Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10316.2/41888
Title: Antianarchia: interpreting political thought in Plato
Authors: Lane, Melisssa
Keywords: Plato;Socrates;mouthpiece;politics;political theory;political philosophy;anarchy;tyranny;rule;office
Issue Date: 2016
Publisher: Imprensa da Universidade de Coimbra
Abstract: This paper outlines a defense of the project of seeking to interpret Plato’s political thought as a valid method of interpreting Plato. It does so in two stages: in the first part, by rebutting denials of the possibility of interpreting Plato’s thought at all; in the second part, by identifying one set of ideas arguably central to Plato’s political thought, namely, his profound rejection of political anarchy, understood in terms of the absence of the authority of officeholders and posited both as characteristic of democracy and as the origin of tyranny. This approach to anarchy and its relationship to tyranny is, I contend, a Platonic innovation (so far as we can judge from surviving texts), and must be understood against the background of Greek writings that straightforwardly opposed the two. I aim here to show, on the one hand, that denying tout court the project of seeking to interpret Plato’s political thought is an implausibly extreme position, and, on the other, that pursuing that project can bear valuable fruit.
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10316.2/41888
ISSN: 2079-7567
2183-4105 (PDF)
DOI: 10.14195/2183-4105_16_5
Rights: open access
Appears in Collections:Plato Journal

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