Plato’s Socrates and the law code of Athens

The paper claims that Socrates’ disawoval of wisdom in the Apology is not to be taken too seriously since it belongs to the rhetorical strategy of the sovereign philosopher who speaks in front of the crowd. In the political arena, the philosopher admits his obligation to become a philosopher-king, b...

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Main Author: Jinek, Jakub
Format: Article
Language:ces
Published: Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Philosophy 2021-08-01
Series:Filosofický časopis
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spelling doaj-f45ecc552f9949ba86e6f07e7c45fbb22021-09-02T06:18:02ZcesCzech Academy of Sciences, Institute of PhilosophyFilosofický časopis0015-18312570-92322021-08-0169Special Issue 210312410.46854/fc.2021.2s.103Plato’s Socrates and the law code of AthensJinek, JakubThe paper claims that Socrates’ disawoval of wisdom in the Apology is not to be taken too seriously since it belongs to the rhetorical strategy of the sovereign philosopher who speaks in front of the crowd. In the political arena, the philosopher admits his obligation to become a philosopher-king, but only under a condition: only if his fellow-citizens would freely recognize his legitimacy to rule. As a potential ruler, he has to take into consideration the existing law code which is to be respected if his intended political reform should take place and succeed. The paper stresses that despite Plato’s condemnation of the democratic way of life current in Athens, he never criticizes Athenian law code as such; Solonian legal reform forms a starting point for his own political project. As a brief glance at the proposed law code of Magnesia in Plato’s Laws makes clear, the Platonic philosopher is full of respect to the Athenian legislative tradition.
collection DOAJ
language ces
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jinek, Jakub
spellingShingle Jinek, Jakub
Plato’s Socrates and the law code of Athens
Filosofický časopis
author_facet Jinek, Jakub
author_sort Jinek, Jakub
title Plato’s Socrates and the law code of Athens
title_short Plato’s Socrates and the law code of Athens
title_full Plato’s Socrates and the law code of Athens
title_fullStr Plato’s Socrates and the law code of Athens
title_full_unstemmed Plato’s Socrates and the law code of Athens
title_sort plato’s socrates and the law code of athens
publisher Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Philosophy
series Filosofický časopis
issn 0015-1831
2570-9232
publishDate 2021-08-01
description The paper claims that Socrates’ disawoval of wisdom in the Apology is not to be taken too seriously since it belongs to the rhetorical strategy of the sovereign philosopher who speaks in front of the crowd. In the political arena, the philosopher admits his obligation to become a philosopher-king, but only under a condition: only if his fellow-citizens would freely recognize his legitimacy to rule. As a potential ruler, he has to take into consideration the existing law code which is to be respected if his intended political reform should take place and succeed. The paper stresses that despite Plato’s condemnation of the democratic way of life current in Athens, he never criticizes Athenian law code as such; Solonian legal reform forms a starting point for his own political project. As a brief glance at the proposed law code of Magnesia in Plato’s Laws makes clear, the Platonic philosopher is full of respect to the Athenian legislative tradition.
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