Parámetros
- 339 páginas
- 12 horas de lectura
Más información sobre el libro
Mary Margaret McCabe challenges the belief that Aristotle was the first to systematically discuss individuation, asserting that Plato was deeply engaged with what constitutes an individual and approached the issue in a fundamentally different manner. She examines the significance of individuation in Plato's work, from the *Parmenides* to the *Politicus*, offering a fresh perspective on his later metaphysics. Traditionally, Plato is viewed as contrasting the particulars of the sensible world with transcendent forms, which is thought to be central to his metaphysical framework. McCabe disputes this interpretation, arguing that Plato's focus on individuals reveals a tension between complex individuals and simpler ones. In dialogues like the *Theaetetus* and the *Timaeus*, Plato raises questions about individuation but does not provide definitive answers. Later, in the *Sophist*, *Philebus*, and *Politicus*, he develops what McCabe terms the mesh of identity, which attempts to explain how individuals relate to one another. However, this concept does not adequately clarify how individuals achieve unity or coherence. McCabe posits that individuation may be absolute, prompting a reevaluation of philosophy's longstanding dependence on Aristotle's conclusions.
Compra de libros
Plato's Individuals, Mary Margaret McCabe
- Idioma
- Publicado en
- 1994
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- (Tapa dura)
Métodos de pago
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- Título
- Plato's Individuals
- Idioma
- Inglés
- Autores
- Mary Margaret McCabe
- Editorial
- Princeton University Press
- Publicado en
- 1994
- Formato
- Tapa dura
- Páginas
- 339
- ISBN10
- 0691073511
- ISBN13
- 9780691073514
- Serie
- Etiquetas
- No ficción, Ciencias sociales, Tema histórico, Temática filosófica, Filosofía, EE.UU., Grecia antigua
- Descripción
- Mary Margaret McCabe challenges the belief that Aristotle was the first to systematically discuss individuation, asserting that Plato was deeply engaged with what constitutes an individual and approached the issue in a fundamentally different manner. She examines the significance of individuation in Plato's work, from the *Parmenides* to the *Politicus*, offering a fresh perspective on his later metaphysics. Traditionally, Plato is viewed as contrasting the particulars of the sensible world with transcendent forms, which is thought to be central to his metaphysical framework. McCabe disputes this interpretation, arguing that Plato's focus on individuals reveals a tension between complex individuals and simpler ones. In dialogues like the *Theaetetus* and the *Timaeus*, Plato raises questions about individuation but does not provide definitive answers. Later, in the *Sophist*, *Philebus*, and *Politicus*, he develops what McCabe terms the mesh of identity, which attempts to explain how individuals relate to one another. However, this concept does not adequately clarify how individuals achieve unity or coherence. McCabe posits that individuation may be absolute, prompting a reevaluation of philosophy's longstanding dependence on Aristotle's conclusions.
