PHI 312 – Introduction to Philosophy. The Classical Period Socrates (469 – 399) Plato (428 – 347) Aristotle (384 – 322)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
TELEOLOGICAL ETHICS.
Advertisements

Aristotle – b. 384 d. 322 BCE  Plato’s student at his Academy  Wrote on nearly every field  Was tutor to Alexander, 342 BCE  Founded his own school,
Aristotle was the greatest scientist of the ancient world. He believed in using logic and reason to explain natural events in an era when most people believed.
-Never wrote any records of his own. -Most of what we know is from his pupil Plato. -Did not like the early schools of philosophy=Useless -Declared the.
The Naturalist: Aristotle
The Metaphysics of Aristotle “Plato is dear to me, but dearer still is truth.” An introduction: Dr. Paul R. Shockley.
Great Philosophers of Ancient Greece: Plato and Aristotle James A. Van Slyke, Ph.D.
REALISM  At eighteen, he joined Plato's Academy in Athens and remained there until the age of thirty- sevenPlato's Academy  His writings cover.
Aristotle ( BCE): First theorist of democracy
Aristotle Happiness, Virtue, and The Golden Mean
Aristotle Virtue Ethics
Virtue Ethics (Aristotle)
Plato and Aristotle. ? Which came first: the Chicken or the Idea of a chicken?
Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics
Socrates, Plato, & Aristotle
First Five What is “Groupthink?” How long did Plato study under Socrates? Which of Plato’s dialogues discusses “The Prisoners and the Cave?”
The Ancient Greeks Aristotle Ἀριστοτέλης.
NATURAL LAW ARISTOTLE AND HAPPINESS. Who was Aristotle? Born in 384 BC in Stagyra, Macedonia. Son of a wealthy court physician. Studied in Plato’s Academy.
Great Thinkers Think Alike! Socrates Plato and Aristotle Compiled by Amy.
Virtue Ethics Another amusing and easy topic for A2 ethics.
Aristotle ( BCE). Biography Studied at Plato ’ s Academy Founded the Lyceum Tutored Alexander the Great Classified and mapped out knowledge o Logic,
An Introduction to Ethics Week Five: Aristotle. Aristotle Quick Recap of Kant Motive of duty and the Categorical Imperative Axe-wielding maniac Optimistic.
Chapter 1 A Comprehensive History of Western Ethics
Greek Philosophy.
Aristotle on early experience and good
Aristotle ( BCE): What is Virtue? PHIL 1003 Semester I
Philosophers.
Greek Philosophers. What is Philosophy? Means “love of wisdom” The rational investigation of the truths and principles of being, knowledge, or conduct.
Greek Philosophy Chapter 11. I. Greeks placed great importance on intellect, and/or the ability to reason.
Aristotle. Some Facts about Aristotle  Lived from  Plato’s best student at the Academy  Father was a physician —presumably taught Aristotle.
Aristotle of Stagira By: Briane Emerson. Aristotle was born in a small Greek town called Stagira. Aristotle created the theory Syllogism, a form deductive.
Ancient Greece Philosophers World History I Miss LaFerriere.
Introduction to Greek Philosophy That is, the really important Greek philosophy.
Aristotle’s Theory of Eudaimonia or Happiness. 500 BC200 BC Greek Philosophers (500BC – 200BC) Timeline The Great Three Plato ( ) Socrates (469.
Chapter 8: Justice The Problem of Justice Introducing Philosophy, 10th edition Robert C. Solomon, Kathleen Higgins, and Clancy Martin.
Philosophy of the Late Classical Period PlatoAristotle.
Chapter 2: Reality Two Kinds of Metaphysics: Plato and Aristotle
GREEK PHILOSOPHERS Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle.
Allegory of the Cave D. Montoya. Vocabulary 1.abash 2.abate 3.abject 4.abyss 5.acute.
Aristotle By: Pratyu Chundu Morrison- 1 st hour Edcanvas project Due: March 13, 2013.
Aristotle ( BCE): What is Virtue? PHIL 1003 Semester I
Greek Classical Philosophy “Western philosophy is just a series of footnotes to Plato.”
The Naturalist: Aristotle
Aristotle ( BC). Aristotle was born in 384 BC in Halkidiki, a Greek island. His father was the personal doctor to the king of Macedonia. He was.
Philosophy 224 Aristotle’s Vision of the Human. Aristotle ( B.C.E.) Unlike Socrates and Plato, Aristotle was not an Athenian. ◦ He was born in.
Aristotle’s Ethics. Aristotle  Lived from BCE  One of the greatest philosophers of Ancient Greece  Student of Plato  Tutor to Alexander the.
Aristotle. History and Background - Born in 384 B.C.E. in the city of Stagira in Greece. - At the age of 17, he moved to Athens to study at Plato’s Academy.
GREEK PHILOSOPHERS I can explain the importance of the Greek philosophers; Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle.
Greek Philosophy CHW3M. Philosophy From Greek philo (love) soph (wisdom) From Greek philo (love) soph (wisdom) Can you name any Greek philosophers? Can.
PHI 312 Introduction to Philosophy. Plato Student of Socrates. Founded the Academy in Athens.
Ethical theories tend to suggest a set of principles or rules than all human beings are bound by. Utilitarianism – the greatest good for the greatest.
Ethical theories tend to suggest a set of principles or rules than all human beings are bound by. Utilitarianism – the greatest good for the greatest.
Metaphysics Aristotle and Plato.
The difference between the beliefs of Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle By: caden Bankhead.
The Ring of Gyges Plato.
Aristotle.
Aristotle.
PHI 312 – Introduction to Philosophy
Aristotle’s Theory of Eudaimonia or Happiness
Greatest Ancient Greek Men 1750 B.C – 133 B.C..
Math & Science Archimedes Eratosthenes Pythagoras
Greek Philosophers The Big Three.
Aristotle's Background
Eudaemonism The Morality of Self-Realization
Aristotle 384 BCE – 322 BCE.
Chapter Four Section Four
Greece Society and Culture
Chapter 7: Ethics Morality as Virtue: Aristotle
Presentation transcript:

PHI 312 – Introduction to Philosophy

The Classical Period Socrates (469 – 399) Plato (428 – 347) Aristotle (384 – 322)

Aristotle Joined Plato’s Academy when he was 18. Stayed for 20 years. After Plato died, he started his own school at the Lyceum. Peripatetic school.

Aristotle’s Influence In science, Aristotle wrote about anatomy, astronomy, geology, geography, meteorology, physics and zoology. In philosophy he wrote about aesthetics, ethics, metaphysics, politics, economics, psychology, rhetoric, and theology.

Aristotle Metaphysics. Agreed with Plato that ideal forms exist – but not in a separate otherworldly existence. The forms exist in the objects themselves. Form and matter (substance) go together – form gives matter its particularity, whereas matter gives concreteness to Form. (Mitchell 67)

No one encounters “treeness” apart from an actual tree. To get a better idea of what a tree is, one needs to observe many different trees and classify them.

For Aristotle, if the perfect Forms can only exist in the material world, then studying that world is the best way to study reality itself. These ideas influenced how the two went about their work. –Plato wrote a book (Republic) describing what an ideal society would look like. –Aristotle studied 158 actual constitutions and their societies to see which was the most successful.

Plant kingdom –Nutritive –Reproductive –Locomotive Animal kingdom –Sensory, perception Human beings –Rational

Aristotle’s four causes: (Metaphysics) Material cause = the material from which something comes. Efficient cause = that which brings something into being. Formal cause = the essence of something. Final cause = its reason for being.

Aristotle’s four causes: Material cause = marble Efficient cause = the artist Formal cause = a statue Final cause = aesthetic value

According to Aristotle, matter has entelechy – “inner purpose” or “end” – potential. When its potential becomes actual, matter becomes real. Telos = purpose, goal

Implications for Ethics Plato’s ethics were based on the concept of virtue – the Good. –The Good is the ideal model of the good. –Conformity to the form of the Good is what makes a person virtuous. –Plato did not clearly define what doing good really meant. –The function of the soul is to make sure reason controls one’s desires and spirit.

Aristotle was much more practical Nicomachian Ethics – a book dedicated to his son. –He said one can know the good and actually put it into practice. –The primary purpose of a person is to guide action and feeling by reason (similar to Plato, but more specific). –This process manifests itself in specific virtues.

All human activity is directed toward some good. Happiness is that good desired for its own sake – thus it is the supreme good. Humans are uniquely able to experience happiness. Happiness is tied to virtue. Virtue is the life lived in accordance with reason.

Moral virtue is acquired by practice. –“Moral goodness... Is the result of habit.” Harmony is important – we must not surrender to desire but we must not deny it either. We must find the middle way between the extremes: the golden mean.

The Golden Mean - courage -cowardicerashness honest self-appraisal - false modesty boastfulness -

The goal is harmony – the right action, done in the right way, toward the right person, to the right extent, at the right time, and with the right motive. Situations change, thus our response. What does not change, however, is the principle of the mean.

Aristotle’s list of Virtues –Courage –Temperance –Liberality –Magnificence (excellence) –Pride –Good temper –Friendliness –Wittiness –Shame –Justice

Aristotle He was called by King Philip of Macedon to tutor his son: Alexander the Great.

Aristotle When Alexander died, Aristotle became the target of Athenian anger. Aristotle fled the city saying, I will not allow the Athenians to sin twice against Philosophy. 3-minute philosophy

Aristotle B.C.E. Nationality: Greek Group Alliances: "Angry" Ancients "Vicious" Virtue Ethicists AKA: Aris-Total Destruction "Beware His Throttle" Aristotle Powers: walking Weaknesses: some people think maybe he could have taught Alexander the Great a little more about diplomacy. Notes: The high quality of this product is ensured by the four causes at work in the manufacture of the toy: the plastic, the assembly line robots, the designers' creative ideas, and the profit from retail sales to spoiled children. Also, the following reasoning establishes that children will love the Aristotle action figure: All Philosophical Powers® figures are totally awesome. This toy is a Philosophical Powers® figure. Therefore, this toy is totally awesome.