This paper reevaluates the role of Adeimantus in Book 2 of Plato's Republic, arguing that his challenge to Socrates' view of justice—specifically, his interest in the influence of the outer world on our inner lives—serves a crucial yet underappreciated purpose in initiating the political project of the work. I suggest that it's due to Adeimantus' contribution in the Republic that Plato's wide-ranging inquiry into issues in ethics, politics, psychology, epistemology, and metaphysics hangs together as an integrated whole. A further benefit of this reevaluation, I argue, is the way it illuminates Plato's assessment of poetry in the dialogue. This paper was delivered this past year as part of the Boston Area Colloquium in Ancient Philosophy. Co...
The Republic was written approximately between 380 and 370 BC. The title Republic is derived from La...
Thesis advisor: Robert C. BartlettA translation and close study of the “myths” of the afterlife that...
I argue that the strict account of techne agreed to by Socrates and Thrasymachus in Republic I provi...
Plato appears to have used the genre of the philosophical dialogue in a unique way. It could be inte...
Plato’s Republic, as the dialogue is known in English, is a classic, perhaps the classic investigati...
On one of the most common readings of the Republic, Plato means for us to agree with Socrates and hi...
"This book is a lucid and accessible companion to Plato’s Republic, throwing light upon the text’s a...
In this paper, I argue that in the Republic Plato justifies the political authority of the guardian...
Plato's "Republic" is a timeless philosophical masterpiece that delves into the nature of justice, t...
Plato has been read as a virulent opponent of democracy, a common interpretation that, among other t...
In the traditional interpretation, The Republic is a continuation of the discussions in Gorgias, acc...
Our time is characterized both by a reliance upon institutions founded upon concepts of reason, and ...
This thesis poses the question ‘What is the critique of democracy in Plato’s Republic?’ It is not th...
Plato is generally taken to set out his notion of justice in Book IV of the Republic. Unfortunately,...
Plato is often acknowledged as the first philosophical critic of democracy and his Republic is regul...
The Republic was written approximately between 380 and 370 BC. The title Republic is derived from La...
Thesis advisor: Robert C. BartlettA translation and close study of the “myths” of the afterlife that...
I argue that the strict account of techne agreed to by Socrates and Thrasymachus in Republic I provi...
Plato appears to have used the genre of the philosophical dialogue in a unique way. It could be inte...
Plato’s Republic, as the dialogue is known in English, is a classic, perhaps the classic investigati...
On one of the most common readings of the Republic, Plato means for us to agree with Socrates and hi...
"This book is a lucid and accessible companion to Plato’s Republic, throwing light upon the text’s a...
In this paper, I argue that in the Republic Plato justifies the political authority of the guardian...
Plato's "Republic" is a timeless philosophical masterpiece that delves into the nature of justice, t...
Plato has been read as a virulent opponent of democracy, a common interpretation that, among other t...
In the traditional interpretation, The Republic is a continuation of the discussions in Gorgias, acc...
Our time is characterized both by a reliance upon institutions founded upon concepts of reason, and ...
This thesis poses the question ‘What is the critique of democracy in Plato’s Republic?’ It is not th...
Plato is generally taken to set out his notion of justice in Book IV of the Republic. Unfortunately,...
Plato is often acknowledged as the first philosophical critic of democracy and his Republic is regul...
The Republic was written approximately between 380 and 370 BC. The title Republic is derived from La...
Thesis advisor: Robert C. BartlettA translation and close study of the “myths” of the afterlife that...
I argue that the strict account of techne agreed to by Socrates and Thrasymachus in Republic I provi...