Fr. 152.40

Plato on Justice and Power - Reading Book I of Plato's Republic

English · Hardback

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Description

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Most commentaries on the Republic rush through Book I with embarrassment because the arguments of the participants, including Socrates, are specious. Beginning with Book II, the arguments are brilliant, so why did Plato write Book I? Lycos shows that the function of Book I is to attack the view that justice is external to the soul-external to the power humans have to render things good-and is merely instrumental to a good society. The dramatic situation in Book I presents justice as internal, requiring not laws, but discrimination and virtue.
After this introduction, the rest of the Republic serves to sketch out what virtue is and how to practice discrimination. Plato on Justice and Power ends with some illuminating contrasts between this sense of virtue and that characteristic of our modern liberal politics which takes an external view of justice similar to the Athenians view at the time of Plato.


About the author










Kimon Lycos is Senior Lecturer in Philosophy at the Australian National University in Canberra.

Product details

Authors Kimon Lycos
Publisher State University of New York Press
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.08.1987
 
EAN 9780887064159
ISBN 978-0-88706-415-9
No. of pages 212
Weight 445 g
Series SUNY Series in Philosophy (Har
SUNY Series in Philosophy (Har
Suny Philosophy
Subject Non-fiction book > Philosophy, religion > Philosophy: general, reference works

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