El MITO Del CARRO ALADO de PLATÓN 🐎 | Filosofía Antigua

😬 What does the myth of the winged chariot tell us? For Plato, what is the relationship between soul and body? I'll explain! 👇🏾👇🏾👇🏾 💥 ALL of Plato in 15 Minutes 👉🏽    • TODO PLATÓN Resumido en 15 Minutos 😎 (FÁ...   🔴 LIKE this video! 🎬 Learn EASILY (and FROM SCRATCH) with my Philosophy Course ►►►    • Introducción al Curso de Filosofía 😍 (¡H...   Hello, philosophy addicts! I'm Enric, your philosophy teacher on YouTube, and this is Philosophy Addicts. We're continuing with our course on ancient philosophy! Plato, the great disciple of Socrates and the great teacher of Aristotle, legitimately divides the history of philosophy in two: after him, nothing would ever be the same. Perhaps the most famous aspect of his philosophical system is the Theory of Forms: the thesis that, in addition to the sensible world, there exists an ideal world where the eternal and incorruptible Forms or Ideas of things exist. In the sensible world, there are countless men; in the world of Forms, the Form of Man; in the sensible world, we find countless beautiful things; in the world of Forms, Beauty itself; and so on. This theory is complemented by a dualistic conception of the relationship between soul and body, in which the body is likened to the sensible world (being mortal, material, and corruptible), and the soul to the ideal world (being immortal, immaterial, and incorruptible). For Plato, the soul's proper place is the world of Ideas. In fact, before inhabiting the body, the soul pre-existed in that world, but a kind of original sin or transgression cast it into our own. Plato attempts to explain this with a myth: the myth of the winged chariot, likening our soul to a chariot with a charioteer (reason) and two horses, one white and gentle (the spirited appetite) and the other black and untamed (the appetitive appetite). Because of the black horse, the winged chariot loses its balance and falls, from the pure contemplation of the Ideas, into the darkness of this world of shadows. So… Where is the myth of the winged chariot mentioned? What does the winged chariot symbolize? What is the charioteer according to Plato, and what is his role? What does the white horse represent in the myth of the winged chariot? What does the black horse represent in the myth of the winged chariot? What are the three parts of Plato's soul? What were Plato's thoughts on the soul and the body? What is the rational soul according to Plato? I'll explain it in the video so you can understand! (An ideal video as an introduction to philosophy, or for high school and university entrance exams!). 🕘 INDEX: 0:00 - Introduction 0:23 - Plato's Myth of the Chariot 1:27 - What does the myth of the chariot tell us? The three parts of the soul 3:17 - Where does the soul come from according to Plato? 4:10 - The original sin of the soul 5:05 - What the soul desires 6:22 - What is death for Plato? The role of philosophy and virtue 8:56 - What does Plato's myth of the chariot mean? Summary 👇🏾 WATCH one of these videos! 👇🏾 ❤️ Plato and the Theory of Forms:    • PLATÓN ☀️► TEORÍA DE LAS IDEAS y DUALISMOS...   💚 Plato's Republic and the Soul:    • LA REPÚBLICA de PLATÓN y el ALMA 🤓👑 [¡Expl...   🎬 Or check out my most recent videos:    / @adictosalafilosofía   -------------------------------SOCIAL MEDIA------------------------------- 👥 Facebook: Philosophy Addicts 🐦 Twitter: @filoadictos 📸 Instagram: @filoadictos 💬 Contact: [email protected] 👇🏾 Check out the featured comment! 👇🏾