Why Is Plato’s Good Good?

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Translator

Advisor

Editors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Wydział Filozoficzny UAM

Title Alternative

Abstract

The form of the Good in Plato’s Phaedo and Republic seems, by our standards, to do too much: it is presented as the metaphysical princi­ple, the epistemological principle and the principle of ethics. Yet this seemingly chimerical object makes good sense in the broader context of Plato’s philosophical project. He sought certain knowledge of neces­sary truths (in sharp contrast to the contingent truth of modern science). Thus, to be knowable the cosmos must be informed by timeless princi­ples; and this leads to teleology and the Good. The form of the Good, it is argued, is what makes the world knowable insofar as it is knowable. This interpretation plugs a significant gap in the scholarship on the Good and draws attention to a deep connection between Plato’s episte­mology and his teleological understanding of the cosmos.

Description

Sponsor

Keywords

Form of the Good, teleology, Plato’s epistemology, necessity

Citation

Nathan, A. R. (2022) “Why Is Plato’s Good Good?”, Peitho. Examina Antiqua, 13(1), pp. 125–136. doi: 10.14746/PEA.2022.1.6.

Series

ISBN

ISSN

Title Alternative

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

Creative Commons license