LP3. The Construction of Jay Gatsby: Creating Identity Real Name: James Gatz Age: 17 From: North Dakota Parent’s occupation: Farmers.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Part 3: God is Good. Heresies: Can we know God? Can He know us? Mormonism: You can literally become a _______. Liberalism: You really just need to become.
Advertisements

Starter Heraclitus (c.500B.C.) What does this mean? Do you agree?
Kelso High School English Department. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald.
Plato and Aristotle MUST – Explain Plato’s Cave allegory and Theory of Forms. SHOULD – Evaluate Plato using Aristotle. COULD – Defend and challenge Aristotle’s.
Renaissance Christian Humanist vs. Machiavellian world views
Ben Gerke. Lived French existentialist philosopher, influenced by Kant, Hegel, and Kierkegaard, among others Father Jean-Baptiste Sartre was.
Plato’s Philosophy. 4 Key Ideas Virtue is Knowledge The soul is immortal Knowledge is remembering The Forms.
Araby is about the boy’s mental initiation
 Write out all the adjectives from the following lines. What do you notice about these adjectives? What nouns do they describe? What difference between.
Plato and the Forms According to Plato, common sense is wrong. We do not sense the world as it really is. The senses present the world in a confused way.
Plato Theory of Forms.
Divine Truth Forgiveness & Repentance Concepts. Feeling The Wrong Emotions  One of the biggest problems we have is self- deception with emotions  Attempting.
Kelso High School English Department. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald.
1 Life’s Ultimate Questions “Plato” Christopher Ullman, Instructor Christian Life College.
Christian Ethics. How Should We Live? 3. Virtue and Happiness Sunday, May 22, to 10:50 am, in the Parlor. Everyone is welcome!
PLATO ( BCE) A student of Socrates, and one of the most influential rationalist philosophers Rationalism? The belief that reasoning is the best.
Copy the following terms and their definitions:. A note card is one idea, fact or anecdote that you gained from a source: *a “direct quote”(Use these.
The Seven Sacred Teachings
Plato’s Republic Books VI & VII
Socrates and the Socratic Turn
Chapter 6 The Great Gatsby
Chapter 5.  Can you give a reasonable explanation of who God is and what God wants from us?  While we cannot discover God purely on our own, we can.
 Greek Philosopher, BC  Contemplated Perceptions of Reality ◦ Human Views of Reality vs. Forms.
Signs and Symbols.
Welcome! 20 September 2012 Agenda I.Gatsby Quiz 2 II.Group Discussion III.TPCASTT.
The Great Gatsby Presented by Mike L Evans by F. Scott Fitzgerald.
Introduction to the novel The Stranger by Albert Camus
Welcome! 25 September 2012 Agenda I.Group Discussion II.TPCASTT review III.Sample Essays.
Knowing God Through Creation Chapter 1 Lesson 1. Read Daniel 3:52 When did you first realize that God exists? How do you know that God exists?
Intro: Clarification of Terms. Basic Classification Epistomology Ontology Ethics:
The American Dream.  I Hear America Singing by Walt Whitman I hear America singing, the varied carols I hear, Those of mechanics, each one singing.
Knowing God Through Creation
Philosophy 1050: Introduction to Philosophy Week 10: Descartes and the Subject: The way of Ideas.
Structure of the Phaedo Part I: Prologue 57a-69e Part II Logos 70a-107b First arguments and myth 70a- 84c Challenge and response to Simmias 84c-91c Final.
Augustine’s Confessions Book Two Chap IV? Reflects on how and why he stole some pears: on how and why he did wrong (evil) for its own sake Do we do this?
Student Objective: Students will have a circle discussion on the important passages of Chapter 6 of The Great Gatsby.
Chapter 2: Reality Two Kinds of Metaphysics: Plato and Aristotle
Descartes and Buddies “To be or not to be, that is the question”
It’s Plato, not Playdough Thoughts on the Republic, the Soul, and everything in between.
Chapter 11 Happiness, Suffering, and Pessimism in Kierkegaard, Schopenhauer, Nietzsche, and Mill.
+ The Great Gatsby Review of F. Scott Fitzgerald Chapter 6 Analysis April 2011 – May 2011.
Greek Classical Philosophy “Western philosophy is just a series of footnotes to Plato.”
Philosophical Foundations Course Summary Introduction to Divine Revelation Monday, December 07, 2015Monday, December 07, 2015Monday, December 07, 2015Monday,
Structure of the Phaedo Part I: Prologue 57a-69e Part II Logos 70a-107b First arguments and myth 70a- 84c Challenge and response to Simmias 84c-91c Final.
Plato’s Theory of Forms. The idea of the Forms is illustrated in the Allegory of the Cave. Plato believed true reality existed beyond normal perceptions.
Alienation and Social Classes Karl Marx By: Michael C. Colon, Aiyana Walker, Gisselle Robles, Gianna Cicchetti, Toba Mohammad, Dennis Heffernan and Sabrina.
The Way of the Blessed Central Family - Part 2 The Pledge.
Thomas Aquinas “On Being and Essence”. Saint Thomas Aquinas born ca. 1225; died 7 March 1274 Dominican.
BC The Republic is one of Plato’s longer works (more than 450 pages in length). It is written in dialogue form (as are most of Plato’s books),
CHAPTER TWO – LOVE DEFINED: GIVING VS. USING
The Great Gatsby Day 3: Daisy, James Gatz and the Title.
How Powerful is Plato’s Influence according to Alfred North Whitehead “all philosophy is nothing more than a footnote to Plato.” Plato was a student of.
In the beginning was the one who is called the Word (Jesus). The Word (Jesus) was with God and was truly God. From the very beginning the Word (Jesus)
Dads, what’s so great about being a father? What brings you joy, what do you love about it? What has surprised you about being a dad?
THE DOCTRINE OF GOD HIS ATTRIBUTES Source: Grudem, Systematic Theology.
R EALITY ACCORDING TO P LATO. TODAY’S LECTURE In this presentation we will: 1.Begin our investigation into the question of reality (metaphysics) 2.Briefly.
Ideal World/World of Forms.  c B.C.E. Athens, Ancient Greece  Teacher of Aristotle  Influenced by Socrates, Heraclitus, Parmenides and the.
Seeing the Father John 14:5-11.
Lecture on Plato BC
With a partner, find your assigned quote within the pages of the novel and perform a deep dive. You will then respond to the following questions about.
The in-class essay Please make sure you write legibly…if I can’t read it, I can’t guess as to what it says.
Gatsby questions: Chapter 1
The Great Gatsby Chapter Six.
The Theory of Forms or The Theory of Ideas
Anna Barbee Kaila Evans Abigail Foster
Acquiring Spiritual Knowledge Part 3
The GREAT GATSBY Ch 6 Analysis notes
Anna Barbee Kaila Evans Abigail Foster
Exploring Identity and Belonging
The GREAT GATSBY Ch 6 Analysis notes
Presentation transcript:

LP3

The Construction of Jay Gatsby: Creating Identity Real Name: James Gatz Age: 17 From: North Dakota Parent’s occupation: Farmers

Creating Identity “I suppose he’d had the name ready for a long time, even then. His parents were shiftless and unsuccessful farm people — his imagination had never really accepted them as his parents at all. The truth was that Jay Gatsby of West Egg, Long Island, sprang from his Platonic conception of himself. He was a son of God — a phrase which, if it means anything, means just that — and he must be about His Father’s business, the service of a vast, vulgar, and meretricious beauty. So he invented just the sort of Jay Gatsby that a seventeen-year-old boy would be likely to invent, and to this conception he was faithful to the end.” (Chapter 6)

Deconstructing the Passage We will be coming back to this passage may times throughout the novel, but after your first reading, what are some terms that are difficult? Platonic: 1. of, pertaining to, or characteristic of Plato or his doctrines: the Platonic philosophy of ideal forms. 2. pertaining to, involving, or characterized by Platonic love as a striving toward love of spiritual or ideal beauty. 3. ( usually lowercase ) purely spiritual; free from sensual desire, esp. in a relationship between two persons of the opposite sex. Meretricious: 1. alluring by a show of flashy or vulgar attractions; tawdry. 2. based on pretense, deception, or insincerity. 3. pertaining to or characteristic of a prostitute.

“a son of God” He was a son of God — a phrase which, if it means anything, means just that — and he must be about His Father’s business, the service of a vast, vulgar, and meretricious beauty. Meretricious: 1. alluring by a show of flashy or vulgar attractions; tawdry. 2. based on pretense, deception, or insincerity. 3. pertaining to or characteristic of a prostitute.

“a son of God” Does this statement have a positive or negative connotation? What is Fitzgerald’s meaning? What purpose does this provide to our understanding of Jay Gatsby?

Platonic Conception “The truth was that Jay Gatsby of West Egg, Long Island, sprang from his Platonic conception of himself.” Platonic: 1. of, pertaining to, or characteristic of Plato or his doctrines: the Platonic philosophy of ideal forms. 2. pertaining to, involving, or characterized by Platonic love as a striving toward love of spiritual or ideal beauty. 3. ( usually lowercase ) purely spiritual; free from sensual desire, esp. in a relationship between two persons of the opposite sex.

Forms Activity On a piece of paper draw one animal and one object.

Plato’s Theory of Forms Plato splits up existence into two realms: 1. the material realm 2. the transcendent realm of Forms. Humans have access to the realm of Forms through the mind, through reason, given Plato's theory of the subdivisions of the human soul. This gives them access to an unchanging world, invulnerable to the pains and changes of the material world. Why did Plato focus on such a topic?

Plato’s Problem How can humans live a fulfilling, happy life in a contingent, changing world where everything they attach themselves to can be taken away? Plato’s response: Theory of Forms Christianity’s response: The gift of Faith

Plato’s Theory of Forms The six main properties of the forms are: 1. Transcendent - the forms are not located in space and time. For example, there is no particular place or time at which redness exists. 2. Pure - the forms only exemplify one property. Material objects are impure; they combine a number of properties such as blackness, circularity, and hardness into one object. A form, such as circularity, only exemplifies one property. 3. Archetypes - The forms are archetypes; that is, they are perfect examples of the property that they exemplify. The forms are the perfect models upon which all material objects are based. The form of redness, for example, is red, and all red objects are simply imperfect, impure copies of this perfect form of redness. 4. Ultimately Real - The forms are the ultimately real entities, not material objects. All material objects are copies or images of some collection of forms; their reality comes only from the forms. 5. Causes - The forms are the causes of all things. (1) They provide the explanation of why any thing is the way it is, and (2) they are the source or origin of the being of all things. 6. Systematically Interconnected - The forms comprise a system leading down from the form of the Good moving from more general to more particular, from more objective to more subjective. This systematic structure is reflected in the structure of the dialectic process by which we come to knowledge of the forms.

“Platonic Conception of himself” “The truth was that Jay Gatsby of West Egg, Long Island, sprang from his Platonic conception of himself.” What does this reveal about Jay Gatsby’s true identity? What is the problem with creating oneself in this manner?

Platonic Perfection No one has ever seen a perfect circle, nor a perfectly straight line, yet everyone knows what a circle and a straight line are. Perceived circles or lines are not exactly circular or straight, and true circles and lines could never be detected since by definition they are sets of infinitely small points. But if the perfect ones were not real, how could they direct the manufacturer?