Forms and Structure in Plato’s Metaphysics

Forms and Structure in Plato’s Metaphysics by Anna Marmodoro, published by Oxford University Press in 2021, offers a detailed investigation into the metaphysical ideas of Plato and his predecessor Anaxagoras. This edition, comprising 223 pages, presents a fresh perspective on their philosophical accounts of objects and properties, emphasizing the concept of overlap between properties and things in the world. Marmodoro explores how Plato initially adopts Anaxagoras’s model of constitutional overlap and later develops the notion of qualitative overlap, which is central to understanding Plato’s metaphysics.
Readers will find that the book delves into significant themes such as the role of Forms, the nature of necessity, and the philosophical implications of structure and complexity in metaphysics. By applying contemporary analytic metaphysical tools, Marmodoro makes the ancient systems of Anaxagoras and Plato accessible to modern philosophers, thereby connecting their ideas to current philosophical discussions. This work not only highlights the innovative aspects of Plato’s thought but also opens new avenues for research in the field of metaphysics.
Official synopsis Publisher
This book investigates the thought of two of the most influential philosophers of antiquity, Plato and his predecessor Anaxagoras, with respect to their metaphysical accounts of objects and their properties. The book introduces a fresh perspective on these two thinkers’ ideas, displaying the debt of Plato’s theory on Anaxagoras’s, and principally arguing that their core metaphysical concept is overlap; overlap between properties and things in the world. Initially Plato endorses Anaxagoras’s model of constitutional overlap, and subsequently develops qualitative overlap. Overlap is the crux to our understanding of objects participating in Forms in Plato’s metaphysics; of Plato’s account of relata without relations; of the role of Forms as causes; of the metaphysics of necessity; and of the role of the Great Kinds and of the paradeigma in the development of Plato’s thought.
Anna Marmodoro argues that Plato is ground-breaking in the history of metaphysics, in different ways from those acknowledged so far, and with respect to more metaphysical questions than had been hitherto appreciated; e.g. Plato’s treatment of structure as property; of complexity; and his introduction of the first ever account of metaphysical emergence.
In addition to these results, Marmodoro makes Anaxagoras’s and Plato’s systems philosophically accessible to us, today’s philosophers, by applying conceptual tools from analytic metaphysics to the study of ancient metaphysics. In this way, the book brings Anaxagoras’s and Plato’s ideas to bear on todays’ philosophical discussions and opens up new venues of research for current philosophical discussions.
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