Plato - One of the Most Important Philosophers
Place of Birth: Athens
Dates 428/427 - 347
B.C.
Occupation: Philosopher
Who Was Plato?
He was one of the most
famous, respected, and influential philosophers of all time. A type of love
(Platonic) is named for him. We know the Greek philosopher Socrates mostly
through Plato's dialogues. Atlantis enthusiasts know Plato for his parable
about it in Timaeus and other descriptions from Critias.
He saw tripartite
structures in the world around him. His social structure theory had a governing
class, warriors, and workers. He thought the human soul contained reason,
spirit, and appetite.
He may have founded an
institution of learning known as the Academy, from which we get the word
academic.
The Dialogues of Plato
The Name 'Plato': Plato
was originally named Aristocles, but one of his teachers gave him the familiar
name, either because of the breadth of his shoulders or his speech.
Birth: Plato was born
around May 21 in 428 or 427 B.C., a year or two after Pericles died and during
the Peloponnesian War. [See Ancient Greece Timeline.] He was related to Solon
and could trace his ancestry to the last legendary king of Athens, Codrus.
Plato and Socrates:
Plato was a student and follower of Socrates until 399, when the condemned
Socrates died after drinking the prescribed cup of hemlock. It is through Plato
that we are most familiar with Socrates' philosophy because he wrote dialogues
in which his teacher took part, usually asking leading questions -- the
Socratic method.
Plato's Apology is his
version of the trial and the Phaedo, the death of Socrates.
The Legacy of the
Academy: When Plato died, in 347 B.C., after Philip II of Macedonia had begun
his conquest of Greece, leadership of the Academy passed not to Aristotle, who
had been a student and then teacher there for 20 years, and who expected to follow,
but to Plato's nephew Speusippus.
The Academy continued for several more centuries.
Eroticism: Plato's
Symposium contains ideas on love held by various philosophers and other
Athenians. It entertains many points of view, including the idea that people
were originally doubled -- some with the same gender and others with the
opposite, and that, once cut, they spend their lives looking for their other
part. This idea "explains" sexual preferences.
Atlantis: The mythical
place known as Atlantis appears as part of a parable in a fragment of Plato's
late dialogue Timaeus and also in Critias.
Tradition of Plato: In
the Middle Ages, Plato was known mostly through Latin translations of Arabic
translations and commentaries. In the Renaissance, when Greek became more
familiar, far more scholars studied Plato. Since then, he has had an impact on
math and science, morals, and political theory.
The Philosopher King:
Instead of following a political path, Plato thought it more important to
educate would-be statesmen. For this reason, he set up a school for future
leaders. His school was called the Academy, named for the park in which it was
located. Plato's Republic contains a treatise on education.
Plato is considered by
many to be the most important philosopher who ever lived.
He is known as the
father of idealism in philosophy. His ideas were elitist, with the philosopher
king the ideal ruler.
Plato is perhaps best
known to college students for his parable of a cave, which appears in Plato's
Republic.
Plato is on the list of
Most Important People to Know in Ancient History.
source:
https://www.thoughtco.com/plato-important-philosophers-120328
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