CEU Electronic Theses and Dissertations, 2017
Author | Calian, Florin George |
---|---|
Title | From One to one, to many: the Parmenides 142b-144b |
Summary | This dissertation is a contribution to the reassessment of Platonic ontology and mathematical conceptions as found in the beginning of the second hypothesis of the second part of the Parmenides (142b -144b), in what I argue to be Plato’s ontological argument and the argument for the generation of numbers. I support the reading of these two specific arguments as a coherent continuum: how the being of one was conceived by Plato as necessarily different from one, differentiating thus himself from Eleatic philosophy and setting the grounds for multiplicity, which leads Plato into a discussion on the primordial of numbers. There are numbers (the mathematical argument) only because one and being can be separated (the ontological argument). My analysis of the argument for the generation of numbers is substantia ted by an evaluation of Aristotle’s testimony in Metaphysics A6, a testimony which, I argue, is built upon this passage of the Parmenides. The dissertation provides an analytical commentary of the stages of the arguments, in an attempt to place the arguments on the map of Plato’s philosophy. I demonstrate that the ontological and mathematical arguments are actual Platonic arguments, and not merely dialectic exercises, which have traceable conclusions in Plato’s philosophy of the so called late dialogues, especially the Theaetetus, the Sophist, and the Timaeus. |
Supervisor | Gábor Betegh |
Department | Philosophy PhD |
Full text | https://www.etd.ceu.edu/2017/calian_george-florin.pdf |
Visit the CEU Library.
© 2007-2021, Central European University