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Encyclopedia > Platonic

Platonic idealism is the theory that the substantive reality around us is only a reflection of a higher truth. That truth, Plato argues, is the abstraction. A particular tree, with a branch or two missing, possibly alive, possibly dead, and initials of two lovers carved into its bark, is distinct from the form of Tree-ness. A Tree is the ideal that each of us holds that allows us to identify the imperfect reflections of trees all around us.


Some people construe "Platonism" to mean the proposition that universals exist independently of particulars (a universal is anything that can be predicated of a particular).


Platonism is an ancient school of philosophy, founded by Plato; this school had an actual, physical existence at a site just outside the walls of Athens called the Academy as well as the intellectual unity of a shared approach to philosophizing.


Platonism is generally divided into three periods:

  1. Early Platonism
  2. Middle Platonism
  3. Neoplatonism

Platonism is considered to be, in mathematics departments the world over, the predominant philosophy of mathematics, especially regarding the foundations of mathematics.


One statement of this philosophy is the thesis that mathematics is not created but discovered in some undescribed realm. A lucid statement of this is found in an essay written by the British mathematician G. H. Hardy in defense of pure mathematics.


The absence in this thesis of clear distinction between mathematical and nonmathematical "creation" leaves open the inference that it applies to allegedly creative endeavors in art, music, and literature.


Nietzsche was highly critical of Plato and his influence on Western philosophical thought.


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Plato and Platonism (2724 words)
Platonic account of the origin of the universe, contained in the "Timaeus", although the details regarding the activity of the demiurgos and the
Platonism in the history of Scholasticism -- e.g., the School of Chartes in the twelfth century -- and throughout the whole
Platonism, and especially of neo-Platonism, were incorporated in the Aristotelean system adopted by the schoolmen.
Middle Platonism [Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy] (8719 words)
Perhaps the most important contribution of Xenocrates to the history of Platonism (and all of philosophy as well) is the doctrine that the Ideas are thoughts in the mind of the One (Dillon, p.
Platonism, therefore, should not be thought of a simple elucidation of Plato's doctrines, but rather as a creative engagement with Plato's texts and with certain doctrines handed down by the Academy as belonging to Plato.
Middle Platonism ends with Origen of Alexandria and his younger contemporary Plotinus, both of whom were deeply indebted to many of the philosophers discussed in this article, yet moved in directions uniquely their own.
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