The City-State of the Soul: Self-Constitution in Plato's Republic offers a reinterpretation of Plato's philosophical masterpiece, which presents the moral life as consisting, most deeply, in the constituting or "founding" of one's own soul. Plato wants to persuade the brightest and most ambitious that the life of justice and, in particular, of just governance puts their talents and ambitions to their best possible use.
The City-State of the Soul: Self-Constitution in Plato's Republic offers a reinterpretation of Plato's philosophical masterpiece, which presents the moral life as consisting, most deeply, in the constituting or "founding" of one's own soul. Plato wants to persuade the brightest and most ambitious that the life of justice and, in particular, of just governance puts their talents and ambitions to their best possible use.
Preface Introduction Chapter One: Why Is Thrasymachus So Angry? Chapter Two: Genealogies of Justice Chapter Three: Utopia and Its Founder Chapter Four: Philosophy and the Founder's Perspective Chapter Five: Why the Philosophers Will Govern Introduction to Part Two Chapter Six: The Soul and its Parts (I) Chapter Seven: The Soul and its Parts (II) Chapter Eight: Justice and Action Chapter Nine: Freedom Bibliography
Preface Introduction Chapter One: Why Is Thrasymachus So Angry? Chapter Two: Genealogies of Justice Chapter Three: Utopia and Its Founder Chapter Four: Philosophy and the Founder's Perspective Chapter Five: Why the Philosophers Will Govern Introduction to Part Two Chapter Six: The Soul and its Parts (I) Chapter Seven: The Soul and its Parts (II) Chapter Eight: Justice and Action Chapter Nine: Freedom Bibliography
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