Metaphysics, Philosophy

Plato’s Metaphysical Answer to the One and the Many, Part Two

Part one of this series can be found here.

Plato attempts to resolve this question of the One and the Many with his theory of Forms. In order to understand how Plato discovers the transcendent world of the Forms, however, it is necessary to understand his categories of Being and Becoming. These categories are closely connected to the problem of the One and the Many. Basically, Plato’s conception of Being corresponds to the One and his category of Becoming corresponds to the Many. For Plato, Being must be one and unchanging. Being cannot involve multiplicity and change because that would include non-Being. That which is, cannot be that which is not. Due to the law of non-contradiction, Being cannot include non-Being. Plato’s category of Becoming (the Many) includes change and involves a mixture of multiplicity, change, and non-Being. If all reality involves the world of change, flux, and transformation – rationality, science, and thoughtful discourse would be impossible. Plato realized there had to be something that supported the basic nature of existence and provided a ground for understanding reality, logic, mathematics, and scientific inquiry. Plato conceived of this essential nature of reality as the transcendent and eternal realm of pure Being (the One). In his dialogue the Timeaeus, Plato describes his conception of Being and Becoming this way:

First then, in my judgment, we must make a distinction and ask, What is that which always is and has no becoming; and what is that which is always becoming and never is? That which is apprehended by intelligence and reason is always in the same state; but that which is conceived by opinion with the help of sensation and without reason, is always in a process of becoming and perishing and never really is. (447)

It is important to understand Plato’s dual worlds of Being and Becoming in order to fully grasp his metaphysical theory of Forms and to see how he resolved the question of the One and the Many. Plato’s theory of Forms states that every perishable and changing thing in the world of Becoming (the Many) is caused by a transcendent world (the One), which is populated by immutable, eternal Forms. Plato’s conception of transcendent reality is a world that lies beyond both space and time. In other words, according to Plato, every example of chair, human, instance of justice, or act of love has a perfect, unchangeable, transcendent Form that corresponds to it in the world of pure Being. In the Phaedo dialogue, Plato presents this passage which explains how sensible things participate in their transcendent Form:

I cannot help thinking, if there be anything beautiful other than absolute beauty should there be such, that it can be beautiful only in so far as it partakes of absolute beauty – and I should say the same of everything. Do you agree in this notion of the cause?

Yes, he said, I agree.

He proceeded: I know nothing and can understand nothing of any other of those wise causes which are alleged; and if a person says to me that the bloom of colour, or form or any such thing is a source of beauty, I leave all that, which is only confusing to me and simply and singly, and perhaps foolishly, hold and am assured in my own mind that nothing makes a thing beautiful but the presence and participation of beauty in whatever way or manner obtained. (242)

Tables not only participate or correspond to their perfect transcendent Form, but so do moral realities. In this way, Plato resolves the problem of the One and the Many. The Form existing in pure Being participates in the physical world of Becoming. Sometimes the Forms are referred to as Ideas because they can only be grasped through the intellect and human reason.

For Plato, the theory of the Forms and their interaction in the world of Becoming is not only true of the physical world, but also in the area of ethics in the attempt to discover what makes actions right or wrong. In the Euthyphro, Plato attempts to explore and describe how piety participates in the transcendent Form or Idea1 of piety:

Soc. Remember that I did not ask you to give me two or three examples of piety, but to explain the general idea which makes all pious things to be pious. Do you not recollect that there was one idea which made the impious impious and the pious pious?

Euth. I remember.

Soc. Tell me what is the nature of this idea, and then I shall have a standard to which I may look, and by which I may measure actions, whether yours or those of any one else, and then I shall be able to say that such and such an action is pious, such another impious. (193)

For Plato, not only do the things of becoming, things of this physical world, participate in an eternal Form, so do moral actions. In this way, Plato would tell us that the Bill of Rights (the first ten amendments of the United States Constitution) actually participates in the eternal and immutable Form of justice, although imperfectly. In the Republic, for example, Plato explains his project of attempting to define the big metaphysical idea of justice as a first step in discovering how it applies to particular individual instances of justice:

First let us complete the old investigation, which we began, as you remember, under the impression that, if we could previously examine justice on the larger scale, there would be less difficulty in discerning her in the individual. That larger example appeared to be the State, and accordingly we constructed as good a one as we could, knowing well that in the good State justice would be found. Let the discovery which we made be now applied to the individual. (350)

Metaphysically, Plato is interested in finding the perfect model of justice and then trying to figure out how that model or idea of justice works out at the particular level. In part three, we will discover how Plato further divides reality. Then we will evaluate whether or not Plato was successful in his attempt to resolve the problem of the one and the many.

Works cited

Plato. The Dialogues of Plato. Trans. Benjamin Jowett. Great Books of the Western World. Vol. 6. Chicago: Encycyclopedia Britannica, Inc., 1996.

1 The Greek word ‘eidos’ can mean both Form and Idea.