Plato Equality

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In America today we tend to take political equality for granted. Even if we differ in abilities and outcomes, we still accept the notion that “all men are created equal,” as the Declaration of Independence has it. That everyone is entitled to an equal say in the political system thus seems to most people completely logical. Most people in contemporary society therefore view democracy as perhaps the only fundamentally just form of government; it is an ideal that society aspires toward. Many also see democracy as the best way of maintaining liberty and respect for human rights against government control. The ancient Greek philosopher Plato, however, did not see things in this way. Despite living in Athens, the most prominent democracy in the …show more content…

He argues that in the same way as a doctor practices medicine for the sake of the patient’s health and a captain commands and navigates a ship for the sake of the crew, so likewise the statesman rules for the sake of the people (Plato, p.91-92). The political leadership must thus in a sense be separate from the body politic in order to rule in the common interest and be skilled in the art of politics and of good character that they may make sound judgements, even as a ship’s captain must be separate from the crew so that his orders will only have the best interests of the voyage in mind and must also be skilled at navigating to reach the destination. As Plato sums it up directly, “no ruler of any kind, qua ruler, exercises his authority, whatever its sphere, with his own interest in view, but that of his subject in view” (Plato, p.92). If ruling is, as Plato argues, simply a skill that requires to specialized knowledge and experience, then it follows that rulers ought to be those who possess this skill. I believe that this view of ruling is key to Plato’s understanding of how politics ought to work. Because, for him, it is simply a matter of course that the best political system will be the one which is best suited to providing those skilled politically with authority in the state; by his view, democracy fares poorly in this regard. In The Republic, Plato seems to compare democracy to a poorly managed ship. Extending his analogy of the captain and his crew, he supposes a state of affairs in which the captain is deaf and short-sighted and poorly skilled. In the absence of real leadership, the crew seeks to control the ship themselves. They form factions and quarrel among themselves; because they do not understand navigation, they have no concept of what they ought to be doing. Their only idea of good seamanship is getting the captain to give them what they want, and it degenerates into a

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