transpondency / tags / plato

Tagged with “plato” (13) activity chart

  1. Fiona Leigh – Restless Forms, Motionless Causes

    Dr Fiona Leigh (UCL): Restless Forms, Motionless Causes

    It is widely held that Plato’s Forms rest or change or both in Plato’s Sophist. The received opinion is, however, quite false – or so I will argue. There is no direct support for it in the text and several passages tell against it. I will further argue that, contrary to the view of some scholars, Plato did not in our dialogue advocate a kind of change recognizable as ‘Cambridge change’, as applicable to his Forms. The reason that Forms neither change nor rest is that they are purely intelligible entities, not susceptible to changing or being at rest. Since Plato continues in the Sophist to treat Forms as causes, it follows that Forms are changeless causes. I ask what conception of cause might allow for this view, and reject the suggestion that Plato was some kind of proto-dispositionalist about causation. Instead I suggest that he understood causation to incorporate a notion of structuring, such that Forms can be seen to structure their participants and so cause them to possess the attributes they possess.

    —Huffduffed by transpondency one year ago

  2. History of Criticism Revision Class

    A class taught by Tim Morton at UC Davis, March 19, 2012.

    —Huffduffed by transpondency one year ago

  3. History of Criticism 17

    A class taught by Tim Morton at UC Davis, March 8, 2012.

    —Huffduffed by transpondency one year ago

  4. History of Criticism 16

    A class taught by Tim Morton at UC Davis, March 6, 2012.

    —Huffduffed by transpondency one year ago

  5. How to Read Any Poem, Anywhere Interim Class

    A class taught by Tim Morton, UC Davis, February 29, 2012.

    —Huffduffed by transpondency one year ago

  6. History of Criticism 15

    A class taught by Tim Morton, UC Davis, March 1, 2012.

    —Huffduffed by transpondency one year ago

  7. History of Criticism 12

    A class taught by Tim Morton at UC Davis, February 21, 2012.

    —Huffduffed by transpondency one year ago

  8. History of Criticism 11

    A class taught by Tim Morton at UC Davis, February 16, 2012.

    —Huffduffed by transpondency one year ago

  9. History of Criticism 10

    A class taught by Tim Morton at UC Davis, February 9, 2012.

    —Huffduffed by transpondency one year ago

  10. History of Criticism 9

    A class taught by Tim Morton at UC Davis on February 7, 2012.

    —Huffduffed by transpondency one year ago

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