Information AboutTechne |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT TECHNE | |
| philosophical terminology | |
|
In '' Ion '', Socrates believed that techne -- in the sense that it was art -- represented a threat to peace, order and good government for which Reason and Law “by common consent have ever been deemed best.” Aristotle saw it as representative of the imperfection of human imitation of nature. For the Ancient Greeks , it signified all the Mechanical Arts including medicine and music. The English Aphorism , ‘gentlemen don’t work with their hands,’ is said to have originated in ancient Greece in relation to their Cynical view on the arts. Due to this view, it was only fitted for the lower class while the upper class practiced the Liberal Arts of ‘free’ men (Dorter 1973). Socrates also compliments techne only when it was used in the context of episteme. Episteme sometimes means knowing how to do something in a craft-like way. The craft-like knowledge is called a ‘technê.' It is most useful when the knowledge is practically applied, rather than theoretically or aesthetically applied. For the ancient Greeks, when techne appears as art, it is most often viewed negatively, whereas when used as a '', written by Plato , the knowledge of forms "is the indispensable basis for the philosophers' craft of ruling in the city" (Stanford 2003). Techne is often used in philosophical discourse to distinguish from art (or Poiesis ). This use of the word also occurs in The Digital Humanities to differentiate between linear narrative presentation of knowledge and dynamic presentation of knowledge, wherein techne represents the former and poiesis represents the latter. SEE ALSO EXTERNAL LINKS
|
|
|