The Hypothetical Method in Plato's Middle Dialogues
Dissertation, University of Oxford (United Kingdom) (
1987)
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Abstract
Available from UMI in association with The British Library. Requires signed TDF. ;The purpose of this dissertation is to offer an interpretation of Plato's hypothetical method in his middle dialogues. The hypothetical method is given in three accounts, one in the Meno, the Phaedo and the Republic. ;These three accounts of the method, besides their affinities, seem to present some differences. The first main problem is to see whether we can speak of one single method, or of three different hypothetical methods. Plato, in the Meno says that his method is similar to one which the geometers use and gives as an elucidation of it, an obscure geometrical problem to which I offer a new solution. The second main problem of this dissertation is to examine whether there is any relation between Plato's accounts of the hypothetical method and the various methodologies in Greek geometry at that time. ;I show one method that employs hypotheses and proceeds in two ways: firstly, a way upwards towards the premises of the argument or towards prior questions and, secondly, a way downwards from the premises to the desired conclusion. The upward way is a heuristic process, whilst the downward one is deductive. Although we have essentially one method in all three dialogues, it is somewhat differentiated from one dialogue to the next . In the three accounts of the hypothetical method, I see three stages of an evolutionary process similar to a corresponding one which took place in the evolution of the method of indirect proof in geometry. More precisely, I argue that the three accounts of Plato's method reflect three corresponding stages in the evolution of the reductive method of Hippocrates of Chios to the geometrical method of analysis and synthesis. ;I argue furthermore, as regards the relation between Plato's philosophy and mathematics, that the axiomatization of geometry had an impact on Plato's conception of knowledge and upon his conception of dialectic. We have good reasons to suppose that, Plato proposed a programme of reducing the principles of mathematics into the fewest possible and his contribution to this programme was decisive