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Introduction
"Man
is a being in search of meaning" - Plato
Socrates was a short, ugly, and generally annoying man who
lived in Athens from 470 BC to 399 BC. He spent the first half of his life
as a sculptor, which made sense since he was the son of a sculptor. Legend has it that he became a philosopher
sometime after age 40 when the Oracle at Delphi indicated he was the wisest man
in the world. The news of this surprised Socrates who, though educated in
literature, music, and rhetoric, felt strongly that he wasn't very wise at all.
It was only after he started interrogating the greatest thinkers of Athens that
he came to realize that nobody really knew the things they supposed they did. This thus verified the oracle since he seemed
to be the only person aware of the fact that nobody (including himself) seemed
to truly know anything, which made him the wisest person in the world.
Socrates escaped execution a few times during his life.
Finally, as an old man of roughly 70, he was found guilty of corrupting the
youth of Athens and not believing in the gods of the state and was executed by
being forced to drink poison (hemlock). When asked to flee by his followers, he
responded that no true philosopher feared death and besides, where ever he
ended up he would probably annoy them so much that it would lead to the same
result (Crito).
It is popular to portray Socrates' trial and punishments as
unjust, and there were a lot of politics at work in the trial and sentencing. Still,
it is worth noting that twice previous to the trial there had been overthrows
of Athens democratic government by students of Socrates (Alcibiades and
later Critias). It's not surprising that his students
would try to overthrow democracy since Socrates was a strong critic of it and
said it made "Equals of everyone, including unequals".
What we know of Socrates today comes from his student Plato,
the historian Xenophon, and the playwright Aristophanes. The first two exalt Socrates in Euthyphro,
Phaedo, Sophist, and many other works; and the last satirized him in the play
"Clouds" and briefly describes him as an instigator of sedition in "Birds." Socrates himself wrote nothing as far as we
know. Thus the specific ideas of
Socrates and those of Plato are hard to separate, since Socrates spoke but
didn't write and Plato says he wrote only what Socrates spoke. Rather than worry about what was said by
whom, lets combine the two and treat them as one person and examine their
contributions to epistemology relevant to our discussions.
Theory of Forms - The
Epistemology of Socrates as Expressed by Plato
The epistemology of Socrates (and Plato) is defined by the theory of Forms. The theory of forms essentially states that the objects of the world we
perceive empirically (through our senses) are only imperfect aspects of more
complete, idealized "Forms." The famous shadow on the walls of a cave story
from The Republic does a good job of explaining this idea of "Forms;" here is
the Wikipedia summary of the allegory:
In the dialogue,
Socrates describes a group of people who have lived chained to the wall of a
cave all of their lives, facing a blank wall. The people watch shadows
projected on the wall by things passing in front of a fire behind them, and
begin to ascribe forms to these shadows. According to Socrates, the shadows are
as close as the prisoners get to viewing reality. He then explains how the
philosopher is like a prisoner who is freed from the cave and comes to
understand that the shadows on the wall do not make up reality at all, as he
can perceive the true form of reality rather than the mere shadows seen by the
prisoners.
The Forms are essentially abstract concepts that were more complete than the aspects of
them that are perceived in the real world. Try thinking of it this way:
Imagine you
were tasked with determining whether or not an object placed in front of you
was a dog. Chances are you'd feel fairly confident that you'd recognize a dog
if you saw one standing in front of you and the task wouldn't be too difficult.
Now imagine
someone else is tasked with determining whether or not an object placed in
front of them is a dog, except they have no idea what a dog is. You are allowed
to explain to them what a dog is, but then must leave them to complete their
task. Now the task is much more
difficult.
We all think we know what a dog is, but when pressed to
describe one to someone who has never seen one, it becomes difficult due to the
variety of characteristics of dogs. This
is a classic characteristic of the Socratic Dialogues. In these Dialogues, Socrates is constantly
asking the person he's interacting with to define something and refine that
definition. For Socrates, part of the
problem was that people took for granted they knew what an object, virtue,
emotion, etc. (dog) was, but when pressed to describe one would often fail
miserably (since describing one is much harder than it sounds).
The fact that we recognized whether or not it was a dog standing
in front of us was evidence to Socrates that we possessed an innate
understanding that was deeper than the objects we came across in the real
world. Socrates believed that there is a
"Form" that was "dog" that we knew inherently so that when a dog was placed in
front of us, we recognized it as such. This
was also true for beauty, courage, table, fire, house, anger, etc. What we encountered in the real world were
not these Forms themselves, but rather a shadow of these Forms (or if you like
the book Flatland, a projection). Socrates felt that since the world we
live in is filled only with shadows of the Forms, Forms themselves couldn't be
fully appreciated (understood) by the senses.
One must resort to rational thought (reasoning) to understand the Forms.
Socrates (and Plato) believed these idealized concepts
(Forms) couldn't be learned, but rather had to be remembered. This is completely consistent with the theory
of Forms, but may strike us in the modern world as strange. Basically Socrates reasoning was that all
Earthly things are imperfect shadows of perfect Forms corresponding to those
things. All varieties, shapes, and sizes
of dogs were but imperfect shadows of the idealized Form "Dog." All varieties of courage were but imperfect
shadows of the Form "Courage." Socrates
thus believed that all of us were just imperfect shadows of the Forms of "Ourselves." The Forms of "Ourselves," being ideal and
perfect, could perceive the Forms of all other things (Courage, Dogs, Beauty,
etc.). Thus in order to understand the Forms of other things, we must somehow access
that knowledge we forgot (lost) when we were projected from our perfect Form of
"Ourselves" to that flawed shadow which inhabits the real world. Socrates believed rational thought
(reasoning) allowed us to remember the things we forgot. Naturally, based on
this way of looking at things, Socrates believed any outside stimulus was
unimportant since when one used rational thought to discover Forms, one was
remembering, not learning.
This link has an example of Socrates approach.
I have used the term "shadows" above in my explanation, but
that is just a metaphor. A more accurate
description of what Socrates believed would be Perfect Ideals (Forms) and that
which exists in reality (Shadows). To
summarize, Socrates believed there were perfect ideals (Forms) that
corresponded to those imperfect or incomplete things that we come across in the
real world (shadows). Socrates believed
that we "ourselves" were no exception, and there existed an ideal version
(Form) of "Ourselves" that knew the idealized versions (Forms) of everything
else. Thus to understand the ideal version of everything else, we needed only
remember that which we forgot when we were projected into the real world. This remembering was achieved with rational
thought.
Consequences of the
Theory of Forms to Epistemology
First and foremost, Socrates believed that absolute truths
existed (Forms). He believed that
empirical data were incomplete and distorted aspects of these absolute truths were
thus irrelevant. The absolute truths
(Forms) could only be learned through reasoning.
Socrates believed that Forms could have no self-contradiction. For example, if you say "all dogs are large"
and then acknowledge "some dogs are small" then your original definition is
wrong. Socrates consequently developed a
method for disproving misconceptions through contradiction. The misconception is stated as a premise. Other short premises that are easily agreed
upon are presented. Through a series of
logical steps, a contradiction emerges that disproves the original
misconception. This created a process of
elimination by which one could move closer to the absolute truths (Forms) being
examined.
"If particulars are to
have meaning, there must be universals" - Plato
The next point is profound and it is hard to determine
whether it came from Socrates or Plato.
Basically it says "The whole of everything has a corresponding Form." What that means is that it is not enough that
a definition be consistent with respect to a particular Form; it must be
consistent with respect to all Forms since all Forms correspond to a single
Form "the Universe." There can be no
contradictions in general. A proof need
only be proven incorrect once to be incorrect.
This is a fundamental tenet of mathematics and science today.
In Part 3 we will see examine how Aristotle took the theory
of forms and modified it in such a way as to create a foundation on which
modern thinking was built. Link to Part 1.
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