This paper considers the conflicting "loves" of Cornelius Castoriadis--his love for the ancients, and especially Plato, and for the common person of the demos. A detailed study of Castoriadis' analysis of Plato's Statesman exposes that Castoriadis attempts to resolve the paradox by rereading Plato as a radical democrat. I argue that this unorthodox reading is at best "quirky, " (a charge Castoriadis levels at Plato) at worst a groundless sophism. However, I conjecture that Castoriadis' reading may not constitute a serious attempt to describe a Platonic politics, so much as a prescriptive reading of what otherwise might have been, given certain strands of political generosity evident elsewhere in Plato's corpus
This text shows that Castoriadis justifies the figure of Socrates in terms of the work of politics. ...
In this paper I discuss the relationship between Cornelius Castoriadis and Ancient Greece by focusin...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 154-158).In his brief intellectual autobiography “From Absol...
Castoriadis’ entire colossal politico-philosophical-psychoanalytical project is based around the not...
Plato has been read as a virulent opponent of democracy, a common interpretation that, among other t...
There is no shortage of scholarly options regarding Plato’s view of democracy; many of which believe...
Plato is often acknowledged as the first philosophical critic of democracy and his Republic is regul...
Cornelius Castoriadis’s entire work has been all along devoted to pursuing a vehement critique of al...
Understanding Plato's contribution to democratic education means more than understanding the substan...
The position of Socrates in Plato’s earlier dialogues is often seen as an anticipation of contempora...
A certain trend in political philosophy has associated Plato with a totalitarian tradition, which i...
//// Abstract: This paper conceives itself as part of a larger effort that sets out to mediate among...
Plato is performing a dialectical thought process in juxtaposing Socrates and the Eleatic Stranger i...
The paper outlines Cornelius Castoriadis’ philosophical view on a theory of democracy. The French t...
Can we criticize democracy? Above all, can we criticize democracy objectively, that is to say, criti...
This text shows that Castoriadis justifies the figure of Socrates in terms of the work of politics. ...
In this paper I discuss the relationship between Cornelius Castoriadis and Ancient Greece by focusin...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 154-158).In his brief intellectual autobiography “From Absol...
Castoriadis’ entire colossal politico-philosophical-psychoanalytical project is based around the not...
Plato has been read as a virulent opponent of democracy, a common interpretation that, among other t...
There is no shortage of scholarly options regarding Plato’s view of democracy; many of which believe...
Plato is often acknowledged as the first philosophical critic of democracy and his Republic is regul...
Cornelius Castoriadis’s entire work has been all along devoted to pursuing a vehement critique of al...
Understanding Plato's contribution to democratic education means more than understanding the substan...
The position of Socrates in Plato’s earlier dialogues is often seen as an anticipation of contempora...
A certain trend in political philosophy has associated Plato with a totalitarian tradition, which i...
//// Abstract: This paper conceives itself as part of a larger effort that sets out to mediate among...
Plato is performing a dialectical thought process in juxtaposing Socrates and the Eleatic Stranger i...
The paper outlines Cornelius Castoriadis’ philosophical view on a theory of democracy. The French t...
Can we criticize democracy? Above all, can we criticize democracy objectively, that is to say, criti...
This text shows that Castoriadis justifies the figure of Socrates in terms of the work of politics. ...
In this paper I discuss the relationship between Cornelius Castoriadis and Ancient Greece by focusin...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 154-158).In his brief intellectual autobiography “From Absol...