Notions of Progress
About This Episode Where did the word “philosopher” come from — and who got to decide what it meant? In Episode 8, Part 1 of Notions of Progress, we trace the moment Plato took a word that had begun as a mocking label and transformed it into an institutional claim. Prof. Christopher Moore’s Calling Philosophers Names (Princeton University Press, 2020) shows us how the coining of philosophos was not a neutral act of description but a polemical move — one that drew a sharp line between those who merely acquired knowledge and those who pursued wisdom as a lifelong orientation. Drawing on three of Plato’s dialogues — the Meno, the Phaedrus, and the Gorgias — the episode asks what it meant to found a school on that claim and what that founding bet risked. Prof. W.K.C. Guthrie’s historical account of the early Academy situates the institutional stakes. The episode traces the distinction between episteme — genuine knowledge — and doxa — mere opinion — as the intellectual fault line on which Plato’s entire wager rests. This is the first of three episodes tracing the founding of the Academy, from the naming of philosophy through the institution’s mechanics to Aristotle’s departure and the first test of the founding bet. —————————————————————— Show Notes & Timestamps * 00:00 — Introduction to Plato’s Philosophical Journey * 02:18 — The Birth of the Academy and Its Claims * 04:17 — The Evolution of the Term ‘Philosophos’ * 07:57 — The Distinction Between Episteme and Doxa * 11:51 — Plato’s Selective Approach to Knowledge * 12:52 — Aristotle’s Departure and Philosophical Expansion * 13:33 — Recap —————————————————————— Key Concepts & Terms Philosophos (phil-OH-soh-foss) — lover of wisdom As Moore demonstrates across pre-Platonic and Platonic sources, the word did not emerge as a neutral description. It circulated as a mildly mocking label before Plato claimed it, narrowed it, and redefined its referent entirely. In Moore’s reading, Plato’s decision about who counts as a philosophos is simultaneously a decision about what kind of knowledge matters and who is capable of it. The naming of the discipline was the first move in the founding of the Academy. Episteme (ep-ISS-teh-may) — genuine knowledge Stable, reasoned knowledge — as distinct from opinion — and the object the Academy was founded to produce and transmit. The Meno’s conclusion — that the virtuous statesman operates by true opinion, not knowledge — is the challenge the Academy was built to answer. If doxa cannot be systematically taught or institutionally transmitted, only episteme justifies the existence of a philosophical school. Guthrie’s commentary situates this distinction as Plato’s foundational move against both the Sophists and the democratic assumption of broadly equal political capacity. Doxa (DOX-ah) — opinion or true belief Distinguished from episteme in the Meno. The virtuous statesman operates by true opinion, not knowledge — like a poet who produces fine things without being able to say why. The Sophist educational programme produces doxa, not episteme — and doxa cannot be systematically taught or institutionally transmitted. Plato’s point is that true opinion, however reliable in practice, will not hold under examination. Technē (tek-NAY) — craft or genuine expertise The central spine of the series from Episodes 5–8. A genuine technē has a determinate subject matter, aims at the genuine good of its object, and can give a rational account of itself. The Sophists claimed rhetoric was a technē ; Plato argued in the Gorgias that it was not — it is a knack (empeiria), producing persuasion without understanding why. The Academy’s founding claim was that philosophy met the genuine standards of technē and exceeded them, because its object was not persuasion but truth. —————————————————————— Fascinating Historical Insights A Philosopher Was Originally a Term of Mockery Before Plato, the word philosophos was not a badge of honour. As Moore traces across pre-Platonic sources, the term circulated as a mildly pejorative description — someone suspiciously over-interested in ideas, impractical, unworldly. Plato’s intervention was to take this floating, slightly comic label and claim it entirely: stripping away its mocking connotations, redefining the word’s referent, and making it describe something altogether more serious. The episode shows how this terminological move was simultaneously a philosophical argument and a political act. The Academy’s Founding Claim Was Unprecedented in the Ancient World What Plato built was not a school in the conventional Sophist sense — a travelling teacher offering instruction for fees. It was a fixed, sustained community of inquiry organised around a shared method and the explicit claim that genuine knowledge, as distinct from opinion, was achievable and transmissible across generations. As Guthrie’s account of the early Academy makes clear, no institution in the ancient world had previously staked its existence on quite this claim. The Academy’s founding was an assertion that philosophy could accumulate: that the next generation could begin where the last left off. Aristotle Was at the Academy for Twenty Years — and Then Left Aristotle arrived at the Academy as a young man and remained for twenty years, until Plato’s death. His departure — and his subsequent founding of the Lyceum — is one of the most consequential intellectual events in ancient history. The episode treats this not as a biographical footnote but as the first serious test of the Academy’s founding bet. If philosophical knowledge genuinely accumulates across generations, Aristotle’s twenty years should have produced a philosophical heir. That he left instead and built something different is the question Episode 10 will address directly. Episteme and Doxa: A Philosophical Argument Against Democracy Plato’s insistence that episteme is categorically different from doxa was not merely an epistemological position. It was a claim about who is capable of governing. The Sophists had argued that political skill was a form of expertise acquirable by any citizen willing to learn rhetoric. Plato’s distinction cuts against this entirely: if most people operate at the level of opinion and only the philosophically trained can attain genuine knowledge, the democratic premise — that citizens are broadly equal in their capacity for political judgment — is philosophically undermined. The founding of the Academy was, among other things, a counter-argument to Athenian democracy. —————————————————————— Resources & Further Reading Primary Sources * Plato. Meno, 87c–100b. The teachability argument and its aporetic conclusion. Cooper–Hackett translation recommended. * Plato. Phaedrus. The soul’s orientation toward wisdom and the distinction between genuine and imitative rhetoric. Cooper–Hackett translation. * Plato. Gorgias, 447a–527e. The full dialogue: rhetoric on trial, the Polus episode, the Callicles section, and the eschatological myth. Cooper–Hackett translation. Works Discussed * Moore, Christopher. Calling Philosophers Names: On the Origin of a Discipline. Princeton University Press, 2020. The primary anchor for Episode 8. Moore traces the etymology and early history of philosophos across pre-Platonic and Platonic sources, demonstrating that Plato’s terminological decisions encoded a philosophical and political programme. * Guthrie, W.K.C. A History of Greek Philosophy, Vol. IV. Cambridge University Press, 1975. Guthrie’s historical account of the early dialogues and the Academy’s founding situates the institutional stakes of Episode 8’s argument. Further Context * Kerferd, G.B. The Sophistic Movement. Cambridge University Press, 1981. The authoritative account of the Sophist tradition whose horizontal model of civic progress Episode 8 explicitly rejects. Essential background for understanding what Plato was arguing against. * Retz, Tyson. Progress and the Scale of History. Cambridge University Press, 2022. The series anchor. See Episodes 3–4 for the full framework. —————————————————————— Related Episodes * Episode 5: The Sophists — Human Agency, Technē, and the First Theory of Civic Progress. Establishes the Sophist framework and the horizontal model of cumulative progress that Episode 8 rejects. * Episode 6: Plato vs. the Sophists, Part 1 — The Cave, Recollection, and the Case Against Cumulative Knowledge. The first two pillars of Plato’s counter-argument. * Episode 7: Plato vs. the Sophists, Part 2 — Rhetoric, Power, and the Making of Callicles. The direct bridge to Episode 8. * Episodes 3–4: Five Faces of Progress — Prof. Tyson Retz. The taxonomic framework applied across the series. —————————————————————— Coming Up Next Episode 9 turns from the naming of philosophy to its institutionalisation. Where Episode 8 asked what the founding bet was, Episode 9 asks how the Academy actually worked — its pedagogy, its method of succession, and the problem Plato may not have solved before his death. Prof. Werner Jaeger’s Paideia, Vol. II anchors the episode’s account of what it meant to build an institution around the transmission of philosophical knowledge. —————————————————————— Listen & Subscribe
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