As I see it, Plato's world of forms is the world of ideas or potentials for forms to manifest through the interactions of universal laws on lawful levels of reality.JHuber wrote:Yes, but my point is that "form" is an illegitimate word to use here. The word "form" is an attribute. The number one is a unit. Units do not have attributes. They have no size, color, shape, form, anything. They don't even actually exist. What you write on paper for a unit is a symbol that the unit represents not actually the unit itself. That is the whole point of units. If they did have attributes then they would only be able to count some things but not others.Nick_A wrote:Both the reality of fractions and the experience of color helps me to appreciate Plato's theory of forms. Of course this is superficial but it helps in understanding what is meant by a "conscious human perspective" that transcends the automatic expression of opinions.
The number ONE can be divided into fractions and these fractions can be divided into more fractions. But can fractions exist without the ONE from which they are defined? Obviously not. Where ONE is the form, fractions are its lawful devolutions.
It wouldn't make sense to change the name of Plato's theory to "Theory of Units," because that is already called mathematics. Plato is misusing the word "Form". As a result, people went on for centuries believing or trying to understand a higher reality that had form.
Consider the difference between no-thing and nothing as the boundries of creation. No-thing is consciousness without content. Everything exists within no-thing as potential. Nothing on the other hand is just the absence of content and potential
I think the idea of the world of forms in contrast to their diversity of manifestations is precise.