Table of Contents
Preface
Guide to Pronunciation
1. Philosophy and Ordinary Life (Reading in the Republic: Book I)
Plato's Dialogical Style
The Sociology of Knowledge and Questioning Authority
Appearance and Reality and Questioning Common Sense
Normative Philosophy Versus Empirical Enquiry
Absolute Philosophy Versus Relative Convention
The Normative/Empirical Distinction in a Moralized Cosmos
Plato's Diaglogical Style Reconsidered
Some Initial Reservations
Suggestions for Further Reading
2. Politics and the Ideal City (Reading in the Republic: Books II-V)
Plato Versus Hobbes on Justice and Happiness
The Construction and Rationale of the Ideal City
Art and Censorship
The Living Conditions of the Guardians
Useful Falsehoods
Force in the City and Soul
Plato Versus Hobbes on Substantive and Instrumental Reason
Suggestions for Further Reading
3. Plato's Metaphysics (Reading in the Republic: Books VI-VII)
Metaphysics, Ontology, and Epistemology
The Divided Line as an Overview of Plato's Metaphysics
Explaining Plato's Metaphysics on its Own Terms
The Doctrine of the FormsRealism Versus Nominalism
Dialectic and the Form of God
Problems in Plato's Metaphysics Interpreted on its Own Terms
Interpreting Plato's Metaphysics from Other Points of ViewAcknowledging Finitude
Suggestions for Further Reading
4. Plato's Metaphysics and Imperfect Justice (Reading in the Republic : Books VIII-X)
The Types of Imperfect Justice
Ranking the Types
Proofs that Most Just Person is Happiest
Critique of the Proofs
The Genesis of Imperfection
Accounts of Imperfection in Subsequent Philosophy and Political Theory
Art Versus Philosophy Revisited and the Myth of Er
Suggestions for Furhter Reading
5. Politics in the Face of Finitude (Reading in the Republic: Review of Book VIII)
Aristocracy, Timocracy, Oligarchy, and Tyranny Rejected
Democracy by Default
Another ViewInterpreting Plato as a Proponent of Democracy
Appropriating Plato's Criticism of Democracy
Democracy and Philosophy
Suggestions for Further Reading
Selecting Bibliography
Index