The Argument against the Friends of the Forms Revisited: Sophist 248a4–249d5

Author:

Wiitala Michael

Abstract

AbstractThere are only two places in which Plato explicitly offers a critique of the sort of theory of forms presented in thePhaedoandRepublic: at the beginning of theParmenidesand in the argument against the Friends of the Forms in theSophist. An accurate account of the argument against the Friends, therefore, is crucial to a proper understanding of Plato’s metaphysics. How the argument against the Friends ought to be construed and what it aims to accomplish, however, are matters of considerable controversy. My aim in this article is twofold. First, I show that the two readings of the argument against the Friends that dominate the contemporary literature – the “Cambridge Change” reading and the “Becoming-is-Being” reading – lack sufficient textual support. Second, I offer an alternative reading of the argument against the Friends that better explains both the text of 248a4–249d5 and the role the argument plays within the Stranger’s wider project of demonstrating that non-being is. My thesis is that the Stranger’s argument against the Friends seeks to demonstrate that the forms must be both at rest and moved, where “moved” (kineisthai) has the sense of “affected.” To participate in a form is to be affected by that form. I argue that since, according to the Stranger, every form participates in some other forms (see 251d5–253a2), every form is “moved” in the sense that it is affected by the forms in which it participates. Likewise, I argue that every form is at rest in the sense that its unique nature remains unaffected by the other forms in which it participates.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

History and Philosophy of Science,Philosophy

Reference106 articles.

1. Does Plato Revise His Ontology in Sophist 246c–249d?;Archiv Für Geschichte Der Philosophie,1983

2. Motion and Rest as Genuinely Greatest Kinds in the Sophist;Ancient Philosophy,2015

3. Speaking of Something: Plato’s Sophist and Plato’s Beard;Canadian Journal of Philosophy,2008

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