Plato: Philosophy as Politics

Abstract

One of the elements that obstruct the access to a presumed meaning of Plato’s doctrine is the use of the conventional meaning of the term “philosophia”, that is the signification that has prevailed after Aristotle. In order to eliminate this anachronism, it is necessary to review the meanings that the term had before Plato and in his dialogues. We should see that for the founder of the Academy philosophy was not a purely contemplative act, but one that was concerned with politics. In his opinion, philosophy as dialectics was the art of contentious reasoning, of continuous and everlasting validation of true opinions. This method does not lead to truth; it substitutes the truth – and all this happens in the field of language. Thus philosophy is also a way to govern and make politics. Ergo the expression “philosopher king” does not unite terms that were previously opposites, but rather expresses the need that this model of making politics takes the place of the already established political power.

Authors and Affiliations

Sorin Bocancea

Keywords

Related Articles

Rationality at the Limits and the Limits of Rationality:The Question of the Integrity and Existence of the Human Species

The purpose of this article is to address the question of our responsibility as human beings, by taking into consideration the intersection between ethics and science. I intend to prove that the issues raised by the exis...

Reading desire

Guillaume Sibertin-Blanc, Deleuze et L’Anti Œdipe. La production du desir, Paris : PUF, 2010

Interest as Mirror to Our Own Self

Patrick Stokes, Kierkegaard’s Mirrors Interest, Self and Moral Vision, Hampshire, New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010

Pouvoir foucaldien et sélection naturelle. Une comparaison et une divergence

This paper has a triple aim. First of all, it makes a comparison between Foucault’s notion of power relations and the notion of natural selection as it has been developed, since Darwin, by evolutionary biology. A number...

La compréhension blanche. Herméneutique phénoménologique et révélation de la chair poétale

Built upon the basic postulates of phenomenologic hermeneutics, this approach discusses the distinction between the poetic and the poetal body, investigating the possibility of the latter to reveal itself to the comprehe...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP129215
  • DOI -
  • Views 97
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Sorin Bocancea (2009). Plato: Philosophy as Politics. Meta: Research in Hermeneutics, Phenomenology, and Practical Philosophy, 1(1), 155-180. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-129215