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Plato’s Theory of Ideas

2024-02-17 04:15:26

Theme: Student theory of Plato's mind: Milena Sadžak Date: December 2001 Introduction of the author Commentary: Still innocence, innocence, ordinary human consciousness began to gradually self-improve and gave birth to those great people, "Devotion" in the mind that remains forever. One of the great men is Plato. Plato is a philosopher. Plato as an artist. Plato was born as the wisdom of his own finite nature. Plato as my own realistic journey. I got lost because I read a small but important piece of young, inexperienced, Plato conversation.

Plato uses the term "concept" in a subjective sense, also known as Plato's "concept theory." Platonic ideas are reality that exists irrespective of their ideas. He uses another term, "form", to explain it. This form does not necessarily refer to the shape of the object. Plato believes we understand naturally about what the ultimate truth is, before the soul enters our body, but as we enter the material world, we know that this I forget my knowledge. We still feel that this knowledge on the incomplete form still exists and waits for recovery through the process of recollection.

Plato's formal theory or theoretical theory is not a material change world we know through emotion, but a non-material abstract (but substantial) form (or idea) is the most fundamental reality We claim to have. Plato represents a group of people confined to the cave walls throughout their lives and confronting blank walls. When things pass in front of the flames behind them, people see shadows on the wall and begin to shape their shadows. Plato's student philosopher Aristotle opposed Plato and his theory. Aristotle believes that shapes exist, but they are part of every object, and our senses finally tell us what this subject is. He is an early materialist. Plato's theory is expressed by cave fables and split line theory. Because they are very similar, Aristotle's view on this issue is quite different.

Plato, Aristotle. Aristotle is a student of Plato. Despite being taught by Plato, they have different theories and perspectives. Their morals are classical and traditional in classical Greece, but Aristotle details the road of virtue and happiness. The political theory of Pluto's utopia society is different from Aristotle's view of "the best state of every society". Their metaphysical theory is completely contrary and very contradictory. Plato and Aristotle have come from the same age