'Doxa' (δόξα) is a
Greek word meaning common
belief or popular
opinion, from which are derived the modern terms of
orthodoxy and
heterodoxy. Used by the Greek
rhetoricians as a tool for the formation of argument by using common opinions, the ''doxa'' was often manipulated by
sophists to
persuade the
people, leading to
Plato's condemnation of
Athenian democracy.
It should also be noted that the word ''doxa'' picked up a new meaning between the 3rd and 1st centuries BC when the "Seventy" (''evdomikonta'') Hebrew scholars in Alexandria translated the Hebrew Scriptures into Greek. In this translation of the Scriptures, called the Septuagint, the scholars rendered the Hebrew word for "glory" (''kabot'') as ''doxa''. This translation of the Hebrew Scriptures was used by the early church and is quoted frequently by the New Testament authors. The effects of this new meaning of ''doxa'' as "glory" is evidenced by the ubiquitous use of the word throughout the New Testament and in the worship services of the Greek Orthodox Church.
Doxa, a philosopheme
Henceforth, Plato opposed
knowledge to ''doxa'', which would lead to the classical opposition of
error to
truth, which has since become a major concern in
Western philosophy. Thus, error is considered in
Occident as pure
negativity, which can take various forms, among whom the form of
illusion (which can't be dissipated, as
Kant showed). As such, ''doxa'' may
ironically be defined as the "
philosopher's
sin". In classical rhetoric, it is contrasted with ''
episteme''. However,
Aristotle used the term ''
endoxa'' (commonly held beliefs accepted by the wise and by elder rhetors) to acknowledge the beliefs of the city. Endoxa is a more stable belief than ''doxa'', because it has been "tested" in argumentative struggles in the ''
Polis'' by prior interlocutors. The use of ''endoxa'' in the Stagirite's ''
Organon'' can be found in Aristotle's ''
Topics'' and ''
Rhetoric''.
Vox populi, synonym or reverse of doxa?
The Latin expression ''
Vox populi'' may be compared to ''doxa'', as it means popular opinion. However, in the common sentence ''Vox populi vox Dei'', instead of being a synonym of error, it is reversed into a synonym of truth. Indeed, it may approximatively be translated into: "
God speaks through the clamor of the
masses". It may be argued that
republicanism or even
democracy must be confident in the
power of the people to escape ''doxa'' through
education in order to have a sense; however, the concept of
civic virtue complicates things, as being knowledgeable doesn't necessarily means being
good - an argument often overlooked by advocates of
technocracy or other such
enlightened despotism. Of course, Plato would completely reject this argumentation, as he identifies learning to the treading of an ethical path, as did
Foucault, among many others, show: in ancient Greece, knowledge implies a
conversion of the being, whereas "pure knowledge", disjoined from "
Good", is the product of latter inventions.
Examples of elements of the ''doxa'' of our society include:
★ The sun rises in the East and sets in the West every day.
★ The universities are organized around academic disciplines and there are rational reasons for the academic division of labor, i.e. it is not based on arbitrary framing and power relations.