It is only when the philosophers rule and take on the business of the city that the city stays out of his business. — Fooloso4
But the city has no business of its own, or rather the business of the city is the sum of everybody's business. So when the philosopher takes on the business of the city, he takes on the business of everybody. That's because each person's business is dependent on other people's business and other people's business depends on each person's business. Interdependence, not agglomeration. This applies also to individuals and their parts.Plato was well aware that the politics of the soul and the politics of the city are not the same in all respects. — Fooloso4
A consistent theme throughout the Dialogues is that the best relationship amongst these parts is the source of virtue and true happiness. The pursuit of that relationship is deemed more worthy than the expression of traditional norms. — Paine
And does Socrates/Plato know who the best people are? He doesn't even trust his own philosophers, since he expects to foist his "noble lie" (a mistranslation if ever there was one) even on them.The best people, whose opinions are more worthy of consideration.
True There might indeed be others as wise as him, but only if they know that they don't know. But they don't know that, so they are less wise than him. And has he spoken to everyone, to make sure that there is no-one apart from him who knows that they don't know?The oracle did not say that Socrates was the wisest, it said that no one was wiser, that is, that others might be as wise as him. — Fooloso4
But the city has no business of its own, or rather the business of the city is the sum of everybody's business. — Ludwig V
This applies also to individuals and their parts. — Ludwig V
Agglomeration is all he knows. — Ludwig V
Had you thought what life would be like for the ordinary people in his city? — Ludwig V
And does Socrates/Plato know who the best people are? He doesn't even trust his own philosophers ... — Ludwig V
"noble lie" (a mistranslation if ever there was one) — Ludwig V
we might contrive one of those lies we were referring to earlier
(https://alexpriou.substack.com/p/platos-republic-in-its-thucydidean context)Read in light of Thucydides, the Republic emerges as a cautionary tale regarding the susceptibility of men, living in the midst of great political and moral decay, to grand visions of political and personal transformation, to redemptive and salvific projects both in this life and the next. It is often remarked that the Republic is a book on the limits of politics. This is indeed the case, as Glaucon accepts time and again Socrates’ shocking solutions to the perennial problems of politics. We come to see thereby that, though political judgment admits of better and worse, though there are real goods and harms in how we handle these problems, nevertheless we must on some level learn to live with them.
I hope I never accused you of being idiosyncratic or distorting anything. I thought it was a question of how we interpret the text. But it is true that the line between interpreting the text and what the text actually says is uncomfortably fine. Which is not to say that this interpretation is not of great interest, though I think you will admit it is not the traditional interpretation, or at least not the interpretation I was given when I learnt about all this.In case anyone too quickly concludes that my interpretation of Plato is an idiosyncratic distortion of the text, I happened upon this today while reading about Thucydides: — Fooloso4
I could agree with that.But the city Socrates makes as a compromise with its luxuries and relishes is still not a city we would wish to live in. It is, in fact, in some ways a less desirable city then the first city. — Fooloso4
Part of the project (though not explicitly stated) is to provide a diagnosis of the various deviant forms of the city, which he tracks back to dominance by a faction other than the rational one. What he has got right here is that when things go wrong, it is because the city is dominated by a faction.“I will tell you,” I said: “there is a justice of one man, we say, and, I suppose, also of an entire city.” “Assuredly,” said he. “Is not the city larger than the man?” “It is larger,” he said. “Then, perhaps, there would be more justice in the larger object and more easy to apprehend.
The parts of a person are not people and have no rights of their own. I am obligated to my body, not for its own sake, but for my sake. The parts of a city are people and they do have rights of their own. The city is obligated to its people, for their own sake, not merely for the role they play in society. There is no business of the city over and above the good of its citizens. If it cannot maintain or improve that, it has no business.The business of the city, over and above that of the citizens, is the good of the whole. — Fooloso4
What matters more is the system and how it works - or, better, how the citizens (including the rulers) make it work.It is question of who or what rules. In the just city and soul reason rules. In other cities and souls some other part, spirited or appetitive, leads. — Fooloso4
I think you will admit it is not the traditional interpretation — Ludwig V
Whether, and how far, that argument works is the issue. — Ludwig V
To start with, the theory of forms sits in the background ... — Ludwig V
But his analysis is presented as if were a dissection. — Ludwig V
The parts of a person are not people and have no rights of their own. — Ludwig V
The city is obligated to its people, for their own sake, not merely for the role they play in society. — Ludwig V
There is no business of the city over and above the good of its citizens — Ludwig V
I'm all in favour of that. I was delighted when that approach began, though I have lost touch somewhat with how it has developed. It was a relief to be relieved of the chronology question. It was never clear enough to be helpful and the arguments for it were always suspiciously circular.The dialogues are not doctrines surrounded by window dressing. The dramatic setting and action are important, not to be ignored or abstracted from when Plato is discussed in terms of theories and doctrines. — Fooloso4
Well, that goes at least part of the way towards what I'm hammering at.If I understand you correctly the point is that there is no clear divisions. I agree with that, but I think Plato points to that problem rather than maintaining the divisions. A world of Forms is not the world we live in. A world populated by people who are either rational or spirited or appetitive is not the world we live in. Our world is, as Socrates says, messy, things are mixed and blended. — Fooloso4
No, it's not that simple. We have to re-calibrate our view of Plato's view of the value of truth. You might say it is a welcome element of pragmatism, but that implies quite a change.If noble lie is accepted as the correct translation then the issue is whether and why such a lie is needed. — Fooloso4
I'm not sure I quite understand that. I think that the criteria for a just society will not be the same as the criteria for a just person. I think that the analogy between society and people is tempting, but radically misleading - just as the analogy of the ship of state is tempting but misleading.I do not see it as "the theory of forms" but as the problem of knowledge of justice, or, rather our lack of such knowledge. Unless what justice is is something known then we are in the realm of opinion. This is our natural starting point. The task then is to try and determine what seems to be the best opinion when it comes to matters of justice and the just life. — Fooloso4
Tell me about it. But if there is a part of me that wants to do it, and another part that does, I am not in conflict with myself, and the problem is misrepresented. Although the temptation to describe the unwanted behaviour as not really me is almost irresistible.But we are often at odds with ourselves. If I want to be healthy I should not sit on the couch eating cake. I might claim that I am free to do this or not do it, and even though there is a part of me that does not want to do it, I may end sitting on the couch eating cake anyway. — Fooloso4
Sure. But the city as an institution has neither heart nor soul of its own; it is what it is because of the people who live in and by it. People are an end in themselves; the city is not, nor is any other social institution.There are things we owe to the city. — Fooloso4
What stands as the good of the people is a difficult question. I have another - what good is a good of the people that benefits no-one? Can anything that benefits only some of the people count as the good of the people?As individuals? What stands as the good of the people? What I might regard as good for me might not be what you regard as good for you. — Fooloso4
We have to re-calibrate our view of Plato's view of the value of truth. — Ludwig V
I think that the criteria for a just society will not be the same as the criteria for a just person. — Ludwig V
“Then, perhaps, there would be more justice in the larger object and more easy to apprehend.
But if there is a part of me that wants to do it, and another part that does, I am not in conflict with myself, and the problem is misrepresented. — Ludwig V
But the city as an institution has neither heart nor soul of its own — Ludwig V
The puzzle is why people will sometimes put the good of the city above their own or anyone else's good. — Ludwig V
Well, I don't subscribe to Kant's view. I guess it depends on circumstances, with a bias towards telling the truth.The truth may be that about certain things at certain times sometimes it is better to lie. — Fooloso4
"Myth" is complicated. For me, a myth is a story that has acquired so much significance that it no longer matters much whether it is true or false. Yes, every society has those.The truth is, all societies have their stories, their myths, their lies. — Fooloso4
Yes, it is. The idea of separate parts is a way of dissociating and avoiding it. But what is needed is a resolution of the conflict or at least a way of living with it.Do you mean another part that does not? In that case you both want to do it and not do it. Isn't that a conflict? — Fooloso4
Ah, yes, so they do. But it too often means very undesirable things, such as thinking that behaviour that would be immoral between individuals is ok between cities. Or thinking that criticism of one's city is always to be rejected. It isn't necessarily a good thing.In line with the question of noble lies consider allegiance to the fatherland and/or mother earth. Patriots consider their state or country or homeland as more than just an institution. — Fooloso4
But is it? Anyway, their reason for believing that is not true - i.e. a bad reason.People come to believe that the good of the city is their own good. — Fooloso4
But is it? Anyway, their reason for believing that is not true - i.e. a bad reason. — Ludwig V
Why doesn't he worry about the education of everyone else?What is at issue is the education of the guardians. — Fooloso4
The best way - and the only safe way - to get them to believe that the good of the ciry is their own good is to ensure that the good of the city really is for their own good.They must believe that the good of the city is their own good if they are to protect it even if they die doing so. — Fooloso4
No. It is an indication that reform of the city is needed. The lie just hides the problem.It there reason for believing is not true that is an indication that a lie is needed. — Fooloso4
That makes them no different from the guardians.A mercenary will only fight if it benefits them. — Fooloso4
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