A Journey Into Platonic Politics: Plato's Laws
"One should not take up the Laws as a plan for a new society nor as a means to critique one's own nation and its customs. Indeed, the Laws benefits most those readers who are comfortable in their lover for and allegiance to the standards and institutions of their time and place. Perhaps this claim sounds surprising. But it should surprise only those who believe that love and loyalty are deep set obstacles to thought and reflections. In contrast, such attachments, and not their facile critique, are precisely what lead us to take a healthy interest in and reflect fruitfully upon other people's ways. The characters of the Laws recognize this truth as well. They recommend that the highest body of the new city, a council of thinkers and legislators, young and old, should regularly send spies to other nations, to search out the "beauties" in their foreign habits, beauties that might—or might not—be able to be transplanted back to the council's city. The following study of the Laws attempts to do something of the same thing, to read Plato's dialogue as, in effect, a foreign country, through which readers are led as if they were on a mission for our own Nocturnal Council." —Albert Keith Whitaker, from the Introduction
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A Journey Into Platonic Politics: Plato's Laws
"One should not take up the Laws as a plan for a new society nor as a means to critique one's own nation and its customs. Indeed, the Laws benefits most those readers who are comfortable in their lover for and allegiance to the standards and institutions of their time and place. Perhaps this claim sounds surprising. But it should surprise only those who believe that love and loyalty are deep set obstacles to thought and reflections. In contrast, such attachments, and not their facile critique, are precisely what lead us to take a healthy interest in and reflect fruitfully upon other people's ways. The characters of the Laws recognize this truth as well. They recommend that the highest body of the new city, a council of thinkers and legislators, young and old, should regularly send spies to other nations, to search out the "beauties" in their foreign habits, beauties that might—or might not—be able to be transplanted back to the council's city. The following study of the Laws attempts to do something of the same thing, to read Plato's dialogue as, in effect, a foreign country, through which readers are led as if they were on a mission for our own Nocturnal Council." —Albert Keith Whitaker, from the Introduction
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A Journey Into Platonic Politics: Plato's Laws

A Journey Into Platonic Politics: Plato's Laws

by Albert Keith Whitaker
A Journey Into Platonic Politics: Plato's Laws

A Journey Into Platonic Politics: Plato's Laws

by Albert Keith Whitaker

Paperback(New Edition)

$70.99 
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Overview

"One should not take up the Laws as a plan for a new society nor as a means to critique one's own nation and its customs. Indeed, the Laws benefits most those readers who are comfortable in their lover for and allegiance to the standards and institutions of their time and place. Perhaps this claim sounds surprising. But it should surprise only those who believe that love and loyalty are deep set obstacles to thought and reflections. In contrast, such attachments, and not their facile critique, are precisely what lead us to take a healthy interest in and reflect fruitfully upon other people's ways. The characters of the Laws recognize this truth as well. They recommend that the highest body of the new city, a council of thinkers and legislators, young and old, should regularly send spies to other nations, to search out the "beauties" in their foreign habits, beauties that might—or might not—be able to be transplanted back to the council's city. The following study of the Laws attempts to do something of the same thing, to read Plato's dialogue as, in effect, a foreign country, through which readers are led as if they were on a mission for our own Nocturnal Council." —Albert Keith Whitaker, from the Introduction

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780761826897
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 04/29/2004
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 254
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.58(d)

About the Author

Albert Keith Whitaker is Adjunct Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Boston College. He earned his Ph.D. from the Committee on Social Thought at the University of Chicago.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Acknowledgments
Chapter 2 Introduction
Chapter 3 The End of the Road
Chapter 4 Edifying Sod
Chapter 5 The Old Time Baloney
Chapter 6 Upholding the Law
Chapter 7 Union, Now and Forever
Chapter 8 Mixed Drinks
Chapter 9 Peculiar Institutions
Chapter 10 Mars and Venus
Chapter 11 Doctor of Philosophy
Chapter 12 The Blessings of Intolerance
Chapter 13 Testaments
Chapter 14 Point of Departure
Chapter 15 Conclusion
Chapter 16 Appendices
Chapter 17 Bibliography
Chapter 18 Index
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