What is Medieval (Christian or Islam) philosophy? Explain its Metaphysics, Epistemology and Ethics. Justify your answer.
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Medieval philosophy
Medieval philosophy is the philosophy of
Western Europe and the Middle East during what is now known as the medieval era
or the middle ages, roughly extending from the fall of the Roman Empire to the
Renaissance. Medieval philosophy is defined partly by the rediscovery and
further development of classical Greek and Hellenistic philosophy, and partly
by the need to address theological problems and to integrate sacred doctrine
with secular learning.
Some problems discussed throughout this
period are the relation of faith to reason, the existence and unity of God, the
object of theology and metaphysics, the problems of knowledge, of universals,
and of individuation.
Philosophers from the middle Ages
include the Muslim philosophers Alkindus, Alfarabi, Alhazen, Avicenna, Algazel,
Avempace, Abubacer and Averroes; the Jewish philosophers Maimonides and
Gersonides; and the Christian philosophers Anselim, Peter Abelard, Roger Bacon,
Thomas Aquinas, Duns Scotus, William of Ockham and Jean Buridan.
Metaphysics, Epistemology and Ethics.
Students of Plato and other ancient
philosophers divide philosophy into three parts: Ethics, Epistemology and
Metaphysics. While generally accurate and certainly useful for pedagogical
purposes, no rigid boundary separates the parts.
Ethics, for example, concerns
how one ought to live and focuses on pleasure, virtue, and happiness. Since,
according to Plato (and Socrates), virtue and happiness require knowledge,
e.g., knowledge of goods and evils, Plato's ethics is inseparable from his epistemology.
Epistemology is, broadly speaking, the study of what knowledge is and how one
comes to have knowledge. Among the many topics included in epistemology are
logic, belief, perception, language, science, and knowledge. Integral to all of
these notions is that they (typically) are directed at something. Words refer
to something; perception (aesthesis in Greek) involves perceptible;
knowledge requires a known. In this respect, epistemology cannot be
investigated without regard to what there is.
Metaphysics, or alternatively ontology,
is that branch of philosophy whose special concern is to answer the question
‘What is there?’ These expressions derive from Aristotle, Plato's student. In a
collection of his works, the most detailed treatise on the general topic of
things that are comes after a treatise on natural things, taphusika. Since the
Greek for ‘after’ is Meta, this treatise is titled ‘Metaphysics’. In that work
one finds the famous formula that (first) philosophy studies being the Greek
for which is on qua being. Hence the account of being is ‘ontology’ the
English suffix ‘-ology’ signifying ‘study of’: e.g., biology is the study of
living things.
Metaphysics, then, studies the ways in
which anything that is can be said or thought to be. Leaving to sciences like
biology or physics or mathematics or psychology the task of addressing the
special ways in which physical things, or living things, or mathematical
objects, e.g., numbers, or souls (minds) come to have the peculiar qualities
each, respectively, has, the subject-matter of metaphysics are principles
common to everything. Perhaps the most general principle is: to be is to be
something. Nothing just exists, we might say. This notion implies that each
entity has at least some one feature or quality or property. Keeping at a
general level, we can provisionally distinguish three factors involved when
anything is whatever it is: there is that which bears or has the property,
often called the ‘subject’, e.g., Socrates, the number three, or my soul; there
is the property which is possessed; e.g., being thin, being odd, and being
immortal; and there is the manner or way in which the property is tied or
connected to the subject. For instance, while Socrates may be accidentally
thin, since he can change, that is, gain and lose weight, three cannot fail to
be odd nor, if Plato is correct, can the soul fail to be immortal. The
metaphysician, then, considers physical or material things as well as
immaterial items such as souls, god and numbers in order to study notions like
property, subject, change, being essentially or accidentally.
The images of the central books do not
settle the question of whether or not the objects of the different faculties
are the same. In appealing to a contents analysis, fundamentally an analysis
that takes propositions to be the contents or ‘objects’ of belief and
knowledge, as opposed to the objects themselves, i.e., material particulars or
Forms, one allows that there is a path from belief to knowledge. The same proposition
can be believed, depending on one's reasons for holding the belief. But a
contents analysis is not committed to a justified true belief account of all
knowledge. It is left open that the knowledge of the Forms is somehow the basic.
Descending the line furnishes justification for the claims of the diagnostic
sciences and beliefs about the material world, including the states of affairs
in actual cities. What to do about the basic knowledge of Forms is a key issue.
Sun, Line and Cave suggest to many readers that the knowledge of Forms is
intuitive . On the other hand, the refrain that one who knows can give an
account of what he knows suggests knowledge by description or a propositional
analysis. To emphasize relations between Forms, starting from the relation of
the Good to all Forms, lends credence to the view that Plato is an
epistemological holist. Holism is fueled by the search for definitions, since
in order to know what, for instance, Human is, one must know all the elements
of its definition, Animal, Rationality, Bipedality, and thus the definition of
these elements, and so on. In order to know a given Form, one must know all the
Forms, an extreme version of holism, or at least one must know all the Forms in
a given science. The results of this analysis, the genera and species of a
given science, are then hypostasized as Forms, nodes in a web or the elements
of a field. There is a virtuous circle of justification.
Holist readings can also be combined
with the narrow reading of recollection. The same proposition may well be
entertained by the philosopher as by those who still rely on concepts gleaned
from their everyday encounters. Whether or not one knows or believes that ‘The
triangle has three sides’ depends on what one is doing with that content or how
one is justifying one's belief. The problem is that if somehow knowing that the
triangle has three sides makes ‘triangle’ in the statement refer to the Form,
while believing that proposition makes it refer to something else, then the
content of the two states is different, and the content of the states is
different because, it seems, the objects of the two states are different. Or
one can try to save one's holism by allowing that the different states of mind
cause the propositions to be different. Those who see recollection as an act
engaged in only by philosophers maintain that their concept differs from the
empirically grounded concept of the non-recollector, the occupant apparently of
at least two of the other three stages of Line. But how one gets from the one
concept to the other is unspecified. The concepts are linked by the ‘external
fact’ that the temple, for instance, participates in Beauty. The holist program
seems to entail that one can continue to add to beliefs about Beauty, where one
is deploying the empirical concept, until one in a proper justificatory
exercise acquires all the appropriately related beliefs about properties. Once
that is accomplished, the philosophical concept is recollected. It remains open
on this account, when one has recollected the Form and then descends, whether
the contents of the philosopher's beliefs about the empirical world use the
philosophical concept.
Those who read Plato as subscribing to
different objects for Knowledge and Belief also need a story about how one gets
from one stage to the next. If we assume that Forms are at work throughout the
learning process, then Plato is best viewed as not identifying the Form with
the propositional contents of his states. The same expression will, depending
on the state of the agent, have different referents: the images; the material
objects; some immaterial, abstract intermediary, or a mathematical in the case
of dianoia. On the objects account, Plato has little to say about the status of
the concepts deployed in thought. The Form of Equality is not the concept. The
concept is present throughout the developmental life of the human. Because the
Form is latent in the mind, sensation and everyday talk are capable of
‘triggering’ the concept. A select individual will come to disdain the senses
and the material objects of the sensible world and try to explain what accounts
for the similarities present in his experience. The first fundamental moment of
transition seems to be a shift from the many particulars to some abstract
general notion, an inchoate ‘one-over-many’. That she is able to isolate these
‘ones' at all is, according to the broad reading of recollection, due to the
unconscious operation or influence of the Form that allows her to sort the
perceptions into kinds. The ontological status of these kinds is not, as yet,
clear to her. With the further development of her dialectical capacity, the
philosopher-to-be comes to think that there are Forms; that is, comes to think
that there are special entities variously related to particulars and
property-instances. The objects of these beliefs are still not the Forms
themselves, if the state of mind of the scientist is not yet knowledge. At this
stage, one might even be in possession of the definition of the Form and still
not have knowledge. Exactly why one lacks knowledge is hard to say. It is not,
it seems, because he lacks beliefs about the relation the Forms bear to other
mathematical notions. On the one hand, it is doubtful that Plato believes that
one can know all of mathematics or that one can know what a triangle is only if
one knows every other shape. On the other hand, the mathematician seems to know
as much as would be needed to qualify as having knowledge of the mathematical
Forms. The philosopher is not said to know more mathematics than the
mathematician. He secures his knowledge in the way the mathematician can't.
If ‘more truths’ are added to the truths
in the possession of the mathematician, these can only be truths about the
nature of Forms. These higher logoi will then be general metaphysical
principles about the role of the Good, the simplicity or complexity of Forms,
the specification of the participation relation and so on (not a trivial ‘and
so on’. ) Plato does then place fantastically high demands on knowledge. The
desire to ensure irrefutability, perhaps the legacy of reflection on the
Socratic elenchus, drives him to the conclusion that one really has recollected
the Form only when one has become a metaphysician. She needs to know the
general metaphysical theory.
There
is little reason to think that Plato espouses a holism of knowledge of the sort
discussed above. Plato never says that the mathematician or the philosopher
needs to know all the truths of mathematics or ethics to know some Form.
Moreover, while Plato does prescribe a course of study in the Republic designed
to promote one's dialectical abilities, and while it is agreed by both holists
and intuitionists, those who allow for atomic knowledge of a Form, that the
same Forms are the basic objects of knowledge, it does not follow that Plato
thinks that there is only one way to secure knowledge of the Forms. If there
are different paths to get knowledge, or different ways to know a given Form,
then Plato's epistemology is liable to appear to be both holistic and
acquaintance-like. As for when and where Recollection is operative, or whether
Plato allows that a philosopher or scientist can know anything about the
physical world, it is left to each reader of the dialogues to judge whether
Plato is committed to gulfs between both the ordinary concepts of most humans
and the special concepts of the few philosophers, as well as between the
perfect Forms and the seemingly imperfect physical world. Since a Platonic
dialogue is a dialectical conversation designed to summon the mind of the
reader towards philosophizing, it is appropriate that each reader struggle to
discover for himself What the Knowledge Is?


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