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  1. Despite what the indoctrination camps claim, the founders did not agree with Plato and did not found a republic. Franklin’s acknowledgement that the natural course of corruption is the seed...

  2. Jun 26, 2019 · This work examines Plato’s dialogues on politics, virtue, beauty, the good, the noble, and pleasure in order to offer a comprehensive assessment of Plato’s understanding of politics, and of the relationship between politics and philosophy.

  3. Platonism. In Plato's Republic, the character of Socrates is highly critical of democracy and instead proposes, as an ideal political state, a hierarchal system of three classes: philosopher-kings or guardians who make the decisions, soldiers or "auxiliaries" who protect the society, and producers who create goods and do other work. [1]

  4. Sep 2, 2013 · The authors who so far have most closely scrutinized Franklin's political thought do not see the relevance of many of the younger Franklin's remarks on human nature, arbitrary government, or the nature of political dispute to his concept of politics.

    • Life – from Politics to Philosophy. Plato was born in Athens in c. 427 B.C.E. Until his mid-twenties, Athens was involved in a long and disastrous military conflict with Sparta, known as the Peloponnesian War.
    • The Threefold Task of Political Philosophy. Although the Republic, the Statesman, the Laws and a few shorter dialogues are considered to be the only strictly political dialogues of Plato, it can be argued that political philosophy was the area of his greatest concern.
    • The Quest for Justice in The Republic. One of the most fundamental ethical and political concepts is justice. It is a complex and ambiguous concept. It may refer to individual virtue, the order of society, as well as individual rights in contrast to the claims of the general social order.
    • The Best Political Order. Although large parts of the Republic are devoted to the description of an ideal state ruled by philosophers and its subsequent decline, the chief theme of the dialogue is justice.
  5. Setting aside issues of how to understand Plato’s theology in the Laws, there is the general question of why Plato thinks impiety will undermine the political system of Magnesia. It is easy enough to see why the deist and traditional theist pose a threat.

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  7. Apr 1, 2003 · Some think that Plato does not intend the Republic as a serious contribution to political thought, because its political musings are projections to clarify psychological claims crucial to the ethical theory that Plato does seriously intend. Others think that Plato intends political lessons strikingly different from what is suggested by the face ...

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