5,172 views
Dmitry Bugay and Andrey Nechayev talk about ancient epistemology and the evolution of ancient Greek views on knowledge. We discuss the views on knowledge held by Plato and his many predecessors. We explore the rich vocabulary of epistemic terms of the ancient Greeks, which includes myth, logos, history, episteme, sophia, and other concepts. We find out how rational thought arose in Ionia, why it was intertwined with irrational views on knowledge, and what influence the emergence of mathematical knowledge had on philosophy. Support: https://boosty.to/insolarance Participants: Dmitry Bugay, Andrey Nechayev, Alexey Kardash. Insolarance: Website: https://insolarance.com/ Telegram: https://t.me/insolarance VK: https://vk.com/insolarance_cult Alexey: https://t.me/here_was_dragons Patreon: / insolarance Renovatio: https://t.me/renovatio_conf Timestamps: 0:00 The problem of knowledge in Greek culture. The relativity of antiquity and modernity 6:21 The attitude of contemporaries to Plato 7:20 Poetry, divine and human knowledge in Homer and in Greek archaism 13:22 Did the Greeks have no terminology? Sofia 18:55 Episteme, gnome and history 20:25 The absence of a value difference between logos and myth 21:20 On the emergence of rational thought in Ionia 27:46 Problems of historical and philosophical classification and the struggle of opposing views on knowledge 30:40 The emergence of logos, rhetoric and Heidegger's understanding of logos 41:06 Pythagoreans and the emergence of mathematical knowledge 47:48 Pythagoreans - a sect of numerologists or the beginning of rational knowledge? 54:35 Plato - innovation or inheritance? 1:02:54 On Plato's epistemological dialogues 1:11:17 Why was the theory of knowledge not separated from other areas of philosophy in Antiquity? 1:16:39 Knowledge of the Physical World in Plato and the Meno 1:22:32 Reductivity, Perspective Theory, and Mathematical Knowledge in Plato 1:28:25 Did Plato Consider Knowledge to be True and Justified Belief? Why Does Philosophy Remain Platonistic?