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  1. Plato's Platonism is an attempt to construct the most consistent and defensible positive system uniting the five "antis." It is also the system that all later Platonists throughout Antiquity attributed to Plato when countering attacks from critics including Peripatetics, Stoics, and Sceptics. In conclusion, Gerson shows that Late Antique ...

  2. Anyone wishing to understand the Christian tradition deeply must consider the central, formative role of Platonism. At various times Platonism has constituted an essential philosophical and theological resource, furnishing Christianity with a fundamental intellectual framework that has played a key role in its early development, and in subsequent periods of renewal.

  3. Platonism After Metaphysics: Jan Patočka’s ‘Negative’ Interpretation of Plato Albert Ferkl, Leiden University, January 2022 Each generation has to write its own Plato.1 In 1953, Jan Patočka, the Czechoslovak student of Husserl and Heidegger, completed a 30-page text entitled ‘Negative Platonism’, presenting a unique appraisal of Plato and his legacy.

  4. 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 ...

  5. plato and platonism 539 though by this stage they include Christians and other gnostics, as well as Epicureans, Stoics, and Peripatetics).55 But they also succeeded in integrating enough Stoic and Aristotelian ideas into Platonism to effect the eventual absorption of those rival traditions within it.56 Two central cases in Plotinus are, first ...

  6. Plato, holding a copy of his dialogue Timeo (Timaeus), points upward to the heavens; Aristotle, holding his Etica (Ethics), points outward to the world. Although this view is generally accurate, it is not very illuminating, and it obscures what Plato and Aristotle have in common and the continuities between them, suggesting wrongly that their philosophies are polar opposites.

  7. Hace 2 días · Plato (born 428/427 bce, Athens, Greece—died 348/347, Athens) was an ancient Greek philosopher, student of Socrates (c. 470–399 bce ), teacher of Aristotle (384–322 bce ), and founder of the Academy. He is best known as the author of philosophical works of unparalleled influence and is one of the major figures of Classical antiquity.