Plato's Republic Essay

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Plato once said “The beginning is the most important part of the work” (P.p.22) and in his book, The Republic, Plato began the discussion of what an ideal society could be. Within this discussion, he was able to coin the term; “a just individual” while also addressing the criticisms of an Athenian democracy. However, when compared to a modern democracy, his “just society” follows the same rules and acts identical rather than as the alternative.
Plato’s concepts of a just individual (Philosopher-Kings) centers around the idea that the entire soul aims at fulfilling the desires of the rational part, much as in the just society, the entire community aims at fulfilling the desires of the leaders (whatever the rulers will). Any analysis of Plato’s models will communicate that he addresses everything in nature as part of a hierarchy. The individual soul, in specific, is too hierarchical. The pyramid is made up of appetitive, spirited, and reason. Plato believes that reason should govern the individual, but the appetite must also be regarded if the person’s soul …show more content…

Conversely, he did stress that justice begins with the quality of the individual in that, “Justice means minding one’s own business and not meddling with other men’s concerns.” (P.p.127). While most interpretations believe that this is the correct definition of justice, Plato also offers that justice can be viewed when the divisions of labor work in harmony. For instance, Plato argued that when one finds justice in a new city, justice is not centralized to one person, but rather to the city as a collective whole. Only when one attains justice in the perfect city, working in congregation with the three components of the soul (appetitive, spirited and reasoning), and under the division of labor, then the Philosopher-kings may find true

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