Description
What does it mean to be good? What enables us to distinguish right from wrong? How should human virtues be translated into a just society? In the course of its tautly reasoned Socratic dialogues, The Republic accomplishes nothing less than an anatomy of the soul and an exhaustive description of a State that both mirrors and enforces the soul's ideal harmony. The resulting text is at once mystical and elegantly logical and may be read as a template for the societies in which most of us live today.
Author: Plato
Publisher: Vintage
Published: 03/06/1991
Pages: 416
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.95lbs
Size: 8.00h x 5.10w x 0.90d
ISBN13: 9780679733874
ISBN10: 0679733876
BISAC Categories:
- Philosophy | History & Surveys | Ancient & Classical
- Philosophy | Political
- Philosophy | Ethics & Moral Philosophy
About the Author
PLATO, with Socrates and Aristotle, is the founder of the Western intellectual tradition. Like his mentor Socrates, he was essentially a practical philosopher who found the abstract theory and visionary schemes of many contemporary thinkers misguided and sterile. He was born about 429 B.C. in Athens, the son of a prominent family that had long been involved in the city's politics. Extremely little survives of the history of Plato's youth, but he was raised in the shadow of the great Peloponnesian War, and its influence must have caused him to reject the political career open to him and to become a follower of the brilliantly unorthodox Socrates, the self-proclaimed gadfly of Athens.