Author: Plato
Translator: Jong-hyun Park
Publisher: Seogwangsa
Hardcover | 738 pages | 223*152mm
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>>>This book is written in Korean. |
About This Book
Why do men behave justly? Is it because they fear societal punishment?
Are they trembling before notions of divine retribution? Do the stronger
elements of society scare the weak into submission in the name of law?
Or do men behave justly because it is good for them to do so? Is
justice, regardless of its rewards and punishments, a good thing in and
of itself? How do we define justice? Plato sets out to answer these
questions in the Republic. He wants to define justice, and to define it
in such a way as to show that justice is worthwhile in and of itself. He
meets these two challenges with a single solution: a definition of
justice that appeals to human psychology, rather than to perceived
behavior.
Plato’s strategy in the Republic is to first explicate the primary
notion of societal, or political, justice, and then to derive an
analogous concept of individual justice. In Books II, III, and IV, Plato
identifies political justice as harmony in a structured political body.
An ideal society consists of three main classes of people—producers
(craftsmen, farmers, artisans, etc.), auxiliaries (warriors), and
guardians (rulers); a society is just when relations between these three
classes are right. Each group must perform its appropriate function, and
only that function, and each must be in the right position of power in
relation to the others. Rulers must rule, auxiliaries must uphold
rulers’ convictions, and producers must limit themselves to exercising
whatever skills nature granted them (farming, blacksmithing, painting,
etc.) Justice is a principle of specialization: a principle that
requires that each person fulfill the societal role to which nature
fitted him and not interfere in any other business.
At the end of Book IV, Plato tries to show that individual justice
mirrors political justice. He claims that the soul of every individual
has a three part structure analagous to the three classes of a society.
There is a rational part of the soul, which seeks after truth and is
responsible for our philosophical inclinations; a spirited part of the
soul, which desires honor and is responsible for our feelings of anger
and indignation; and an appetitive part of the soul, which lusts after
all sorts of things, but money most of all (since money must be used to
fulfill any other base desire). The just individual can be defined in
analogy with the just society; the three parts of his soul achieve the
requisite relationships of power and influence in regard to one another.
In a just individual, the rational part of the soul rules, the spirited
part of the soul supports this rule, and the appetitive part of the soul
submits and follows wherever reason leads. Put more plainly: in a just
individual, the entire soul aims at fulfilling the desires of the
rational part, much as in the just society the entire community aims at
fulfilling whatever the rulers will.
The parallels between the just society and the just individual run deep.
Each of the three classes of society, in fact, is dominated by one of
the three parts of the soul. Producers are dominated by their
appetites—their urges for money, luxury, and pleasure. Warriors are
dominated by their spirits, which make them courageous. Rulers are
dominated by their rational faculties and strive for wisdom. Books V
through VII focus on the rulers as the philosopher kings.
In a series of three analogies—the allegories of the sun, the line, and
the cave—Plato explains who these individuals are while hammering out
his theory of the Forms. Plato explains that the world is divided into
two realms, the visible (which we grasp with our senses) and the
intelligible (which we only grasp with our mind). The visible world is
the universe we see around us. The intelligible world is comprised of
the Forms—abstract, changeless absolutes such as Goodness, Beauty,
Redness, and Sweetness that exist in permanent relation to the visible
realm and make it possible. (An apple is red and sweet, the theory goes,
because it participates in the Forms of Redness and Sweetness.) Only the
Forms are objects of knowledge, because only they possess the eternal
unchanging truth that the mind—not the senses—must apprehend.
Only those whose minds are trained to grasp the Forms—the
philosophers—can know anything at all. In particular, what the
philosophers must know in order to become able rulers is the Form of the
Good—the source of all other Forms, and of knowledge, truth, and beauty.
Plato cannot describe this Form directly, but he claims that it is to
the intelligible realm what the sun is to the visible realm. Using the
allegory of the cave, Plato paints an evocative portrait of the
philosopher’s soul moving through various stages of cognition
(represented by the line) through the visible realm into the
intelligible, and finally grasping the Form of the Good. The aim of
education is not to put knowledge into the soul, but to put the right
desires into the soul—to fill the soul with a lust for truth, so that it
desires to move past the visible world, into the intelligible,
ultimately to the Form of the Good.
Philosophers form the only class of men to possess knowledge and are
also the most just men. Their souls, more than others, aim to fulfill
the desires of the rational part. After comparing the philosopher king
to the most unjust type of man—represented by the tyrant, who is ruled
entirely by his non-rational appetites—Plato claims that justice is
worthwhile for its own sake. In Book IX he presents three arguments for
the conclusion that it is desirable to be just. By sketching a
psychological portrait of the tyrant, he attempts to prove that
injustice tortures a man’s psyche, whereas a just soul is a healthy,
happy one, untroubled and calm. Next he argues that, though each of the
three main character types—money-loving, honor-loving, and
truth-loving—have their own conceptions of pleasure and of the
corresponding good life—each choosing his own life as the most
pleasant—only the philosopher can judge because only he has experienced
all three types of pleasure. The others should accept the philosopher’s
judgment and conclude that the pleasures associated with the
philosophical are most pleasant and thus that the just life is also most
pleasant. He tries to demonstrate that only philosophical pleasure is
really pleasure at all; all other pleasure is nothing more than
cessation of pain.
One might notice that none of these arguments actually prove that
justice is desirable apart from its consequences—instead, they establish
that justice is always accompanied by true pleasure. In all probability,
none of these is actually supposed to serve as the main reason why
justice is desirable. Instead, the desirability of justice is likely
connected to the intimate relationship between the just life and the
Forms. The just life is good in and of itself because it involves
grasping these ultimate goods, and imitating their order and harmony,
thus incorporating them into one’s own life. Justice is good, in other
words, because it is connected to the greatest good, the Form of the
Good.
Plato ends the Republic on a surprising note. Having defined justice and
established it as the greatest good, he banishes poets from his city.
Poets, he claims, appeal to the basest part of the soul by imitating
unjust inclinations. By encouraging us to indulge ignoble emotions in
sympathy with the characters we hear about, poetry encourages us to
indulge these emotions in life. Poetry, in sum, makes us unjust. In
closing, Plato relates the myth of Er, which describes the trajectory of
a soul after death. Just souls are rewarded for one thousand lifetimes,
while unjust ones are punished for the same amount of time. Each soul
then must choose its next life.
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