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A NCIENT G REEK P HILOSOPHY 哲學研究所專任助理教授 陳斐婷
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Today’s agenda Learning Classical Greek A brief history of ancient Greek philosophy Introduction to Unite 2: nature, change and cause
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Learning Classical Greek 3
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Fragment of Aristotle’s Politics 4
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ὁ Δικαι ό πολις Dicaeopolis 5
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Ἀ θηνα ῖ ος (an) Athenian 6
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ἐ στ ί (ν) He is; he exists. εἰμίεἰμί I am; I exist 7
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ὁ Δικαι ό πολις Ἀ θην ᾶί ος ἐ στιν. 8
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ο ἰ κε ῖ He/she/it lives, dwells οἰκέωοἰκέω I live, dwell 9
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δ έ and ἀ λλ ά but ο ὐ κ not ἐ ν τα ῖ ς Ἀ θ ή ναις in Athens ἐ ν το ῖ ς ἀ γρο ῖ ς in the fields 10
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ὁ Δικαι ό πολις Ἀ θην ᾶί ος ἐ στιν. ο ἰ κε ῖ δ ὲ ὁ Δικαι ό πολις ο ὐ κ ἐ ν τα ῖ ς Ἀ θ ή ναις ἀ λλ ὰ ἐ ν το ῖ ς ἀ γρο ῖ ς. 11
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A Brief History of Greek Philosophy
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The Pre-Socratic philosophers Milesians (4/13) Thales: water Anaximander: ἄ πειρον (the unlimited, unbound, boundless) Anaximenes: air Ionians (4/20, 4/27) Heraclitus: change and logos Eleatics (4/27, 5/4) Parmenides: the One Zeno of Elea: the paradoxes Atomists (5/11)
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The Pre-Socratic philosophers Pluralists Empedocles: Four elements and two forces (Love and Strife) Anaxagoras: Mind and the divisibility of material ingredients Sophists: Protagoras and Gorgias Plato’s criticisms of sophists (a) Some sophists as a group responsible for decay in moral standards, e.g., Callicles ( Gorgias ) and Thrasymachus ( Republic ) (b) Other sophists such as Protagoras and Gorgias simply repeat those prejudices without founding their view on any rational basis that goes beyond the unexamined beliefs of the majority. Plato connects Sophistic with “appearances” or “images” in the Republic.
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Socrates (470/469-399 BCE) Son of a midwife and a stone sculptor. Snub nose, bulging eyes, thick lips and a pot belly. Often barefoot, seldom bathed, and wore the same thin cloak winter and summer. Infantryman in the Peloponnesian War. In the Apology : corrupting the youth, not believing in the gods of the city state, introducing new divinities. In the Clouds (423BCE) founder of Thinkery School: (a) believing in Breath, Air, Chaos; thunder is not caused by Zeus; (b) teaching the Inferior Logic…
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The historical Socrates Socrates in Plato ’s Apology : corrupting the youth, not believing in the gods of the city state, introducing new divinities. Socrates in Aristophanes ’ The Clouds (423BCE): a naturalist philosopher. The Thinkery School, believing in Breath, Air, Chaos. Thunder is not caused by Zeus… Socrates in Xenophon ’s Socratic writing: concerned only with ethical issues; pessimistic about knowledge of heavenly phenomena. Socrates in Aristotle ’s writing: ethical issues
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Plato (427-347 BC) Two worlds: the visible world vs. the intelligible world. Particulars exist in the visible world. Forms exist in the intelligible world. Particulars are inferior to the Forms. 20
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Aristotle (384-322 BC) There is only one world. Particulars are the primary substances. Particulars are primary and fundamental to the universals. 21
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Unite 2: Nature, Change, and Cause
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Nature and Change
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φύσις (nature)
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What x consists of or comes to be from
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Crocodiles
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Epilepsy
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Hippocrates on nature
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From the regular and permanent traits to their underlying constituents
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Explaining Change
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The material explanation as the principle
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Thales, Anaximenes, Heracleitus
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Aristotle’s criticism
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The efficient explanation as the principle
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Aristotle’s (and Plato’s) Criticism? If you were Aristotle (or Plato), how would respond to the efficient explanation as the principle of the cosmos (the world, the universe)?
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Next week: Heracleitus
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