Syllabus /plato JZT
Syllabus /plato JZT
Syllabus /plato JZT
JZT
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PAPER: POLITICAL SCIENCE (200 MARKS)
PAPER I- (Marks - 100)
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Part -B (50 Marks)
III. State System: The nature and emergence of modern nation-state system,
Islamic concept of state and Ummah
IV. Political Concept (Western and Islamic): Sovereignty, Justice, Law, Liberty,
Freedom, Equality, Rights and Duties, Human Rights, Political authority and
Power.
V. Comparative Politics: Political Socialization, Political Culture, Political
Development, Political Recruitment, Social Change, Civil Society, Violence and
Terrorism in Politics, Gender and Politics, Women Empowerment.
VI. Political Participation: Political Change and Revolution, Elections, Electoral
System, Public Opinion, Propaganda, Political Parties, Pressure Groups and
Lobbies
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VII. Political Institutions and Role of Government: Legislature, Executive,
Judiciary, Political Elites, Civil-Military and Bureaucracy.
II. Global and Regional Integration : Globalization and Politics, Global Civil
Society, Regional politico-economic integration and organizational
structure of the European Union, SARRC, ECO, International Financial
Regimes IMF and WTO
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Part-B (70 Marks)
III. Comparative and Analytical Study of the Political Systems: Political system
of Turkey, Iran, Malaysia, India and China
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V. Government and Politics in Pakistan: Constitution making from 1947 -
1956, A comparative and critical analysis of 1956, 1962, 1973 Constitutions
of Pakistan, Constitutional Amendments up-to-date, Federal structure in
Pakistan, and Central-Provincial relations after 18th amendments, Political
Culture of Pakistan, political developments and the Role of civil and
military Bureaucracy, Judiciary, feudalism, Dynastic Politics, Political Parties
and Interest Groups, elections and Voting Behavior, Religion and Politics,
Ethnicity and National Integration,
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VI. International Relations:
History of International Relations: Post WWII Period
Foreign Policy of Pakistan:
National Interests and Major Determinations such as :
1). Size/Geography
2). Economic Development
3). Security
4). Advancement in Technology
5). National Capacity
6). Political Parties/Leadership
7). Ideology
8). National Interest
9). Role of Press/Bureaucracy Also external factors like International Power Structure,
10). Social Structure International Organizations, World Public Opinion and
11). Public Opinion reaction of other states
12). Diplomacy. Foreign Policy-making Process in Pakistan
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Plato
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Questions
Explain Plato’s Theory of Justice. How he tries to implement it through the Education System?
(2001)
Plato’s Communism was, is and will remain impracticable. Critically examine this
statement.(2003)
Examine the main similarities and differences in the Political Ideas of Plato and Aristotle.
(2004)
Explain Plato's theory of Justice. How he tries to implement it through educational system?
(2006)
“Plato intended to build an institution for scientific study of politics and training of statesman"
elaborate (2008)
Discuss Plato’s contribution to the History of political thought.(2009)
Platonic and Aristotelian paradigms (2011)
Plato intended to build an institution for scientific study of politics and training of statesman."
elaborate. (2012)
Critically examine the concept of "Justice" by Plato.(2014)
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Political Philosophy
Initially, Political Science was called Political Philosophy
Study of philosophy of State i.e. Political Thought is a part of the study of
Political Science
Philosophy provides to Political Science knowledge of ideal human behavior,
political values, good and bad in political theory, right and wrong laws,
policies and governmental decisions and theory of ideal social-political
institutions
Political thought or political philosophy, is the study of questions
concerning power, justice, rights, law, and other issues pertaining to
governance
Whereas political science assumes that these concepts are what they are,
political thought asks how they have come about and to what effect
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Socrates
Born 470 – 399 BC
A classical Greek (Athenian) philosopher credited as one of the founders of
Western philosophy, and as being the first moral philosopher, of the Western
ethical tradition of thought
An enigmatic figure, he made no writings, and is known chiefly through the
accounts of classical writers writing after his lifetime, particularly his students
Plato and Xenophon
Method :
The Socratic method, also known as maieutics, method of elenchus, elenctic
method, or Socratic debate, is a form of cooperative argumentative dialogue
between individuals, based on asking and answering questions to stimulate
critical thinking and to draw out ideas and underlying presumptions
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Plato
He became a student of Socrates, but his studies with the Greek master
were interrupted by the Peloponnesian War, which pit Athens against
Sparta
Plato fought as a soldier between 409 and 404 B.C
He left Athens when the city was defeated and its democracy was replaced
by a Spartan oligarchy
He considered returning to Athens to pursue a career in politics when the
oligarchy was overthrown, but the execution of Socrates in 399 B.C.
changed his mind
In about 385 B.C., Plato founded his academy, which is often suggested to
have been the first university in history. He would preside over it until his
death around 348 B.C.
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Plato
Ancient Greek philosopher
Born 428/427 BC
Athens, Greece
Died 348/347, Athens
Student of Socrates
Teacher of Aristotle (384–322 BCE)
Founder of the Academy
Best known as the author of philosophical works of unparalleled influence.
WORKS:
The Republic
The Statesman
The Laws
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Definition of Abstract
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Definition of MetaPhysics
The branch of philosophy that deals with the first principles of things,
including abstract concepts such as being, knowing, substance, cause,
identity, time, and space
abstract theory with no basis in reality
Metaphysics is the branch of philosophy that examines the fundamental
nature of reality, including the relationship between mind and matter,
between substance and attribute, and between potentiality and actuality
The word "metaphysics" comes from two Greek words that, together,
literally mean "after or behind or among [the study of] the natural“
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Definition of MetaPhysics
It has been suggested that the term might have been coined by a first
century AD editor who assembled various small selections of Aristotle’s
works into the treatise we now know by the name Metaphysics (ta meta ta
phusika, 'after the Physics ', another of Aristotle's works)
Metaphysics studies questions related to what it is for something to exist
and what types of existence there are
Metaphysics seeks to answer, in an abstract and fully general manner, the
questions:
What is there?
What is it like?
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Definition of MetaPhysics
Topics of metaphysical investigation include existence, objects and their
properties, space and time, cause and effect, and possibility
Metaphysics is considered one of the four main branches of philosophy,
along with epistemology, logic, and ethics
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Definition of Virtue by Plato
Like most other ancient philosophers, Plato maintains a virtue-based
eudaemonistic conception of ethics. That is to say, happiness or well-being
(eudaimonia) is the highest aim of moral thought and conduct, and the
virtues (aretê: 'excellence') are the requisite skills and dispositions needed
to attain it.
Eudaimonia, also spelled eudaemonia, in Aristotelian ethics, the condition
of human flourishing or of living well
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Plato’s Form of Good
The ultimate foundation of Plato’s metaphysics—his view of reality—is his
theory of Forms, culminating in the Form of the Good. Few, says Plato,
really understand the nature of the Good itself
The Form of the Good sits atop Plato’s hierarchy of being as the ultimate
Form
The Forms themselves are abstract, although they do inform the concrete
world, and Plato frequently relies on metaphor to describe them
To understand the Good itself, Plato relies on an analogy with the sun
Plato’s central concern is that the world of material objects is shifting,
deceptive, and unreliable
The Form of the Good, Plato says, is to the intelligible realm as the sun is
to the visible realm
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Plato’s Form of Good
It resembles a divine logos, or divine rationality, which became an object of
worship for successive schools of philosophy that developed under the
influence of Plato’s ideas
Nowadays, we might compare the Form of the Good to laws of nature,
though this is not fully satisfying, since the Form of the Good is not particular
law of nature, but the reason why there are laws at all
Consider Plato’s influence on theology: The Form of the Good is the ground
of all being, an immaterial object that exists more perfectly than anything
else, a thing responsible for the goodness and rationality in the world
This is something like an interpretation of the Christian view of God
developed in the Middle Ages, founded in Platonic and Neo-Platonic
metaphysics.
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Plato’s Form of Good
Consider the subject of mathematics and geometry
What is a point? It is a location in space with no dimension
In other words, it is not a real object. Points are ideal entities, not space-time
particulars
They take up no space. Likewise, lines have length but no breadth
Mathematics is about ideal entities, and some mathematicians today are still
“Platonists” about numbers: they hold the view that numbers or other
mathematical objects are immaterial things. And they have to be in order for
us to be able to know eternal truths about them.
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Areas of Inductive Research Deductive Research
Difference
Purpose Is concerned with generation of new theory Is aimed to testing theory
demerging from the data
Start-End Starts with observation and end result is theory It starts with the proposition of hypothesis and the
end result of the research is confirmation/rejection
Hypothesis No Hypothesis Specific hypothesis and bound to follow
Structure It is less structured as there is no guiding factor It is highly structured because there is some
specific aim to be accomplished
Sample Small number of sample are analyzed with Large numbers of samples are analyzed with less
greater gravity depth
Direction Inductive research is bottom –up approach Deductive research is top-down approach
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Method
Theological:
Combination of Inductive & Deductive method (deduces all his political
philosophy from certain fundamental assumptions)
Three basic doctrines:
Virtue is knowledge:
Terms are identical, no virtue or excellence without knowledge, influenced
the entire personality through intellect
Idea is Real :
What is real is “the idea of thing:
Is the perfect, permanent, immutable, self-existent entity which underlines
the changing, imperfect and outwardly object of perfection” not “the things
itself”… BEAUTY COULD EXIST WITHOUT A BEAUTIFUL THING
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Method…..
Theory of Knowledge :
Two kinds of knowledge :
Opinion or belief:
Changeable & shakable from its foundations
Real knowledge:
Permanent, scientific, mathematically true & based on reason
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Method…..
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Summary of Plato’s Philosophy
Human Soul/Society consists of :
Reason
Spirit
Appetite
Rule over spirit and appetite by Reason is defined as Justice
Justice is a Virtue
Virtue is the requisite skill to attain happiness or well being
Form of Good (divine laws)provides the details of Virtue
Learning those details require education
Education is the base for all the holders of the state’s functional institutions
State’s Functional Institutions are ruled by Philosopher king
And that state is called the ideal state
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Republic
Handles the Core issue of Discovery of the nature and Habitation of Justice
Adopts Negative Approach :
What Justice is not
Rejection of “Prima Facie” theories of Justice
Traditional Theory :
Caphalus :-‘Justice lies in speaking the truth & paying your debts’
Polymarchus:- ‘Giving everyman what is due to him’. “Justice lies in doing
good to one’s friends and harm to one’s enemy”
Plato Refutes it on following grounds :
Friend in appearance
Inconsistent to morality
Ignores the social whole or society
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Republic….
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Republic….
Principles :
Non- interference
Functional Specialization
Harmony
Types :
Social
Individual
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Background
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Prevailing theories of Justice …….
According to Cephalus 'justice consists in speaking the truth and paying
one's debt. Thus Cephalus identifies justice with right conduct
Polemarchus also holds the same view of justice but with a little
alteration. According to him "justice seems to consist in giving what is
proper to him“
The simple implication of this conception of justice may be that "justice is
doing good to friends and harm to enemies." This is also a traditional
maxim of Greek morality.
Thrasymachus defined justice as "the interest of the stronger". In the
other words, might is right.
Plato prove that justice does not depend upon a chance, convention or
upon external force. It is the right condition of the human soul by the very
nature of man when seen in the fullness of his environment.
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Idea of Justice ……
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Idea of Justice ……
Plato contended that justice is the quality of soul, in virtue of which men
set aside the irrational desire to taste every pleasure and to get a selfish
satisfaction out of every object and accommodated themselves to the
discharge of a single function for the general benefit
In additional, Sophistic teaching of the ethics of self-satisfaction resulted
in the excessive individualism also induced the citizens to capture the
office of the State for their own selfish purpose and eventually divided
"Athens in to two hostile camps of rich and poor, oppressor and
oppressed
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Principles/Method of Defining Justice
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Justice within Individual
Human organism according to Plato contains three elements:
Reason, Spirit and Appetite
An individual is just when each part of his or her soul performs its
functions without interfering with those of other elements
For example, the reason should rule on behalf of the entire soul with
wisdom and forethought
The element of spirit will sub-ordinate itself to the rule of reason
Those two elements are brought into harmony by combination of
mental and bodily training
They are set in command over the appetites which form the greater
part of man's soul
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Justice within Individual….
Therefore, the reason and spirit have to control these appetites which are
likely to grow on the bodily pleasures
These appetites should not be allowed, to enslave the other elements and
usurp the dominion to which they have no right
When all the three agree that among them the reason alone should rule,
there is justice within the individual
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Social Justice
Corresponding to these three elements in human nature there are three
classes in the social organism :
Philosopher class or the ruling class which is the representative of reason
A class of warriors and defenders of the country is the representative of
spirit; and
The appetite instinct of the community which consists of farmers,
artisans and are the lowest rung of the ladder
Thus, weaving a web between the human organism and the social organism,
Plato asserts that functional specialization demands from every social class
to specialize itself in the station of life allotted to it
Justice, therefore to Plato is like a manuscript which exists in two copies,
and one of these is larger than the other
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Social Justice…..
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True Justice /State Justice
True justice to Plato, therefore, consists in the principle of non-interference
The State has been considered by Plato as a perfect whole in which each
individual which is its element, functions not for itself but for the health of
the whole
Every element fulfils its appropriate function
Justice in the platonic state would, therefore, be like that harmony of
relationship where the Planets are held together in the orderly movement
Plato was convinced that a society which is so organized is fit for survival
Where man are out of their natural places, there , the co-ordination of parts
is destroyed, the society disintegrates and dissolves
Justice, therefore, is the citizen sense of duties
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Criticism on Plato’s concept of Justice
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Plato on Education
Plato regards education as a means to achieve justice, both individual
justice and social justice. ... In this sense, justice means excellence
For the Greeks and Plato, excellence is virtue. According to Socrates, virtue
is knowledge
According to Plato, individual justice can be obtained when each individual
develops his or her ability to the fullest
Education for All ; Plato want every boy and girl educated optimally
Education should be provided by the state not by parents
The total development of a man, mind body and soul by using every
possible mean
To develop leader among the future rulers
To develop hard and competent workers.
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Plato on Education…..
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Plato on Education….
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Plato on Woman Education….
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Plato on women Education….
Plato believed that women are equal to men and that, although some
women are physically smaller or weak, some women are physically equal
to men therefore those women who are physically strong should be
allowed to learn the same skills that men do
In his book Republic Plato describes how male and female receive the
same education and be given the same duties in society as given to the
male member
These people are the ones who will be in charge of his republic which
would be an ideal society, where philosophers are kings
In other words, who knows what is good for the people and for the
mankind and take their decisions based on that knowledge
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Plato recommended play method at elementary level; student should
learn by doing
And when he reached the higher level of education, his reason would be
trained in the processes of thinking and abstracting
Plato wants motivation and interest in learning
He is against the use of force in education. "Knowledge which is acquired
under compulsion obtains no hold on the mind.“
Strict Censorship on literature
Compulsory state controlled education system
Education for mental and physical development
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Criticism on educational system of Plato
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Theory of Communism
A corollary (logical outcome ) of his conception of justice
He believed that without communism there would be clash of ideas and
interests between reason and appetite
Plato’s communism is based on the premise that property, family instincts
and private interests would distract man’s attention from his obligations to
the community
Family and property are always impediments not only to philosopher king,
but also to a commoner in his discharge of duties
As property and family relationships seemed to be the main source of
dissension in the society, Plato stated that neither of them must be given any
recognition in an ideal state
A sort of communism of family and property was essential to offset the
consequences of Plato’s design of ideal state
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Communism of Property
Plato attempted to create a new social order wherein the ruling class
surrendered both family and private property and embraced a system of
communism
This practice of communism is only meant for the ruling class and the
guardian class
Plato did not bind this principle on the third class, namely, the artisans
In other words, they were allowed to maintain property and family, but
were under strict supervision so that they do not become either too rich or
too poor
Though Plato structured the society in this manner, he never made any
attempt to work out his plan that ensured such a system to function
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Communism of Property…..
The land and its products were in the hands of the farmers
So, only the guardians were deprived of property. Plato deprived them
of all valuables such as gold and silver, and were told that the diviner
metal is within them, and therefore there is no need for any ornaments
as it might pollute the divine thoughts
The guardians were paid salaries just right enough for their
maintenance
They were expected to dine at common tables and live in common
barracks, which were always open
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Communism of Property…..
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Communism of Family
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Criticism
Useless
Opposed the fundamental nature of man
Difference in nature of male and female
Relation of husband and wife
Relation of mother with children
impractical
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Philosopher King
Concept is based upon the Tripartite Division of Human Kind
Tripartite Division of Human Kind :
Reason
Spirit
Appetite
Corresponding Division of Society
The Rulers
The Soldiers
The Farmers
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Process of Making Philosopher King
Multi stage Educational System
35 years
Up to 50 years
After 50, retire and study
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Criticism of the Ideal state
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Comparison Between Plato and Aristotle
Plato believed that man could achieve absolute truth only by
consideration of the eternal forms, not through observations and
experiences. Aristotle instead shifted away from this view and
instead used observations and experiences to pursue his goal of
achieving knowledge
Plato’s philosophy is abstract and utopian, whereas Aristotle’s is
empirical, practical, and commonsensical
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Comparison Between Plato and Aristotle
For Plato, the Forms are perfect exemplars, or ideal types, of the properties
and kinds that are found in the world
Corresponding to every such property or kind is a Form that is its perfect
exemplar or ideal type
Forms are abstract /translucent/ reveled objects, existing completely outside
space and time
Thus they are knowable only through the mind, not through sense
experience. The task of philosophy, for Plato, is to discover through reason
(“dialectic”) the nature of the Forms, the only true reality, and their
interrelations, culminating in an understanding of the most fundamental
Form
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Comparison Between Plato and Aristotle
Aristotle rejected Plato’s theory of Forms but not the notion of
form itself
For Aristotle, forms do not exist independently of things—every
form is the form of some thing
A “substantial” form is a kind that is attributed to a thing, without
which that thing would be of a different kind or would cease to
exist altogether
Aristotle refuted Plato’s definition, believing it to be unclear and
illogical in claiming that a chair can be understood to be a chair due
to its relationship with a form existing outside of time and space
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Plato is often criticised for being too elitist in his views, as he requires a
great amount of time devoted to asceticism in order to learn. He also sees
the mass public as ignorant and incapable, or at least unwilling to accept the
truth of a reality beyond our own
Aristotle, though, is much more grounded and includes everybody when it
comes to their ability to learn
Plato, a political philosopher, was in the pursuit of philosophical truth .
Aristotle was concerned with the citizen and the design of political
institutions
Plato – “A priory knowledge is equal to prenatal knowledge”’ Aristotle – “A
priory knowledge is not prenatal, but can be gained by induction based on
abstraction”
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Plato – “The object of our intellectual concepts (i.e. the things we directly
conceive by means of our intellectual concepts ) are the perfect forms.”
Aristotle – “The object of our intellectual concepts are the nature’s
(essences, quiddities ) of material things (on the soul); These objects can
not be the perfect forms of Plato, for such perfect forms can not exist.”
In Philosophy ;Plato believed that concepts had a universal form, an ideal
form, which leads to his idealistic philosophy
Aristotle believed that universal forms were not necessarily attached to
each object or concept
In Ethics ; Plato believed that wisdom is the basic virtue and with it, one
can unify all virtues into a whole. Aristotle believed that wisdom was
virtuous, but that achieving virtue was neither automatic nor did it grant
any unification of other virtues
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In Science , Plato did write about Mathematics, Geometry, and Physics,
but his work was more exploratory in concept than actually applicable.
Aristotle, among a few others is considered to be one of the first true
scientists. He contributed new concepts in Math, Physics, and Geometry
Plato believed that concepts had a universal form, an ideal form, which
leads to his idealistic philosophy
Aristotle believed that universal forms were not necessarily attached to
each object or concept, and that each instance of an object or a concept
had to be analyzed on its own
In logic, Plato was more inclined to use inductive reasoning, whereas
Aristotle used deductive reasoning. The syllogism, a basic unit of logic (if
A = B, and B = C, then A = C), was developed by Aristotle
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Both Aristotle and Plato believed thoughts were superior to the senses.
However, whereas Plato believed the senses could fool a person, Aristotle
stated that the senses were needed in order to properly determine reality
An example of this difference is the allegory of the cave, created by Plato. To
him, the world was like a cave, and a person would only see shadows cast
from the outside light, so the only reality would be thoughts
To the Aristotelian method, the obvious solution is to walk out of the cave
and experience what is casting light and shadows directly, rather than relying
solely on indirect or internal experiences
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Plato was Socratic in his belief that knowledge is virtue, in and of itself. This
means that to know the good is to do the good, i.e., that knowing the right
thing to do will lead to one automatically doing the right thing; this implied
that virtue could be taught by teaching someone right from wrong, good
from evil
Plato could not develop institutions and the frame work
Aristotle stated that knowing what was right was not enough, that one had
to choose to act in the proper manner—in essence, to create the habit of
doing good. This definition placed Aristotelian ethics on a practical plane,
rather than the theoretical one espoused by Socrates and Plato
Aristotle was the first philosopher who emphasized and invented the
concept of institutions in a sate
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Plato’s Views on Democracy
In the Republic he criticizes the direct and unchecked democracy
of his time precisely because of its leading features
Firstly, although freedom is for Plato a true value, democracy
involves the danger of excessive freedom, of doing as one likes,
which leads to anarchy
Secondly, equality, related to the belief that everyone has the
right and equal capacity to rule, brings to politics all kinds of
power-seeking individuals, motivated by personal gain rather
than public good
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Plato’s Views on Democracy…….
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Plato’s Contributions Political Philosophy
Plato developed such distinct areas of philosophy as epistemology,
metaphysics, ethics, and aesthetics
His deep influence on Western philosophy is asserted in the famous
remark of Alfred North Whitehead: “the safest characterization of the
European philosophical tradition is that it consists of a series of
footnotes to Plato.”
His greatest impact was Aristotle, but he influenced Western political
thought in many ways
The Academy, the school he founded in 385 B.C.E., became the model
for other schools of higher learning and later for European universities
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Plato’s Contributions Political Philosophy……
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Plato on Characteristics of a Leader/Ruler …….
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Plato on Characteristics of a Leader/Ruler…..
An ideal state, Plato says, “can never grow into a reality” until “philosophers
become rulers in this world, or until those we now call kings and rulers really
and truly become philosophers, and political power and philosophy thus
come into the same hands
Only philosophers are morally and intellectually suited to govern and lead
Morally because they are interested in and have a passion for truth and
learning, while showing no interest in the temptations of gaining power
for the sake of power
Intellectually because they are able to attain knowledge on the ideal
forms of virtue, beauty, and the good
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Plato on Characteristics of a Leader/Ruler…
Philosophers as leaders
Virtue and the good are key to Plato’s view on leadership as an art of ruling.
Leaders can attain four cardinal virtues:
Prudence (as wisdom)
Justice (as fairness)
Temperance (as moderation/restraint)
Courage (as fortitude/resilience)
The “good” refers to the ultimate goal of attaining knowledge
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Plato on Characteristics of a Leader/Ruler….
First of all, by relaxing his notion that only philosopher kings ought to rule,
we can agree that leaders, then and today, must be committed to wisdom
and truth-seeking
Leaders are individuals who work hard to get to the proverbial bottom of
things: they seek evidence and facts to inform their actions and to inform
the actions of those around them
Second, leaders are also individuals who value justice in their interactions
with others
Third, effective leaders are also temperamentally moderate in their
approach and show restraint in their actions
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Plato on Characteristics of a Leader/Ruler….
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