THEORIES OF KNOWLEDGE IN THE OLD ACADEMY

The task of identifying the particular epistemological theories of the members of the old Academy is not an easy one, by reason of the general lack of evidence, but, at least in the case of Speusippus and Xenocrates, some insights are derivable. In both cases what we can observe is – while doubtless...

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Main Author: John Dillon
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: ILIESI 2018-12-01
Series:Lexicon Philosophicum
Online Access:https://lexicon.cnr.it/ojs/index.php/LP/article/view/559
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author John Dillon
author_facet John Dillon
author_sort John Dillon
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description The task of identifying the particular epistemological theories of the members of the old Academy is not an easy one, by reason of the general lack of evidence, but, at least in the case of Speusippus and Xenocrates, some insights are derivable. In both cases what we can observe is – while doubtless acknowledging the inferior status of sense-perception – a concern, in the case of Speusippus, to arrive at a criterion of accuracy in the perception of sense objects, namely by applying logos to raw sense-data, thus achieving epistemonike aisthesis; and in the case of Xenocrates, the application of his theory of minimal parts to the elucidation of the process of aisthesis
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spelling doaj-art-d8071d8337cb47169885f359a3f815da2025-08-20T02:52:16ZdeuILIESILexicon Philosophicum2283-78332018-12-0110.19283/lph-2018.559THEORIES OF KNOWLEDGE IN THE OLD ACADEMYJohn DillonThe task of identifying the particular epistemological theories of the members of the old Academy is not an easy one, by reason of the general lack of evidence, but, at least in the case of Speusippus and Xenocrates, some insights are derivable. In both cases what we can observe is – while doubtless acknowledging the inferior status of sense-perception – a concern, in the case of Speusippus, to arrive at a criterion of accuracy in the perception of sense objects, namely by applying logos to raw sense-data, thus achieving epistemonike aisthesis; and in the case of Xenocrates, the application of his theory of minimal parts to the elucidation of the process of aisthesishttps://lexicon.cnr.it/ojs/index.php/LP/article/view/559
spellingShingle John Dillon
THEORIES OF KNOWLEDGE IN THE OLD ACADEMY
Lexicon Philosophicum
title THEORIES OF KNOWLEDGE IN THE OLD ACADEMY
title_full THEORIES OF KNOWLEDGE IN THE OLD ACADEMY
title_fullStr THEORIES OF KNOWLEDGE IN THE OLD ACADEMY
title_full_unstemmed THEORIES OF KNOWLEDGE IN THE OLD ACADEMY
title_short THEORIES OF KNOWLEDGE IN THE OLD ACADEMY
title_sort theories of knowledge in the old academy
url https://lexicon.cnr.it/ojs/index.php/LP/article/view/559
work_keys_str_mv AT johndillon theoriesofknowledgeintheoldacademy