HUM Chapter 31
HUM Chapter 31
HUM Chapter 31
PHILOSOPHICAL CONTIBUTIONS
Experience is that marvelous thing that enables you to recognize a mistake when
you can make it again.
- F.B Jones
Introduction
Great men leave behind them legacy to remember them after their lives on
earth. Historians give us the story of man’s exploits, struggles, failures and successes.
Writers invite us to find delight in things, places or people, with their stories of pleasant
or unpleasant experiences which may be true or simply imaginative in nature.
Scientists contribute amazing discoveries and inventions. Philosophical thinkers share
their thoughts which are precious contributions to shape man’s mind in pursuit for
deeper meaning.
With political philosophy believed to have properly begun with Greece this
chapter starts with famous philosophers of the early times. There were three renowned
figures that pioneered and introduced many ideas.
I. EARLY PERIOD
Describe as a prophetic mentor of his time, his influence in his students was
really great and significant. He was the main character in most of Plato’s Dialouge in
Apology, Crito and Phoedo. This were mainly about the dialogue and final speeches
during his trial and death his Socratic method is a style of teaching which involves
active discussion between the teacher and his pupil. Another name to this method is
dialectic which is the opposite of rhetoric. The former simply means the development
of the art of arguments by the question and answer type while the latter is through
persuasion to arrive at the truth.
The father of this man was a sculptor and his mother was a midwife. His favorite venue
for discussion was the market place where he spent time discussing and exchanging
ideas with the people particularly the young men of that time. As a result of this activity
he was wrongly accused of being a bad influence to the youth. Such act of discussion
was thought to be corrupting the minors. He was arrested, convicted, and finally
sentence to death. Another offense was his refusal to pay worship to the gods of state.
A Greek philosopher whose philosophical theory, had pioneered the transition from
the materialist naturalism to idealism. He live and was edified by many of his students
in Athens including Plato, Antisthenes, and Aristippus. Socrates wrote nothing and
most of his philosophical doctrine was transmitted through Plato’s and Aristotle’s
writings. The anatonomical structure of the world and physical nature of things are
transcendental, beyond human knowledge, what we can know only is ourselves. The
comprehension and the goal of his hypothesis were fully exclaimed by Socrates in the
formula: “know thyselve”.
Plato was a Greek philosopher, and one of the disciples of Socrates. He is the
author of ore than 30 philosophical dialogues. (Sophistes, Parmenides, Theatietus ,
Republic and others. And the founder of objective idealism. Plato was so active
defending the idealistic world outlook against the teachings of Materialism during his
time.
Authentic knowledge is possible only with true existent “forms”. The source of
all knowledge is the immortal human soul’s reminiscences of the world of ideas,
contemplated before its incarnation of the mortal body. We cannot have knowledge of
sensible things and phenomena, but only probable “opinion” between “ideas” and
sensible things, Plato placed the mathematical objects accessible to rational
knowledge. The method of cognition is “dialectics”, which he understood as a two way
process: ascending by degrees of generalizing concepts up to the highest kinds and
descending again from the most general concepts to those of lesser and lesser
generalization.
ARISTOTLE (384-322 B.C)
Known as the greatest thinker of all time , an ancient Greek philosopher. At the
age of 17 he went to Athens to study. He enrolled at the famous Academy directed by
philosopher Plato. He was a pupil of Plato who wrote about logic, ethics and
metaphysics. Plato call him “mind of the school”. He stayed there for 20 years. 2 yrs
of studying Marine biology in Lebos. He returned to Macedonian and became the
mentor of the greatest world conqueror, Alexander the Great.
1. the theoretical aspect as dealing with being, its components, causes, and origin,
2. the poetic as dealing with creativity
Aristotle was not only known as a philosopher but also a scientist, as astronomer
and a political theorist.
Aristotle considered all things, all nature as sequential conversion from “matter”
to “form” and vice-versa. In matter, nevertheless, Aristotle construed only the inactive
principle and ascribed all actions to constitute, to which he reduced the beginning of
motion and its aim. The ultimate source of all motion is God. Nonetheless, Aristotle’s
objective idealist theory of “form” is, in many respects, more objective than the idealism
of Plato, hence Aristotle comes very close to materialism.
And in Metaphysics which originally refers to the book written by him after his book
on Physics. Meta=after physics=book of physical things. But nowadays term denotes
more than its original, it has to do with matters that go beyond (meta). Where in
Metaphysics he states that it is a branch of science which investigates being as being
and attributes which belong to this virtue of its own nature.
THE EARLY MEDIEVAL PERIOD
“Better to have loved and lost, than to have never loved at all…”
The famous Catholic theologian and philosopher came from a prominent family.
His father was a government official and his mother was a pious woman who was later
canonized as the Church’s saint for the godly life.
Augustine have a very good education but grew up to be a very worldly man.
believed to a sinner he became a devout Catholic through the relentless effort of his
mother. He became a priest and was later named as Bishop of Hippo. His worldly
outlook had a well-defined fideist character based on the principle “Where there is no
faith there is no knowledge, no truth.” His views constituted one of the sources of
scholasticism. In his De Civitate Dei Augistine developed the Christian conception of
the world history comprehended fatalistically, as pre-ordained by God. He
counterposed his “City of God”, the universal rule of the church, to Cavitas terrena, the
City of Earth, the “sinful” secular state. This doctrine played an important part in the
struggle of the Papacy against the feudal lords. His contentions helped to shape the
western thoughts on the Catholic faith:
St. Augustine Contributions:
He was an Italian theologian ang philosopher. He was also a priest who became the
Archbishop of Canterbury. He, too, avhieved sainthood. Like St. Augustine his
influence is significant in the study of western thoughts. He believed, that God exist by
priori argument. God exist in reality and in the understanding of men but not physically
(Double, 1999:264).
To him natural theology and science have no connection. God's existence is not to
discover God's existence by reason but just to use reason to understand what one
believes in (Stumpf, 1999:153). Human mind is too limited to contain God's profundity.
It is sufficient to accept there is God.
Ansel maintained that faith must precede reason, one must believe in order to
understand, faith, however, can be based on reason. For Christian dogmas were
indisputable truth, he, however, held that they should be rationally understood, so as
to stengthen the believer's faith. In this way his rationalism was subordinated to
fideism.
His contributions :
He was known as the Angelic Doctor who belonged to the thirteen century, the
supposed Golden Age of the Catholic Church. He received education at nearby abbey
of Monte Cassino and attended University of Naples at 16 years old. This angelic
theologian was an Italian by nationality and from the order of the Preachers. Albert
Magnus was the one who introduced Thomas to the works of Aristotle, so he set
himself the task of harmonizing Aristotle’s teaching with Christian Doctrine. He wrote
the “Summa Theologica”, his great work which remained unfinished due to his death.
Together with St. Augustine of Hippo and St. Anselm of Canterbury he believed and
supported their contention that the greatest of all devotions is the devotion to God.
Like St. Augustine, he was also named as one of the Doctors of the Church.
The idea of the Unmoved Mover introduced by Aristotle 1,600 years ago was
supported by St. Thomas Aquinas. He argued that the motion we have today is
traceable to an initial motion originator, who is none other than the Supreme God.
(Double 1995:251)
Further, St. Thomas claims that the law is directed to the common good. Beside human
made laws must be in harmony. (Barcalow, 1992: 386)
THE LATE MEDIEVAL PERIOD
He was born in Florence during the period of great awakening, the Renaissance.
There was the rebirth of the human spirit of which political criteria had such
tremendous influnce. A political adviser, he was exiled when the Republic fell
His work, the 'Prince' exposed the ruthless strategy to obtain, maintain, sustain and
extend power. It was a straightforward approach of a leader to manipulate people to
get them to work and support him in power. Some of his recommended principles are
:
- Never show humility, arrogance is more effective. A leader according to this principle
does not and must not admit mistake when he commits one but has to still keep his
firm stand of defiance to hold the people to his power. To admit one's fault is a
character of the weak.
- Morality and ethics are for the weak. Powerful people feel free to lie, cheat and
deceive to serve their purpose. One in power is licensed to tell lies, to hide the truth,
to keep on cheating his followers to preserve harmony which is his purpose.
- It is better to be feared than to be loved. (Grienberg, 1995: 106) A leader has to rule
with an iron fist. His mere presence commands respect and blind submissiveness from
his subjects.
To him principles of religion make man feeble and an easy prey for evil minded people.
(Curtis, 1981:227)
RENE DESCARTES (1536-1650)
Descartes Contributions:
René Descartes is often credited with being the “Father of Modern Philosophy.” This
title is justified due both to his break with the traditional Scholastic-Aristotelian
philosophy prevalent at his time and to his development and promotion of the new,
mechanistic sciences. His fundamental break with Scholastic philosophy was twofold.
First, Descartes thought that the Scholastics’ method was prone to doubt given their
reliance on sensation as the source for all knowledge. Second, he wanted to replace
their final causal model of scientificexplanation with the more modern, mechanistic
model.
In the Second Meditation, Descartes tries to establish absolute certainty in his
famous reasoning: Cogito, ergo sum or “I think, therefore I am.” These Meditations are
conducted from the first person perspective, from Descartes.’ However, he expects
his reader to meditate along with him to see how his conclusions were reached. This
is especially important in the Second Meditation where the intuitively grasped truth of
“I exist” occurs. So the discussion here of this truth will take place from the first person
or “I” perspective. All sensory beliefs had been found doubtful in the previous
meditation, and therefore all such beliefs are now considered false. This includes the
belief that I have a body endowed with sense organs. But does the supposed
falsehood of this belief mean that I do not exist? No, for if I convinced myself that my
beliefs are false, then surely there must be an “I” that was convinced. Moreover, even
if I am being deceived by an evil demon, I must exist in order to be deceived at all. So
“I must finally conclude that the proposition, ‘I am,’ ‘I exist,’ is necessarily true
whenever it is put forward by me or conceived in my mind”. This just means that the
mere fact that I am thinking, regardless of whether or not what I am thinking is true or
false, implies that there must be something engaged in that activity, namely an “I.”
Hence, “I exist” is an indubitable and, therefore, absolutely certain belief that serves
as an axiom from which other, absolutely certain truths can be deduced.
Further, he pointed out clearly that acting from duty is distinct from acting out of
duty. The first explains that performing a task has to be done for it is one’s duty to do
so. The second tells that out of dedication, commitment or motive one responds to a
task. (Gripaldo, 2000:28)
1. His ‘Deontological Theory’ says that moral obligation lies in recognizing the
rights and importance of the individual.
2. His ‘Principle of Ends’ maintains the humanity should be treated as an end and
never as a means.
A German philosopher and scientist, he was the founder of the classical German
idealism and founder of “critical” or “transcendental” idealism. In the “pre-critical”
period (prior to 1770). Kant formulated hid cosmogonic hypothesis, according to which
the planetary system arose and developed out of a prime “nebula”. At the same time
Kant advanced the hypothesis about the existence of a Great Universe of galaxies
outside our Galaxy, developed the theories of the retardation of the Earth’s rotation by
tidal friction and the relativity of motion and rest.
“Productivity of maximum good is not what makes all right actions right…”
Why does Ross think that producing maximum intrinsic goodness is not always
what makes actions right?
Common sense also tells us in some situations that we have more than one
duty and that one duty (e.g., relieving distress) may be “more of a duty” than
another duty (e.g., fulfilling a promise).
Ina situation in which two alternative actions producing equal net amounts of
intrinsic goodness differ only in that one would fulfil a promise and the other
would not; one’s moral obligation would be to perform the action that would fulfil
the promise.
Many believe that Ross's work in this area is his most valuable contribution to
philosophy. However, his main writings in moral philosophy are of lasting if not equal
value. His The Right and the Good is arguably one of the most important works of
moral philosophy published in the twentieth century. Although Ross's view appeared
to suffer at the hands of critics in the middle and late parts of the last century, recent
interest in normative and meta-ethical intuitionism has sparked a renewed respect for
and admiration of his unique contribution to ethics, which is the focus of this entry.
Jean Paul Sartre (1905-1980)
“Man is not a sum of what he has already, but rather the sum of what he does
not yet have, of what he could have”
He was an influential philosopher and political thinker. He, too, was an anti-
authoritarian believer. For him, science should proceed from trying by disconfirming
its hypothese than by trying to confirm them.
- "Those who promise us paradise on earth never produce anything but a hell."
- Our knowledge can only be finite, while our ignorance must necessarily be infinite.
- "We must plan for freedom, and not only for security, if for no other reason than that
only freedom can make security secure."
CONCLUSION
This chapter deals with philosophical thinkers who came in different times. A group
composed of Socrates, Aristotle and Plato belong to the early period. St. Augustine,
St. Anselm and St. Thomas Aquinas composed the Early Medieval Period while
Machiavelli, Descartes and Kant belonged to the Late Medieval Age. Ross, Sartre and
Popper belong to the contemporary time. Each in his own way contributed in shaping
the thoughts of mankind in his own time.
CLASS DISCUSSION
REFLECTION
As a rational animan, what are your qualities that believe will contribute much to make
this world a better place to live in.