Concept in Definition ABC
Miscellanea / / November 13, 2021
By Javier Navarro, in Jan. 2017
The philosophy Western arose in Greece when the first philosophers, the pre-Socratics, raised the need for think with rational criteria and not according to the schemes of mythology. One of the key concepts to understand philosophical rationality is precisely the concept of doxa, which is traditionally translated as opinion.
Doxa versus episteme
We all have our own opinions on various matters. The opinion is based on the assessment subjective about something (I think the cakes are good but a friend consider the opposite). The plurality of personal evaluations makes it impossible to build a true knowledge starting from the simple opinion. If we want to get closer to the truth, we must go the path of knowledge or episteme.
The difference between opinion and knowledge (doxa and episteme) was addressed by Parmenides and later by Plato. According to the first, the doxa part of the senses, of desires and personal experiences, while the episteme is the attempt to construct truths far from individual subjectivity. According to Plato, doxa is a knowledge that depends on appearances and, therefore, is misleading (to those who defended their ideas according to the doxa, Plato contemptuously called them doxographers, which we could translate as opinion makers).
For most Greek philosophers doxa is a substitute for true knowledge. Through opinion we can communicate, share experiences and value any aspect of reality from our individual point of view. However, if we want to know something with a criterion of truth and objectively, we must go the way of the episteme. This distinction between one form of knowledge and another is decisive for understanding the difference between what is scientific and what is not.
Belief versus science
The reflection on the doxa and the episteme in philosophers like Parmenides and Plato, is a question that allows us to better understand our mental schemes. There are some knowledge that are based on personal beliefs (for example, religious faith), while others are based on strictly rational and empirical criteria (for example, the biology What discipline scientific).
Despite the distinction between belief and science, are not totally incompatible fields, since beliefs can be accompanied by rational arguments and, in parallel, scientific truths can lead to beliefs of a spiritual nature (for example, an astronomer may believe in God because he considers that the order of the universe must have been created by a being higher).
Photos: Fotolia - b_plan88 / echiechi
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