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greek-epistemologyfeatured in 30 works

Sense-Perception

Can our eyes and ears be trusted to deliver real knowledge of the world, or do they deceive us? The question split Greek philosophy down the middle.

Aisthesis, sense-perception, was one of the great battlegrounds of Greek epistemology: the fight over whether, and how, the senses give us genuine knowledge. Parmenides (early 5th c. BCE) and later Plato distrusted the senses and exalted reason, while Aristotle (4th c. BCE) worked out a careful, positive account of perception as the faculty through which the soul takes in the forms of sensible things. The Epicureans went furthest, holding that every sensation is true, and the Stoics built knowledge on a 'cognitive impression' delivered by the senses. Perception thus became the very fault line separating the rationalist, empiricist, and skeptical schools.

How it traveled

  1. Phaedo
    Athens · -380
    explains
  2. Republic
    Athens · -375
    explains
  3. Fragmenta
    · -370
    explains
  4. De carnibus
    Kos · -370
    explains
  5. Theaetetus
    Athens · -369
    explains
  6. Timaeus
    Athens · -360
    explains
  7. Philebus
    Athens · -355
    explains
  8. Memorabilia
    Athens · -354
    explains
  9. Rhetoric
    Chalcis · -335
    explains
  10. Metaphysics
    Chalcis · -322
    explains
  11. De sensu et sensibilibus
    Chalcis · -322
    explains
  12. Nicomachean Ethics
    Chalcis · -322
    explains
  13. De anima
    Chalcis · -322
    explains
  14. Problemata
    Chalcis · -322
    explains
  15. Eudemian Ethics
    Chalcis · -322
    explains
  16. De partibus animalium
    Chalcis · -322
    explains
  17. Analytica priora
    Chalcis · -322
    explains
  18. De somno et vigilia
    Chalcis · -322
    explains
  19. De insomniis
    Chalcis · -322
    explains
  20. De Generatione Animalium
    Chalcis · -322
    explains
  21. De anima (codicis E fragmenta recensionis a vulgata diversae)
    Chalcis · -322
    explains
  22. De sensu et sensibilibus
    Athens · -287
    explains
  23. De odoribus
    Athens · -287
    explains
  24. Epistula ad Herodotum
    Athens · -270
    explains
  25. Optica
    Alexandria · -265
    explains
  26. De Rerum Natura
    Rome · -55
    explains
  27. Lucullus
    Formiae · -43
    explains
  28. de Natura Deorum
    Formiae · -43
    explains
  29. de Finibus Bonorum et Malorum
    Formiae · -43
    explains
  30. On Architecture
    Rome · -15
    explains

Key passages(20)

In Aristotelis Libros De Anima Paraphrasis · Sophonias

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Handbook of Platonism · Alcinous

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De anima · Alexander of Aphrodisias

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De anima · Alexander of Aphrodisias

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De anima · Alexander of Aphrodisias

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De anima · Alexander of Aphrodisias

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In Librum De Sensu Commentarium · Alexander of Aphrodisias

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Quaestiones · Alexander of Aphrodisias

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Fragmenta · Aristocles of Messene

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De Generatione Animalium · Aristotle

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De anima (codicis E fragmenta recensionis a vulgata diversae) · Aristotle

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