Socrates Plato Aristotle | World History | Khan Academy

00:10:57
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pJQr77Vzwyk

Summary

TLDRThe video explores the significant contributions of Ancient Greece, focusing on its most renowned philosophers: Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle. Despite Greece's fragmented political structure, it greatly influenced governance, medicine, the arts, mathematics, and philosophy. Socrates, noted for his Socratic method, emphasized intellectual humility and rational thinking over metaphysical explanations. He was skeptical of pure democracy due to potential exploitation by demagogues and ultimately faced death for his unorthodox views. Plato, Socrates' student, founded the Academy and introduced the concept of ideal forms, advocating for philosopher-kings as rulers. His student, Aristotle, tutored Alexander the Great and continued to promote rational inquiry, exemplified by his Lyceum. The philosophical lineage from Socrates to Plato to Aristotle significantly seeded the rational thought that would later rejuvenate during the European Renaissance and Enlightenment, shaping modern intellectual traditions.

Takeaways

  • 🏛️ Ancient Greece made profound contributions to civilization, especially in philosophy.
  • 🔮 Socrates is known for the Socratic method, promoting a form of intellectual humility.
  • 🗳️ Socrates was skeptical of direct democracy, fearing manipulation by demagogues.
  • ⚖️ Socrates' trial and death highlight tensions with unorthodox views in Athens.
  • 📚 Plato founded the Academy, influencing educational concepts of today.
  • 🌌 Plato's theory of ideal forms addressed abstract knowledge beyond sensory experiences.
  • 👑 Plato advocated for philosopher-kings to ensure wise governance.
  • ✏️ Aristotle, Plato's student, expanded on rational thought, influencing various fields.
  • 🤴 Aristotle's tutoring of Alexander the Great connected Greek philosophy with future conquests.
  • 🌄 The ideas of these philosophers fueled later movements like the Renaissance and Enlightenment.

Timeline

  • 00:00:00 - 00:05:00

    Ancient Greece consisted of multiple city-states, mainly led by Athens and Sparta, and despite not being a unified empire, made significant contributions to civilization, particularly in governance, medicine, arts, mathematics, science, and most notably, philosophy. The key philosophers were Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle. The 5th century BCE saw the rise of Athenian democracy and the Greco-Persian Wars. Post-war Athens saw a Golden Age marked by cultural prosperity and philosophical advancement, where figures like Socrates emerged. Socratic philosophy focused on questioning and rational thinking over divine explanation, highlighting intellectual humility and skepticism towards pure democracy.

  • 00:05:00 - 00:10:57

    Socrates faced trial and was ultimately sentenced to death, accused of corrupting the youth and impiety, though he might have opted for exile. His legacy endured through his student Plato, who expanded on Socratic thoughts and established the concept of the Platonic ideal and the Academy, which became models for future educational institutions. Plato's prominent student Aristotle tutored Alexander the Great and founded the Lyceum. These philosophers contributed to the ethos of modern rationality, influencing the Renaissance and Enlightenment, shaping contemporary understanding and governance.

Mind Map

Video Q&A

  • Who were the famous philosophers of Ancient Greece?

    The most famous philosophers of Ancient Greece were Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle.

  • What was the Socratic method?

    The Socratic method is a teaching style that involves asking incisive questions to deepen understanding and encourage critical thinking.

  • What was Socrates known for?

    Socrates was known for his philosophy, his method of inquiry known as the Socratic method, and his emphasis on rational thought over metaphysical explanations.

  • What is Plato's Academy?

    Plato's Academy was a place of learning founded by Plato outside Athens, named after the Athenian hero Akademos.

  • What did Aristotle contribute to philosophy?

    Aristotle was famous for tutoring Alexander the Great and establishing the Lyceum, contributing significantly to various fields including philosophy, science, and metaphysics.

  • What concerns did Socrates have about democracy?

    Socrates was skeptical of pure democracy, worrying that uneducated voters could be manipulated by demagogues.

  • How did Socrates die?

    Socrates was sentenced to death by drinking hemlock following a trial where he was accused of corrupting the youth and not recognizing state gods.

  • Why is Plato's idea of ideal forms important?

    Plato's theory of ideal forms suggests that non-material abstract forms, rather than the material world, possess the highest and most fundamental kind of reality.

  • How did Aristotle influence Alexander the Great?

    Aristotle tutored Alexander the Great in his youth, imparting knowledge that influenced Alexander's future conquests and governance.

  • What is the lasting impact of these philosophers?

    Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle laid the groundwork for modern rational thought, influencing the European Renaissance and Enlightenment.

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  • 00:00:00
    - [Instructor] Ancient Greece was not even
  • 00:00:02
    a cohesive empire.
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    It was made up of many city states,
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    led by Athens and Sparta.
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    But, despite its fragmentation, it's made innumerable
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    contributions to, not just Western civilization,
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    but civilization as a whole.
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    And those are contributions in terms of
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    forms of governance, like democracy,
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    contributions in medicine, contributions in the arts,
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    in mathematics, in the sciences.
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    But perhaps their most famous contribution
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    is in terms of philosophy.
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    And if we're going to talk about philosophy
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    in ancient Greece, the most famous three philosophers
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    are Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle.
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    Now, before we get into the first of them,
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    and really the teacher of Plato,
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    who was then the teacher of Aristotle,
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    let's get a little bit of context on this time period.
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    So, as we enter into the fifth century BCE,
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    a couple of things are emerging.
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    First, you have a new Athenian democracy.
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    Then, as you get into that century, the Persians invade,
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    try to conquer Greece several times, but unsuccessfully.
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    But then, the Greeks start fighting amongst themselves,
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    led on one side by Athens, on the other side by Sparta,
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    and that's the Peloponnesian War, which ends with
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    Sparta being victorious, but all of the Greek city states
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    being weakened dramatically.
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    Now, between the end, especially the first part
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    of the Greco-Persian Wars, and the end of the
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    Peloponnesian War, it was actually a time of
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    Athenian prosperity.
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    They were leading this semi-empire,
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    they were investing in the arts,
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    and it's often called the Golden Age of Athens,
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    and that's the world in which Socrates emerged.
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    Like many philosophers, Socrates led a very
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    interesting life, and it's worth noting
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    what we know about him does not come directly
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    from his writing.
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    We don't have surviving accounts of his writing.
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    It comes mainly through the writing of his students,
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    Xenophon, and, most notably, Plato.
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    We also get some parody of Socrates from Aristophanes,
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    that Socrates himself did not appreciate much.
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    But what we know is that he started in life,
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    he was a stone mason,
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    he even acted as a soldier, a hoplite,
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    during the Peloponnesian War.
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    But he is, of course, most famous for being a philosopher
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    and for being a teacher.
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    And his teaching style, the Socratic method,
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    is still viewed as something of a best practice today.
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    Rather than lecturing students, to, instead,
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    ask incisive questions that force a student to deepen
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    their thinking and get closer to the root of an issue,
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    and to learn how to think rather than just having
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    knowledge transmitted to them.
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    Now, what's also notable about Socrates
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    and his many students, including Plato and Aristotle,
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    is that they took a departure of how to think about
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    the world from most of the ancient world.
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    Most of the ancient world was focused on the gods
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    and the metaphysical explaining everything.
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    And, while the ancient Greeks did have a large pantheon
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    of gods, Socrates and his fellow philosophers
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    tried to figure out how the world works,
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    why we are here, somewhat independent of the gods.
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    They tried to reason it through,
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    they tried to talk it through, think about it
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    from a rational point of view.
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    And to get a flavor of that, here is a quote.
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    "True wisdom comes to each of us when we realize
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    "how little we understand about life, ourselves,
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    "and the world around us."
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    So, unlike many ancient societies that just tried to
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    explain everything through the metaphysical
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    or through the gods, here you have Socrates saying, no,
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    an ideal true wisdom
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    is when you appreciate how little we know,
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    this form of intellectual humility.
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    Now, Socrates lived during this Golden Age of Athens,
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    a time when democracy was flourishing, the Age of Pericles.
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    But he himself was a little bit skeptical
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    of unfettered or pure democracy.
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    He was worried, well, what if the people voting
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    aren't educated to make the types of decisions?
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    Maybe they can be manipulated by a demagogue,
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    someone who just tells 'em exactly what they want to hear.
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    And so he was a bit of a controversial figure,
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    especially as you get to the end of the Peloponnesian War.
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    Remember, Athens loses the Peloponnesian War.
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    It went from being this powerful head of this Delian League,
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    something of an empire, this wealthy city,
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    and now it's a subjugated state, it's tired from war.
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    And so you can imagine there's a lot of
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    political infighting, and Socrates ends up being
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    one of the casualties.
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    He is actually put on trial by his fellow Athenians.
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    This is a depiction of the trial of Socrates,
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    and it shows Socrates defending himself
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    from the accusations brought against him.
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    Refusing to recognize the gods acknowledged by the state,
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    importing strange divinities of his own,
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    corrupting the young.
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    And his defense, which both Xenophon and Plato write about,
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    called The Apology, he's bewildered, he says,
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    where is all of this coming from?
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    Now, it is true, he did not invoke the gods
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    when he's trying to explain the universe.
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    And, yes, he was trying to teach the young to think.
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    But by no means, if you look at what he was doing,
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    or at least our modern accounts coming through Plato
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    and Xenophon, does it seem like he was trying to
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    undermine the state in some way.
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    But, needless to say, it comes to a vote,
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    and maybe he's a victim of his own fears
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    of a pure democratic process,
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    but, amongst the 500 Athenians voting,
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    280 say that he is guilty,
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    and 220 say that he is not guilty.
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    He is given a chance to think about
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    what his penalty should be.
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    And the charges, at least in the Athenian's minds,
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    were quite serious.
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    But Socrates famously says,
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    "An unexamined life is not worth living."
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    And so, even though many historians think that
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    he might have been able to get exile if he asked for it,
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    he was sentenced to death.
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    And this is a painting done much, much later
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    of what that death of Socrates might have looked like.
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    But you see here Socrates about to, or maybe he just drank
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    the hemlock, which is the poison which will kill him.
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    So, even though he had to die for these pretty spurious
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    allegations, his legacy lives on,
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    and it lives on most famously in his student Plato.
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    Now, Plato is famous for many things.
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    There's this notion of a Platonic ideal form that,
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    whether you're talking about a circle,
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    or a ball, or a dog, or a chair,
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    that there's an ideal form that is independent
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    of what your senses are telling you,
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    or what the chair in front of you might be,
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    that that's an imperfect version of that ideal form.
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    The word Platonic, in general, you'll hear applied
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    to many different concepts, some of the meanings
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    having changed over time.
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    The other thing that Plato is famous for
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    is the notion of an academy.
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    The place where he taught his students
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    was a little field outside the walls of Athens,
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    named for the Athenian hero Akademos,
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    and so that area became known as Plato's Academy.
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    And ever since then, places of learning have often been
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    referred to as academies, just like Khan Academy.
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    But Plato was also concerned, like his teacher Socrates,
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    with the nature of how we should be ruled.
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    "There will be no end to the troubles of states,
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    "or indeed of humanity itself, till philosophers
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    "become rulers in this world, or till those
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    "we now call kings and rulers really and truly
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    "become philosophers, and political power and philosophy
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    "thus come into the same hands."
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    So, like Socrates, he's weary of how
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    they have been governed.
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    And, remember, we're now after the period
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    of the Peloponnesian War.
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    The city states of Greece, especially Athens,
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    have been dramatically weakened, so a lot of people
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    might be thinking, including Plato,
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    is there a better way to govern ourselves?
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    Now, Plato's most famous student is Aristotle.
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    And, like his teacher, Aristotle is famous for many things
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    and explored many dimensions of the universe.
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    But he is probably most famous for being the tutor
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    of Alexander the Great when Alexander the Great was young.
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    Phillip of Macedon, Alexander the Great's father,
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    as he conquers the weakened city states
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    after the Peloponnesian War,
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    he also conquers Aristotle's home town of Stagira,
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    and he enslaves the population.
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    And so, when he goes to Aristotle to tutor his young son,
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    who ends up being called Alexander the Great eventually,
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    Aristotle says, okay, my fee will be
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    free the people of my town.
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    His town is freed, he tutors a young Alexander,
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    when Alexander is in his early teens,
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    and he also gets support for a center of learning.
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    He creates a Lyceum, which is his version of
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    Plato's Academy.
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    And, just like you saw with Socrates and you see with Plato,
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    Aristotle continued this tradition of a focus on learning
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    and a humble acceptance of all that there might be
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    in the world, this rationality that we now see
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    in modern science, that you didn't see
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    from a lot of the ancients,
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    who were focused on the metaphysics and the gods.
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    "It is the mark of an educated mind
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    "to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it."
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    And I'll leave you there, but the big takeaway is,
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    going from Socrates, to Plato, to Aristotle,
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    and there were many other Greek philosophers,
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    you have the seed of what you could call modern rationality.
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    Roughly 2,000 years later, you have the European Renaissance
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    that starts reemerging many of these same ideas,
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    all the way providing a bridge into the Enlightenment,
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    and now our modern, hopefully fairly rational view
  • 00:10:53
    of the world.
Tags
  • Ancient Greece
  • Socrates
  • Plato
  • Aristotle
  • philosophy
  • Socratic method
  • Athenian democracy
  • Peloponnesian War
  • Plato's Academy
  • rational thought