Cover image for Plato's Political Philosophy : The Cave.
Plato's Political Philosophy : The Cave.
Title:
Plato's Political Philosophy : The Cave.
Author:
Huard, Roger L.
ISBN:
9780875865324
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (109 pages)
Contents:
Chapter 1. The Myth of the Cave -- The Story -- The Structure of Knowledge -- Periagoge: The Turning -- The Existential Question: The Way Up -- The Social Question: The Way Down -- Chapter 2. Structure of the World -- Chapter 3. Bad Plato -- Freedom -- Equality -- Truth (and Lies) -- Art -- Chapter 4. Sailing Back from Syracuse -- Public and Private -- Good Plato -- Plato and Freedom -- Plato and Equality -- Plato and the Truth -- Plato and Art -- Chapter 5. Epilogue -- Bibliography.
Abstract:
Roger Huard invites readers to explore Plato s myth of the Cave, which is central to his magnum opus on political philosophy, The Republic. Using The Cave as a key, Huard debunks conventional interpretations of to Plato s political thought (conservative and progressive interpretations alike), and unfolds Plato's notions about the structure of the world, his ideas about justice and human well being, challenging many of our conceptions of the cosmos and political beliefs.The primary goal of this exploration is to arrive at an understanding of Plato s political ideas -- an understanding that is not saddled with the misconceptions that plague contemporary interpretations of his thinking, conservative and progressive alike. The author argues further that this re-examination provides a way to look at the human condition that is significantly different from most available perspectives on the matter and that, by virtue of this difference, challenges both our conceptions of the cosmos and many of our deeply held political beliefs.The author provides a reinterpretation of the cave myth that discusses specifically the structure of knowledge that is imbedded in the myth as well as the concept of philosophy and the philosopher that it details especially in terms of the relationship of the philosopher to the greater social order.An examination follows of the structure of the world that Plato s myth rests upon. This is important because this structure is fundamentally different from current scientific and religious conceptions of the cosmos. It is also significant because Plato s notions about the structure of the world are linked to his ideas about justice and human well being, a link that is forged (albeit implicitly) in his Myth of the Cave. The author then proceeds to a discussion of four topics that separate contemporary political thinking from Plato s:

freedom, equality, truth, and art A two-part examination of these topics demonstrates, first, that Plato s thoughts on these matters are not as we conventionally think them to be; and second, turns a critical gaze on how contemporary political thought may be mistaken about its own ideas concerning freedom, equality, truth and art. A key feature in this re-examination is the differing conceptions we have from Plato s on the private and public realms and how these realms are connected to our ideas about economics and politics.The book concludes with a discussion on the importance of Plato s political philosophy and how it is linked at a fundamental level to some of our cherished political beliefs about justice, human well-being and community.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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