Description

Book Synopsis
Friedland presents the Laws, Plato's longest dialogue, as a drama that must be interpreted with close and sustained attention to each of its three characters. He argues that Megillos, seen by most commentators as the most obtuse character in the dialogue, is in fact a man of few words but of surprising capacity for reflection. This capacity, and the crisis to which it brings him, is key to understanding the Laws' exploration of human nature, permanently drawn both to. The political project outlined in the dialogue, with its almost programmatic focus on the mundane, is a genuinely philosophical opportunity to consider the relationship between competing demands for human beings - between divine and animal nature, and also including the always tense but necessary antagonisms and affinities between politics and human sexuality.

Table of Contents
Introduction Chapter 1. Megillos Chapter 2. The Great Man in the City: Kleinias of Knossos Chapter 3. What is Political Philosophy? Chapter 4. Responsibility, Indignation, and the “Instinct of the Secondary Role” Chapter 5. Nature Chapter 6. Law Chapter 7. Concluding Remarks

The Spartan Drama of Plato’s Laws

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    A Hardback by Eli Friedland

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      View other formats and editions of The Spartan Drama of Plato’s Laws by Eli Friedland

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 14/02/2020
      ISBN13: 9781793603685, 978-1793603685
      ISBN10: 1793603685

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Friedland presents the Laws, Plato's longest dialogue, as a drama that must be interpreted with close and sustained attention to each of its three characters. He argues that Megillos, seen by most commentators as the most obtuse character in the dialogue, is in fact a man of few words but of surprising capacity for reflection. This capacity, and the crisis to which it brings him, is key to understanding the Laws' exploration of human nature, permanently drawn both to. The political project outlined in the dialogue, with its almost programmatic focus on the mundane, is a genuinely philosophical opportunity to consider the relationship between competing demands for human beings - between divine and animal nature, and also including the always tense but necessary antagonisms and affinities between politics and human sexuality.

      Table of Contents
      Introduction Chapter 1. Megillos Chapter 2. The Great Man in the City: Kleinias of Knossos Chapter 3. What is Political Philosophy? Chapter 4. Responsibility, Indignation, and the “Instinct of the Secondary Role” Chapter 5. Nature Chapter 6. Law Chapter 7. Concluding Remarks

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