Syllabus in Junior Philosophy…written By S. A. Hunter.

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Reason must rest at the foundation of the world.
Plurality of Ideas. Plato says that the ideas stand, not for the indi- vidual, but for the genus of things, and there are as many ideas as there are genera. The individual participates in the idea as much as he does in the nature of humanity. The individual is imperfect,— an inadequate expression of the idea, analagous to the ideal conception of the artist which is never equaled by his work.
His Cosmology. Plato assumes three elements; (a) ideas
...(i^a), (b) matter (t-Xi), which he conceives of as primary, just as the ideas, but not archetypal, unformed,— the stuff out of which everything is made, a primordial chaos, and (c) God ( "oOs ). who is the efficient former or artist of things. The idea of God as the Creator does not dawn on Plato.
18 ^ Relations of Ideas (i) to God. They are independent of the divine mind. God must recognize and consult them as he forms the world.
Plato conceives a hierarchy of ideas with the supreme idea being that of the good which at times he identities with or translates into God.


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