Note: All posts are interconnected, so you are requested to read the previous posts before reading this post.
In the last post, we discussed the pre-Socrates
period, where the philosophers explored wholeness and its parts with their
roles. The section discusses Socratic-Platonic thoughts focusing on individual
virtues, happiness, right knowledge, etc., instead of the Universe and its
constituents.
Socrates, a Greek sage and philosopher of the fifth
century B.C. from Athens, was the herald of a silent revolt against the living
highly based on material possessions and imbued with power and wealth along
with inhumanity. The below statement given by Mumford can help us visualize the
materialistic life of that period:
“The ruling classes constantly were enervated by
the surfeit of goods and pleasures they had so ruthlessly monopolized for
themselves. They had lapsed, too may of these insolent rulers and their agents,
from a human to a distinctly simian level; like the apes, they snatched food
for themselves instead of sharing it with the froup; like them too, the more
powerful claimed more than their share of women: like them again, they were in
a constant state of nettled aggression toward possible rivals. In short, they
had alienated themselves from their distinctly human potentialities….”
During
such an era, Socrates challenged all the vanities and pomps of a materialistic
worldview through his simple life and powerful teachings. He was very much
concerned with the question of virtues viz. justice, piety, moderation, etc.,
culminating in human happiness. He believed that happiness depends not on
external objects and luxurious life but on knowingly acting rightly. To achieve
a good life, he believed people should focus on moral virtue rather than pursuing
material wealth because virtue that consists of the right knowing always leads
to the right actions. However, he did not indicate how one could obtain that
virtue. According to him, one can achieve righteousness by questioning one’s
moral beliefs. That’s why he was also known as a moral philosopher of that
time. In his trial speech, he tries to explain the substance of his mission
(Graham, 2016):
“Men of Athens, I appreciate and love you, but I
will obey the god rather than you, and as long as I draw breath and have the
ability, I will not stop philosophising and exhorting you and appealing to any
one of you I happen to meet, saying what I always say, “Good sir, since you are
an Athenian, a citizen of the greatest city and the one most renowned for
wisdom and power, aren’t you ashamed of yourself for devoting yourself to
maximising your wealth, your reputation, and your rank, while you show no interest
at all in how to improve your wisdom, your honesty, and the state of your
soul.”
The
philosophy of ‘right knowledge,’ propagated by Socrates, can be understood by
the writings of his students, especially Plato. He concluded that ‘right
knowledge’ free from all possibilities
of errors of perception and judgment could not be achieved through senses
because our senses are transient, continually changing and subject to decay and
death. Thus, sensual perceptions are not enough to conclude this world
objectively.
The idea of ‘Good’, wisdom etc. belong to the super-sensible world (in contrast to objects which constitute the sensible world), and in Plato’s own words;
“…. in the world of knowledge, the idea of good
seen, is also inferred to be the world of knowledge, the idea of good seen, is
also inferred to be the Universal author of all things beautiful and right… the
immediate source of reason and truth.. and that this is the power upon which he
who would act rationally either in public or private life must have his eye
fixed”.
In
Plato’s philosophy, we thus find a consummation of Socratic teachings. Socrates
taught that true happiness – the perfect realisation of one’s ‘being’ - needs right action, which demands ‘right
knowledge.’ This knowledge could dawn only with a clear understanding of the
idea of ‘Good’, and Plato indicated that ‘divine contemplation’ of the
super-sensible world would reveal the idea of ‘Good.’ The perfection of man
thus necessitated a knowledge of super-sensible realities. Accordingly, in his
Academy too, Plato emphasized ‘enlightening’ his students, creating a love of
knowledge and wisdom rather than imparting any special skill.
We
thus find that Platonic philosophy is a complete antithesis of the
materialistic worldview. Like Socrates, he mocked all attempts at finding
happiness in the ‘sensible world’. He considered people who thought to become
happy only from sensual pleasures as prisoners of an underground cave where one
can never see anything else other than the shadows on the wall of their cave,
and they assume the shadows as realities. It implies that people searching for happiness
only in the domain of their sensual pleasures are unaware of their virtue and
realities. True happiness lies in coming out of this ‘prison house’ of the
‘world of sight’ and willfully undertaking the prisoners’ journey out of the
cave. He believed this was the real purpose of truly human life.
Thus, being practical moral philosophers, Socrates
and Plato much focused on individual virtues that culminate in human happiness.
They condemned happiness and values derived only from senses and advocated that
‘right knowledge’, which could not be possible with temporary senses, is
required to get the virtues. Hence, the Socratic-Platonic thought was the
antithesis of the materialistic worldview prevailing in the modern worldview.
After
briefly understanding Socratic-Platonic thoughts, we can now move towards ‘The
Christian Worldview,’ which dominated the western world for over millennia.
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