the proportions of the originals, as for example
-in true speech. The next subdivision, false images, or
-human fantasies, is found to be the realm of the Sophist.
-
-One further division remains. He who imitates and
-knows that he imitates genuinely, is not a Sophist, but a
-philosopher. It is the Sophist who imitates fantasies.
-Summary
-
-What have we learned from this dialogue, with reference to the themes of eternity, image, and time. Obviously,
-the most significant doctrinal advances were made with
-respect to images, where we learn that their production is
-both a human and a divine art. But more deeply, it has
-emerged that not-being cannot be divided absolutely from
-being, and that the entire realm of things is suffused with
-both being and not-being. One is tempted to assert that
-the gap between the realms of eternity and time has been
-closed, but Plato has not explicitly said this and the
-adoption of this conclusion would be premature. What has
-been explicitly shown is that the Parmenidean isolation of
-the One, beyond all predication and therefore beyond all
-time is unfruitful, and Plato has advanced beyond the
-Parmenidean position. The realm of the Forms cannot be a
-separate realm, as it was described in foregoing dialogues.
-Just as we have advanced from a faulty conception of being
-
-
-through a notion of notebeing, so we have advanced from a
-
-
-
-faulty notion of the realm of the Forms through notions
-of what the Forms are not. Of time, we are told little in
-an explicit way. But one should notice that the Parmenidean
-"queer instant," what we have called "not-time" has been
-generalized, for the Sophist shows that not-being is to
-being what not-time is to time.
-
-
-The Statesman
-
-
-The participants of this dialogue begin their
-dialectical search for the definition of the Statesman,
-utilizing the method of division developed in the Sophist.
-But, the Eleatic Stranger now cautions the hearers not to
-divide arbitrarily and too quickly, but to make sure that
-the divisions they follow in the argument are real divisions into real classes, and not arbitrary divisions for
-which names are invented.
-
-The general point deserves to be underscored. Plato
-is reminding us that division which proceeds only in haste
-to reach a fore-ordained conclusion is sophistic. Such a
-division ignores the fact, established in the Sophist, that
-not all classes communicate with each other, and so division must follow the lines which mark off real classes from
-fantasies. "We must not attempt too general a division of
-the class..." (263 e). "More haste...(means)...less
-speed" (264 b). It is especially necessary to draw out
-the implication that an empirical acquaintance with classes
-
-
-of objects is necessary for the process of right division.
-
-
-
-
-the dialogue proceeds with the method of dividing
-until it reaches the conclusion that the Statesman is he
-who uses the predictive art of knowledge, runs herds of
-living things, which live on land, who are hornless, who
-do not interbreed with other classes of animals, and who
-are two-footed. But the Stranger is not satisfied (267a,b,c).
-For, unlike the shepherd, the Statesman's right to rule is
-disputed by the herd. A new beginning must be made. 'the
-Stranger announces that he will approach the subject by
-employing a myth. But the Stranger says that his tale is
-not to be a retelling of the familiar myth of Kronos, but
-the Stranger's own version, which, he says, is the basis
-of all such stories. In so saying, Plato undercuts the
-myths he has told in the preceding dialogues, from the myth
-of Er in the Republic, through and including the One and
-Many, which he presents and criticises, respectively, in
-the Parmenides and the Sophist. We shall see that even the
-myth of Kronos shall be transcended in the Timaeus.
-
-'the Stranger tells us that the universe was once
-helped in its rotation by the god who framed it in the
-beginning, but that it completed its circle of rotation
-and then set itself in rotation in the opposite direction.
-It did so of its own natural necessity, which the Stranger
-will now explain (269 4d).
-
-It 4s the only prerogative of divine things to be
-steadfast and abiding, but the universe, since it partakes
-
-
-
-of the bodily, cannot enjoy this rank. However, as far as
-possible, it will have uniform rotation (269 e), and
-rotation in reverse is at least in a uniform direction,
-which is as close to the divine as it can be. Even the
-divine god could not change this direction for it would
-violate eternal decrees. Therefore, there are many things
-we cannot say of this universe: neither that it revolves
-entirely by itself, nor that the god revolves it in its
-entirety, nor that a pair of divinities revolve it in
-opposite directions (270 a). In one era it is moved by the
-god and has its own sort of immortality, in another era it
-revolves by itself of its own momentun.
-
-At the time when the reversal of rotation takes
-place, human life experiences great changes. The course of
-life itself reverses, and the old grow younger and younger
-become children and finally wither away (270 e). On the
-other hand, the race of eartheborn men, long dead, now are
-reborn out of the earth, as they were in the former
-rotation (271 ¢c).
-
-Since a reversal of motion takes place at both the
-restoration of proper motion and at the onset of reversal,
-the Stranger tells about the time when the universe was
-helped in its rotation by the god. In that era, all things
-came about without men's labor. When this god was shepherd,
-there were no political constitutions and no personal
-
-
-possession of wives or children, since all men rose up
-
-
-
-fresh out of the earth with no memories. (This is the
-analogue of the "waters of forgetfulness" in the myth of
-Er). Neither did they need clothing or beds but disported
-themselves in the open. Such was the reign of Kronos (272b).
-
-"The crucial question is-did the nurselings of Kronos
-make a right use of their time" (272 b)? They certainly had
-the opportunity to engage in philosophy, since they had
-the requisite leisure, and if they did, their happiness
-would be a thousandfold greater than ours. "Be that as it
-may, let us leave this question aside until we find some~
-one (Timaeus?) who can inform us accurately whether or not
-their hearts were set on gaining knowledge and engaging
-in discussion" (272 a).
-
-When the era of Kronos came to an end, the drastic
-experiences of reversal of motion again took place. The
-god released his helping hand and a great shock went
-through the earth. It tried to follow out the instructions
-given to it by its father, but gradually the bodily element
-gained sway, and it approached the primordial chaos out of
-which it had been fashioned (273 b). At this moment, the
-god again beholds it, and seeing its time of trouble, again
-resumes the helm.
-
-But we are not now in the era of Kronos. It has now
-been ordained that the universe must take sole responsibility for its course, and, following and imitating the change
-in the universe, all things have to change, and, in
-
-
-,particular, a new law of birth and nurture is now binding
-
-
-
-on all creatures (274 8). Since we do not have this
-guardianship of the god to follow, but, "imitating the
-universe and following it through all time, we live and
-grow at one time in this way and at another time in
-that" (274 e). As we shall see, the Timaeus advances beyond
-these doctrines, especially beyond this particular doctrine
-of necessity.
-
-The relevance of this myth to the definition of the
-Statesman is now revealed by the Stranger. Since there are,
-in either era of rotation, men who were sired in the former
-era, we must be careful to look for the right models of the
-Statesman. In the era of the gods' rule, the shepherds
-experience no strife, since all is in harmony; but in the
-subsequent era, the shepherd is forced of necessity to care
-for a strife-torn flock. Which of these is the Statesman
-most like (275 a)?
-
-Before answering this, let us note that there are
-several features of the myth of Kronos, as the Stranger
-composes it, which pertain to our tracing the themes of
-time, image, and eternity. We are told that the unlverse
-is framed by inserting order into chaos, that time is
-governed by the motion of the revolving universe, and that
-the bodily element is the cause of the corruption and decay
-of an era. This would seem to reverse the claim of the
-
-
-mature character of the Statesman, since it resembles the
-
-
-doctrine of bodily imperfection, an early doctrine. However,
-
-
-
-it 48 a children's tale, and, as we shall see, Plato will
-not allow it to pass without criticism. The most important
-feature, for our purposes, is the intimacy with which the
-notion of right rule is connected with the right time and
-the right revolution of the spheres. We have come far from
-the bland assertion that there is a single pattern laid up
-in heaven which he who is willing can easily discern. Now
-we are charged with the need to see how right order in the
-state is dependent on the order of the heavens because they
-
-
-are linked by time. We should further note the Statesman's
-
-
-anticipation of the Timaeus in its description of the
-demiurge and the world soul in the universe described as a
-living creature.
-
-It emerges that the whole reason for the recounting
-of the Kronos myth was to show that the first image of the
-Statesman was incorrect, because it really represented a
-Statesman from the wrong cosmic cycle, innapropriate to
-the cycle we are now following (275). The shepherd of the
-other cycle is much more like a divine shepherd, whereas our
-cycle seems to produce tyrants. Even so, the myth of Kronos
-4s insufficient, and it is said to be too long. It was
-assumed that a grand myth was necessary, as fitting kingly
-responsibility, but, as usual, we went too fast in our
-haste to arrive at a definition (277 b).
-
-The Stranger admits that it is difficult to explain
-
-
-anything without the use of examples, and he is now in the
-
-
-
-strange predicament of using examples to explain his
-doctrine of examples (277 d)! The familiar pedagogical
-device of the alphabet is again resuscitated, and the use
-of known syllables next to unknown syllables is put forward
-as an instance in which similarities and differences can
-be distinguished (278 b). Our own mind reacts the same
-way to the letters with which the universe is spelled out.
-(Again, the cosmological concern) The Stranger admits
-however, that notwithstanding his familiarity with the
-letters in one combination it is difficult to recognize
-them in another setting (278 d).
-
-Another analogy is introduced, and this time it is
-the weaver's art. A long semi-technical discussion of
-weaving arrives at the fact that the weaver is a uniter,
-but he needs the carder, who separates fibers, so that the
-weavers art consists of both separating and combining (283b)
-In other words, the proper art of dialectic consists in the
-skillful handling of both the warp and the woof of being,
-or, as we saw in the Sophist, the correet analysis of
-being and not-being. It is noteworthy that the Stranger
-here, as he did in the Sophist, agrees to supply the
-divisions, or else the argument would have become interminable. Here 1s another hint that he who uses the method of
-division must know in advance where he is going, a point
-which the men of flux advanced. But, instead of confronting
-
-
-this objection head-on, the Stranger attacks it from
-
-
-
-another direction; through the question of relative
-measure, of excess and of defect.
-
-It is quickly ascertained that if the greater is
-greater only by relation to the smaller, and the smaller is
-smaller only by relation to the greater, there is no way
-to say what is right in itself (283 e). Therefore, there
-must be a standard of wieaeuse to which they both approximate in some way. (And so the Forms are reasserted). In the
-same manner, if there were no standard, there would be no
-way of dividing the unjust from the just man, nor, for
-that matter, would it be possible to discern the right
-practice of any art. "Must we not do now what we had to do
-when we discussed the Sophist. We felt constrained there
-to admit that what is not-x nevertheless exists..." (284 b)
-So there must be two standards of measure, one having to do
-with measures relative to each other, and the second those
-which "comprise arts concerned with due measure, due
-occasion, due time, due performance, and all such standards
-as have removed their abode from the extremes and are now
-settled about the mean" (284 e). This seems to refer to
-the Pythagoreans, who assert that measure has to do with
-all things brought into being, but who fail to see that
-there are two sorts of measure, and who therefore are
-prohibited from seeing that there are real classes of
-things with affinities for one another, just as there are
-real differences between some things which therefore have
-
-
-no affinity for one another (285 a,b,c). It is necessary
-
-
-
-to divide according to real classes, not merely to divide
-every item from every other. This is another recapitulation
-of the Sophist: only some forms communicate with each
-other.
-
-This view is asserted in another way when the Stranger
-says,
-
-Some of the things that have true existence and are
-
-easy to understand have images in nature which are
-
-accesible to the senses, so that when someone asks
-for an account of any one of them, one has no
-
-trouble at alleone can simply point to the sensible
-
-image and dispense with any account in words. But
-
-to the highest and most important class of existents
-
-(being) there are no corresponding images, no work
-
-of nature clear for all to look upon (285 e).
-
-In short, the classes of being have images, but being
-itself does not. The important political corollary of this
-becomes evident in the Stranger's description of the
-unlikelihood of the many ever achieving the art of statecraft, since the true science of statecraft is like the
-true science of being: it has no images, and it would be
-quite out of the question to look for fifty kings at any
-one time (292 e).
-
-It 4s important here to comment on what has been
-said about the lack of images of being, for, at first
-sight, it seems to contradict the trend we have been
-tracing through the late dialogues. Plato has told us (in
-the Sophist) that only some of the classes of being
-communicate with each other, and he reminds us of it here.
-
-
-When he says that there are no images of being, he seems to
-
-
-(Mean, that there are no sensory images for the sort of
-
-
-
-pure unmixed being which Parmenides described. But we have —
-already seen another sort of being in the Sophist. The
-lack of images, then, pertains to the classes of being,
-not to being as such nor to beings as such.
-
-I do not wish to enter into a lengthy exegesis of the
-Statesman concerning law and political philosophy. Let it
-
-
-suffice here to write that the Statesman should posess the
-true art of law-making, that this art depends on his real
-knowledge, of which the laws will be images, and that he
-shall have to weave the special knowledge of the special
-departments of life together as best he can, for he can best
-do so. Those who follow those laws, and who know them to be
-images, live in Justice. Those who follow the laws and do
-not know they are images, at least follow a just life
-unknowingly (291-300).
-
-The final task of the dialogue is to describe how
-the life of the state is woven by the Statesman. We are
-confronted with the daring statement that the virtues which
-comprise the state are, in contradistinction to those
-described in the Republic, not at harmony with each other,
-which means that the several parts of goodness are actue
-ally not in accord (306 c). What is the Statesman to do
-about this? He is to establish a training program to
-bring out the best qualities of future citizens, some of
-whom will have opposite virtues. He weaves both sorts into
-the fabric of the state, some forming the warp and some
-
-
-_ forming the woof. This training program "first unites that
-
-
-
-element in their soul which is eternal, by a divine bond,
-since it is akin to the divine. After this divine bond, it
-will in turn unite their animal nature by human bonds"
-(309 b). In short, the Statesman will implant in every
-citizen in the state what we would call a sense of values,
-whether they understand them to be of eternal origin or
-not, and he will accomplish the insertion of this warp by
-a clever weaving of the woof, the human element. In this
-way, citizens will at least imitate, albeit unknowingly,
-their right measure and true standard. More specifically,
-the Statesman will require those who give evidence of
-divine wisdom to intermarry with those who seem without it,
-and so interweave the divine and the human. Thus for
-example, instead of inbreeding a race of warriors who will
-eventually get out of hand by sheer power of zeal, or, on
-the other hand, inbreeding a race of perennial moderates
-who never dare to invent, the Statesman will see to it
-that there are cross fertilizations of these two breeds.
-In this way the best weave is had, which marries the
-gentle to the brave. Socrates ends the dialogue by saying
-"You have drawn to perfection, sir, the image of the true
-king and statesman" (311 c).
-
-
-Summary
-After a rather comical beginning, the Statesman
-
-
-quickly discards the first definition of the Statesman.
-The Myth of Kronos is put between it and the next attempt,
-
-
-Ls
-
-
-
-
-
-'and ita results are that the Statesman must have a real
-knowledge of the rotation of the universe in order to
-ascertain the right time for the right kind of image of
-the ruler. There are certain necessities of cosmic motion
-which must be imitated in the ruler's art. The Pythagoreans
-are chided for their remorseless division without regard
-for real classes and true dialectic.
-
-But perhaps the clearest indication of Plato's
-development of the themes of eternity, image, and time in
-this dialogue is to be found in the view that the true
-Statesman is he who weaves the being and notebeing of
-opposing virtues into the fabric of the state, an eternal
-warp and a temporal woof, which are to be interbred via
-marriage across real classes.
-
-wo themes stand out as clear anticipations of the
-Timaeus: the concern for cosmological time, in the myth
-of Kronos, and the introduction of the sexual allegory,
-
-
-which, as we shall see, in the Timaeus, is generalized.
-
-
-However, before we reach the Timaeus, we must see
-how the Philebus treats these themes.
-The Philebus
-
-
-If one approaches the Philebus with the expectation
-that it will deal with some of the topics of the Statesman
-in a more developed manner, its opening passages seem to be
-anachronistic, for the dialogue begins with a discussion of
-
-
-the relative merits of pleasure and wisdom (11 a), subjects
-
-
-
-discussed in great detail in the Republic. But it soon
-becomes apparent that the discussion will be anything but
-a simple repetition. For example, when Socrates asks
-whether there might not be a third state even better than
-pleasure or wisdom, or whether some mixture of the two is
-preferable, we see that the theme of mixture, as introduced
-in the Sophist and evolved in the Statesman, is actually to
-be reexamined in the context of an ethical inquiry.
-
-It is agreed that there are many pleasures, each of
-which differ from the others. This simple observation
-serves to reintroduce the problem of the One and the Many
-on an ethical level, and with this reintroduction, we will
-be confronted with the modifications and developments which
-the subjects of pleasure and wisdom must receive in the
-light of Plato's later reflections. hus, 1t is agreed
-that unity and diversity of pleasures is "the same old
-argument" (13 c). Somehow, the unity and diversity of
-pleasure must be understood, not in the old way, but in a
-new way. 'he key to the new way is the principle of
-Difference.
-
-It is said that this principle of Difference is a
-marvel of nature because it asks us to affirm that "one
-would be many or many one" (13 e). No one any longer argues
-that it 1s marvelous to assert that Socrates is many and
-one because he has many limbs but is only one Socrates:
-
-
-everyone has agreed to dismiss this as childish (14 d).
-
-
-is
-
-
-
-
-
-Here the initial impression of anachronism fades
-completely, for the passage clearly asserts that it is
-childish to continue to play on the words "one" and "many"
-
-
-now that the Parmenides and the Sophist and the Statesman
-
-
-have advanced so far beyond this verbal naivete. He who
-asserts that the One or the Beautiful or the Good have a
-real existence which in some way is beyond generation or
-destruction, introduces a problem of far greater import
-than the problem of matching names and things (15 a). For,
-if these Forms are real, and if they are always the same,
-or if they are said to have a permanent individuality, he
-who asserts these propositions is dealing with matters of
-greater depth than seems at first apparent. In the same
-way, if one asserts that these Forms can be dispersed and
-multiplied in the world of generation and the endless
-number of things which compose this world, he involves
-himself ina difficulty, for he seems to assert that the
-Forms are at once what they are in themselves and at the
-Same time in the world of many things (15 c). In short,
-he who asserts that there are many pleasures and who says
-at the same time that Pleasure is a One, involves himself
-in the difficulties of "the old argument" and since the
-old argument has not been resolved, one cannot pretend
-that it 1s a simple assertion when he says that there are
-many pleasures, all of which are Pleasure.
-
-To put the matter in our own way, we should say that
-
-
-(the statement "there are many pleasures, each of which
-
-
-
-shares in the idea of Pleasure" involves all of the
-aifficulties which Plato has been examining in the
-Parmenides, the Sophist, and the Statesman. In short, we
-are confronted with nothing less than a philosophical
-summary of the problems and doctrines which Plato confronted
-in the late dialogues.
-
-Notice that it is openly admitted that the verbal
-assertion of both the unity and the diversity of Socrates
-is "childish," and no longer a cause for wonder. The whole
-world is said to know this now. Plato seems to be saying
-here that there are deeper issues at stake than the
-linguistic gymnastics these issues first created. True,
-these questions will be discussed, but their resolution
-will take place on a higher plane than it had heretofore.
-As usual, Plato begins a difficult investigation by
-focusing on the practical face of the deeper problem. Notice
-too that these questions about pleasure and wisdom are not
-mere allegories or childrens’ stories; they are the points
-of departure. Plato intends, as we shall see, to apply
-the method of division, which he has been perfecting in
-
-
-the Sophist and the Statesman, to the questions of ethical
-
-
-import involved in a discussion of pleasure and wisdom and
-their relative merits. But in addition to applying the
-method, he will perfect it further, and greater insight
-4nto the method as well as its applicability will be
-
-
-reached. It is no longer possible to begin with the simple
-
-
-
-separation of the One and the Many, because the method
-of division has gone beyond this level of simplicity.
-
-The One and the Many, therefore are said to "run
-about everywhere together, in and out of every word" (15 a}
-Therefore, we must not divide too quickly between the One
-and the Many, or run too quickly from the Many to the One.
-The endless number of the Many is a kind of infinity, that
-is, a lack of determined specificity, or, in another sense,
-\& vague and indefinite formlessness.
-
-The infinite must not be allowed to approach the
-
-many until the entire number of species
-
-intermediate between unity and infinity has been
-
-found out-then and not until then may we rest
-
-from division (16 e).
-
-The familiar analogy of the alphabet is offered, and
-it is agreed that every sound we utter is both one and
-infinite, that is, a sound is at once just this sound,
-but in another sense it is only a sound, which by itself
-has no meaning, just as letters by themselves have no
-meaning until they are related to each other in words. But
-the precise knowledge of the number and nature of each
-sound is the special province of the grammarian (17 b),
-just as the precise knowledge of tones and their intervals
-4s the province of the musician (17 c).
-
-In this way, Plato seems to say quite clearly that
-the way to knowledge is neither the addition of elements
-to each other without regard to the kinds of relations
-
-
-these elements must have to be intelligible, nor the
-
-
-
-simple recitation of the name we give to them to create
-the appearance of their simple unity.
-
-
-Since these themes were treated in the Statesman
-
-
-it seems reasonable to place the Philebus after it. It was
-necessary to insert this point here because the degree of
-unanimity with which the scholars agree that the Statesman
-succeeds the Sophist 1s not had in the placement of the
-
-
-Philebus after the Statesman. It seems now that the Philebus can be read more intelligently by placing it after the
-Statesman but before the Timaeus, but we shall have to see
-whether this is true after reading the Timaeus.
-
-The method of division, as developed in the Statesman,
-
-
-is summoned here in the Philebus to do service in the
-
-
-quest for the nature of pleasure and the nature of wisdom.
-We have seen that Plato regards Unity as the dialectical
-opposite of infinity, which, for him, means the indeterminite vagueness or an unspecific description of an element,
-without some account of its manner of relation to its
-fellows. In this respect, it is striking to note a brief
-allegory of the god Theuth, whom the Egyptians describe as
-the author and divider and enumerator of sounds in music
-
-
-and grammar (18 ad). As we shall see, the Timaeus will test
-
-
-the method of division on a cosmic scale in a tale similarly attributed to an Egyptian priest.
-In any event, the problem now is not merely to
-
-
-assert the unity and the infinity of number, or pleasure,
-
-
-
-
-
-or wisdom, but to ascertain the kinds of each, and, by
-implication, the Unity, Likeness, Sameness and the opposites in everything (19 b). Whereas Socrates once preferred
-to discuss the Forms and to avoid the realm of things, he
-does not fear to enter into this latter problem now,
-because, just at this instant, some god appears to have
-given him a new memory (20 b).
-
-Socrates quickly convinces Philebus that he would
-not even have full pleasure if he did not also have mind
-and aenery and knowledge, because, without them, he would
-not know whether he was experiencing pleasure. Similarly
-if he had no memory he would not remember pleasure, which
-4s also pleasant, nor, without "true opinion" would he be
-able to perceive present pleasures. In the same way, had
-he no knowledge, he would be unable to calculate future
-pleasures (21 b). Similarly, a life of mind without
-pleasure or pain would be unfeeling. Therefore, somehow we
-must have both in a union, which is a kind of third (22 a).
-But, on this account, neither pleasure nor wisdom can be
-the good, which was decided (at 19) to be the most perfect.
-Socrates exempts divine mind from this refutation, admitting only that human minds are excluded from exclusive
-posession of the Good (22 c). For, the divine mind may
-turn out to be the cause of the three, and, in that case,
-4t will be a fourth. There may even be a fifth, but that
-will be discussed later.
-
-
-
-
-When we say something is hotter or colder, we make :
-\& comparison, and such comparisons are always relative,
-admitting of degrees, and this is an endless business
-because such measures suggest no way to establish a stable
-measure. Thus, the class of all such comparatives includes
-an infinite, i.e., an unlimited number. However, the class
-of unnumbered things itself is the unity of such comparatives (25 a). On the other hand, its opposite, the class of
-all numbered things, admits quantity and is therefore
-finite, or limited, and here too, the class itself is the
-unity of these (25 b).
-
-Now, let them be mixed and let the offspring of
-these two classes be inspected. For out of their union
-comes a third class which has been generated by their
-mixture, and it includes all things so generated by the
-limitation of the unlimited (26 d). Further, the cause of
-thie union is not the same as any of the three classes so
-achieved, and it therefore must be a fourth class (27 b).
-The problem is to ascertain which class pertains to mind,
-for, obviously, pleasure is of the first class since it
-always admits of degree. In this regard, the question is
-raised:
-
-ee eWhether all of this which they call the universe
-
-is left to the guidance of an irrational and random
-
-chance, or, on the contrary, as our fathers have
-
-declared, ordered and governed by a@ marvelous
-
-intelligence and wisdom...Wide asunder are the two
-
-assertions, Socrates, for that which you are now
-
-
-saying is blasphemy; but the other assertion, that
-mind orders all things, is worthy of the respect of
-
-
-
-
-
-the world, and of the sun, and of the moon, and
-of the whole circle of the heavens;...(28 da).
-Here, quite obviously, is a clear anticipation of
-
-
-the Timaeus. In addition, we are next presented with an
-
-
-analysis of the elements of bodies, which are said to be
-the traditional fire, air, water and earth, and, just as
-before, the mere enumeration of their discreteness does not
-explain their unity, for they are united in a body (29 ad).
-The further point is that the universe too consists of
-these elements but it too is a unity. And of course, it
-would be folly to assert that the unity of the universe
-depends on our bodies; rather, we depend on its unity. The
-analogy is carried further, because we know that we have
-souls, and, in the same way, we must assert that our souls
-depend on the soul of the univeree. Further, as bodies
-consist of four elements, so the four classes previously
-discovered may be considered as these elements; that is,
-the unlimited, the limited, their offspring, mixture, and
-the cause of their union, are in fact the true meanings of
-fire, air, earth and water. The universal fire which 1s
-the cause of our fire is the hidden meaning of mind as
-the cause of the universe (30 d). So we must conclude that
-the universe consists of four elements and that we are
-similarly constructed, and our construction depends on its.
-Fire, earth, water, and land correspond to the
-unlimited, limited, mixture and cause. It is not said
-
-
-le
-
-
-
-which elements correspond to which elements, but it is
-clear that mind corresponds to fire, both in us and in the
-universe, It goes without too much comment that this
-doctrine goes beyond a simple Heracliteanism or Pythagoreanism or Anaxagoreanism, or Anaximanders3anism. It is, in
-my view, the seed of the more exact and detailed view
-
-
-which we shall find in the Timaeus.
-
-
-In the remainder of the dialogue, there is a delineation and cross comparison of the types of pleasure and pain, including the cognate emotions, and desires. It would
-be tempting to enter into a detailed commentary on this
-section of Plato's philosophy to show some of its origins
-or that certain doctrines of the modern giants of depth
-psychology are deeply in Plato's debt. However, our purpose
-here is to trace three themes insofar as Plato treats them
-explicitly. Perhaps a short summary will not be too deficient.
-
-Just as there are four classes of elements which
-enter into the composition of the body and of the universe,
-so there are four classes to be discerned in the discussion
-of pleasure. However, it is more complicated here, since
-there are four classes of pleasures, four of pains, four of
-emotions, four of desires, and the intermixture of each of
-these with every other gives rise to innumerable variety.
-Plato himself does not even attempt an exhaustive treatment
-
-
-What is significant for our purposes is the treatment of
-
-
-
-memory and perception. We saw in the Sophist and the
-Statesman that certain images could be false while others
-could be true. In the realm of feeling, the feelings
-attendant upon true or false images will be correspondingly true or false. Thus Plato develops the significant
-ethical dictum that pleasures (or pains or emotions)
-though felt, may be false. We meet again the artist in the
-soul (imagination) which sometimes correctly and sometimes
-incorrectly inscribes the memory-images of past, present,
-and future experiences (39 a). Thus, the question of images,
-irrevocably linked to the tenses of imagination, is, in
-
-
-the Philebus, introduced into the discussion of pleasure,
-
-
-pain, and emotion. Again, since the number of combinations
-of pleasures, whether unlimited, or limited or mixed or
-causative, is innumerable, the multiplication of this
-innumerable number by the three tenses adds an exponential
-4nnumerability. Had he wanted, Plato could have trebled
-and then quadrupled the exponent by the introduction of
-the intermediary tenses of becoming, and then quintupled
-the whole by using the middle voice of his native grammar.
-However, he assures us that he has not forgotten his own
-former dialogues, when he says "...for any class to be
-alone and in perfect solitude is not good nor altogether
-possible" (63 b).
-
-The end of the dialogue, interpreted in the light
-of the gradual growth of Plato's thought through the late
-
-
-tee
-
-
-
-group, is striking, for it asserts unequivocally that .
-neither mind and wisdom nor pleasure and pain are simply
-superior to one another: there must be mixture. Formerly,
-mind and knowledge of the forms would have been indubitably
-best; now, mixture is necessary. However, this is not to
-be interpreted as a simple linear progression, because, as
-we shall see in the Timaeus, what is necessary and what is
-good are not due to comparable causes and are not therefore
-subject to the same criterion for choosing which is better.
-It may well be that what is better is unfortunately not
-what is necessary.
-
-
-Summary
-There are unmistakable hints in the Philebus that
-
-
-the dialogue which succeeds it will take up certain strands
-of Pythagorean logic and develop them further, as for exe
-ample the whole question of the manner in which the cause
-of mixture accomplishes its business, or, as another
-example, the application of the method of division to the
-universe, which was only briefly and partially done in this
-dialogue.
-
-This much, however is certain. 'he Philebus begins
-with the extension of the method of division to the realm
-of pleasure and knowledge of pleasure. The purist position
-that either pleasure or mind must be affirmed as the best
-is abandoned as "childish" and as an "old argument," which,
-
-
-it is agreed, no longer captures philosophic interest.
-
-
-
-
-'The isolated eternality of the forms, modified by the
-Sophist and the Statesman, is further modified by the
-assertion that pleasures or any Form or class cannot be
-both good and alone. |
-
-Lastly, the familiar doctrine of the aviary of images
-4s maintained, and developed insofar as it is now employed
-to explain the basis of false pleasures, feelings, and
-emotions. A beginning is made into the physiology of
-reminiscence and an intimate connection is drawn between
-such a physiology and the first outlines of a concrete
-cosmology. For this intimate connection and a fuller
-description of the relations between a psychogeny and a
-cosmogeny, we must look to the Timaeus.
-
-
-Summary of the Chapter
-Tracing the hypothesized modification and development
-
-
-of the tripartite theme of eternity-image-time through
-the Republic, Parmenides, Theatetus, Sophist, Statesman,
-
-
-and Philebus, it emerges that Plato's treatment of these
-topics is not a simple linear progression. I think I have
-shown that these themes are, in fact, treated together
-wherever discussion of any one of them is broached, and
-that to speak of one involves the need to speak of. the
-others.
-
-From the eternal realm of the Forms and the shadow-~
-like copies of them in the Republic's cave, we saw the
-initial doctrine of the Forms of the middle dialogues
-
-
-
-subjected to the criticism of the Parmenides. There we are |
-told that the naive view of the Forms as separated from
-what appears to us leads to logically untenable positions,
-from a series of unreal instants to hypostasizing none
-existence. A hint of the doctrine of notetime emerges. 'the
-
-
-Theatetus informs us that we must examine the reality of
-
-
-moving images, as if the results of perception were flying
-birds in an aviary-like memory. the Sophist examines note
-being and concludes with the extraordinary assertion that
-notebeing in some way is, so that the artificial separation
-of the world into what is either eternal or temporal,
-agreed to be inadequate in the Parmenides, is now shown,
-not only to be inadequate, but to be impossible. Things
-
-are not isolated absolutes sharing in isolated absolute
-Forms, for images have their own sort of reality. The
-
-
-Statesman acknowledges that this reality of images must be
-
-
-generalized beyond a psychological doctrine, and implies
-that there might well be cosmic images, which are better
-and more intelligible than the myths and fables of the
-historical story-tellers. The Philebus shows that there
-are far-reaching ethical implications of this doctrine,
-and especially, leads to a discussion of the cause (s)
-of mixed classes and mixed realities.
-
-In short, from an initial position which asserted
-the realm of Forms to be eternally separated from the
-
-
-world of moving images, Plato comes to assert that moving
-
-
-
-images have a reality which is in no way to be despised or |
-neglected in favor of a naively-viewed eternity. The world
-of time and the moving images in it cannot be intelligently
-separated from the eternal.
-
-This is not to say that the eternal and the temporal
-are the same world, or that a simple blending or a denial
-of existence to one or the other is Plato's conclusion. On
-the contrary, only by the careful dialectical investigation
-of the differences between eternity and time can their
-relations be spelled out with any philosophical accuracy.
-
-However, it remains to spell out this relationship
-of Forms, images, and times. To qualify as a genuine
-evolution, such a treatment will have to synthesize all
-that has gone before, in a way which will not excise any
-real progress made before it. This means that there will
-have to be a discussion of the psychology of knowledge as
-well as a cosmology of being, and that these two preponderant interests will have to be united in a way which spells
-out their intimate relation. This is exactly what the
-
-
-Timaeus will do. If the Timaeus accomplishes this task,
-
-
-4t follows that the Timaeus should be regarded as a later
-
-
-dialogue and that we should find in it a new synthesis of
-
-
-the doctrines of eternity, image, and time.
-
-
+% ch iii
+% ch iv
CHAPTER IV
THE TIMAEUS