Mendeley TY _ JOUR ID - 13970910165907 TI - The Relationship between Gods and Man in Greek Philosophy JO - History of Philasophy JA - ES LA - fa SN - 2008-9589 AU - hasanifar َAbdolrasool AU - Chitforush Sajjad AD - دانشیار گروه علوم سیاسی، دانشگاه سیستان و بلوچستان، زاهدان AD - دانشگاه جامع امام‌حسين Y1 - 2018 PY - 2018 VL - 1 IS - SP - 103 EP - 118 KW - Greece Homer Socrates Plato God Man DO - N2 - Man’s behaviors and acts in each period are directly influenced by the ontological views and philosophical and religious principles of that period. Therefore, in order to understand the nature of such behaviors and acts, one might initially learn about the dominant ontological and epistemological principles of the time. One of such principles which is necessary for understanding human behavior and acts in each period pertains to the prevailing view of being and God, which directly affects one’s conduct in society. Given the necessity of cross-cultural knowledge in the contemporary era, the profound relationship between the Greeks and Iranians, and its effects on different aspects of their thoughts, the knowledge of the Greeks’ philosophical and behavioral principles could play a key role in the study of this cultural relationship. Accordingly, the present paper investigates the ontological views of the Greeks, their philosophical principles and, particularly, their views of God and the soul and the effect of such views on their behaviors and acts. In doing so, the authors have examined the ideas of three thinkers of the Greek era, namely, Homer, Socrates, and Plato, following an interpretive method. The results of this study indicate that the Greeks’ view of God in each period changed under the influence of the views of the thinkers of the time. In fact, Homer, Socrates, and Plato held distinct ideas in this regard. In Homer’s mythical view, Gods are like human heroes with human attributes and in transaction with human beings. However, in Socrates’s eye, God is a being who guides human beings and communicates with them through demons. Finally, in Plato’s philosophy, where polytheism moves toward monotheism, God, as the Idea of Good, is a transcendent Being who determines Man’s destiny and promulgates laws for their individual and social lives. UR - rimag.ir/en/Article/23374 L1 - rimag.ir/en/Article/Download/23374 ER -