Combining Texts
Ideas for
'Parmenides', 'The Republic' and 'The Rise of Analytic Philosophy 1879-1930'
expand these ideas
|
start again
|
choose
another area for these texts
display all the ideas for this combination of texts
25 ideas
8. Modes of Existence / A. Relations / 4. Formal Relations / c. Ancestral relation
22284
|
'Greater than', which is the ancestral of 'successor', strictly orders the natural numbers [Potter]
|
8. Modes of Existence / D. Universals / 2. Need for Universals
223
|
If you deny that each thing always stays the same, you destroy the possibility of discussion [Plato]
|
2142
|
The plurality of beautiful things must belong to a single class, because they have a single particular character [Plato]
|
227
|
You must always mean the same thing when you utter the same name [Plato]
|
8. Modes of Existence / D. Universals / 6. Platonic Forms / a. Platonic Forms
5094
|
Plato's Forms are said to have no location in space [Plato, by Aristotle]
|
210
|
It would be absurd to think there were abstract Forms for vile things like hair, mud and dirt [Plato]
|
228
|
Greatness and smallness must exist, to be opposed to one another, and come into being in things [Plato]
|
2159
|
Craftsmen making furniture refer to the form, but no one manufactures the form of furniture [Plato]
|
211
|
If admirable things have Forms, maybe everything else does as well [Plato]
|
12043
|
Forms are not universals, as they don't cover every general term [Plato, by Annas]
|
219
|
If absolute ideas existed in us, they would cease to be absolute [Plato]
|
220
|
The concept of a master includes the concept of a slave [Plato]
|
24229
|
The true reality is organised and harmonised in a rational order [Plato]
|
16151
|
Plato moves from Forms to a theory of genera and principles in his later work [Plato, by Frede,M]
|
8. Modes of Existence / D. Universals / 6. Platonic Forms / b. Partaking
215
|
If things partake of ideas, this implies either that everything thinks, or that everything actually is thought [Plato]
|
216
|
If things are made alike by participating in something, that thing will be the absolute idea [Plato]
|
24228
|
Believers in the beautiful see that it is separate from things that participate in it [Plato]
|
17
|
A Form applies to a set of particular things with the same name [Plato]
|
212
|
The whole idea of each Form must be found in each thing which participates in it [Plato]
|
213
|
Each idea is in all its participants at once, just as daytime is a unity but in many separate places at once [Plato]
|
218
|
Participation is not by means of similarity, so we are looking for some other method of participation [Plato]
|
8. Modes of Existence / D. Universals / 6. Platonic Forms / c. Self-predication
217
|
Nothing can be like an absolute idea, because a third idea intervenes to make them alike (leading to a regress) [Plato]
|
214
|
If absolute greatness and great things are seen as the same, another thing appears which makes them seem great [Plato]
|
8. Modes of Existence / D. Universals / 6. Platonic Forms / d. Forms critiques
12122
|
Plato mistakenly thought forms were totally abstracted away from matter [Bacon on Plato]
|
5574
|
Plato's Forms not only do not come from the senses, but they are beyond possibility of sensing [Plato, by Kant]
|