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DO NOW - Journal: DO NOW - Journal: What would you be willing to give up your live for, and why? Try to include the word “value” in your answer. ( Value can be a verb or a noun.)
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Everyone will have a personal answer to this question that is unique to their situation. They will refer to specific things they care about. This is called subjective value. These things have subjective, or personal, importance. (Opposite –universal or “Objective” value) For Socrates, one universal value: TRUTH This value was worth dying for…
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Greek City-State Birthplace of Western philosophy Socrates His Pupil Plato Socrates develops his Socratic method Plato founds the first college to teach philosophy Plato’s student Aristotle develops the field
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Socrates compared himself to a “Horse-fly” on society’s butt He managed to piss off lots of powerful people with his constant questions Eventually he was arrested on 2 charges: 1. Impiety (for his “strange” view on the Gods) 2. Corrupting the Youth (for encouraging the young not to fight in Athens’s constant wars over territory)
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“ I would rather die having spoken in my manner, than speak in your manner and live. … The difficulty, my friends, is not in avoiding death, but in avoiding unrighteousness; for that runs deeper than death…” Quoted from Plato’s Book on the trial, Apology, 38e-39a
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Socrates had a student, Plato, who was greatly upset by his execution. He was furious at his fellow Athenians (some voted to kill Socrates.) He decided the world needed philosophy, so he founded the first college: ACADEMY Here, he began to teach his famous THEORY of FORMS, a theory about True Reality
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Allegory (Myth) of the CAVE -Plato’s famous fable about Truth -Come down on the floor – demonstration -Video: http://www.youtube.c om/watch?v=LTWwY8 Ok5I0 -After: Each element of the story is symbolic. Figure out the symbolism, and the message of the myth. http://www.youtube.c om/watch?v=LTWwY8 Ok5I0 1 PEOPLE= 2 CAVE= 3 CHAINS= 4 SHADOWS= 5 ESCAPEE= 6 OUTSIDE= 7 SUN= 8 REJECTION=
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Plato sees that things in the material world do not last, but decay over time (impermanence) Ideas and Concepts, however, are Eternal He reasons that Ideas represent a Higher Realm than the world of sensory experience Trust thought, not your senses Truth is not a physical thing, but an Idea (Form) -http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c6KVHMU3gb8 What kind of epistemology is this? Why are its (scary) implications?
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If there are “other Realms” that we lack the faculties to perceive, what else don’t we know? If our senses deceive us, how can we be sure our experience is the Truth? These kind of questions lead to an epistemology of doubt: SKEPTICISM Various “Skepticisms” about Reality
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Anyone who’s had a vivid dream knows it feels “Real” to your mind until you wake It is impossible to prove this is not a dream (How would you prove it 100%?) If this was a dream, what would you “wake up into?” “ Is all that we see or seem But a dream within a dream? “ – Edgar Allan Poe
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French Philosopher Rene Descartes asked: What if what I think of as the Outside World is an illusion created by an Evil Demon to trick me? He didn’t really think this: he was testing the limits of knowledge. He was shocked he couldn’t disprove it! Descartes finally decided: “Cogito, ergo Sum.” This means, “I think, therefore I exist.” Because he could experience his own thoughts from “within,” he was convinced his mind was real, but not necessarily his body or the Outside World!
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