Cephalus, the Myth of Er, and Remaining Virtuous in Unvirtuous Times
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.14195/2183-4105_14_5Palavras-chave:
Republic, conventional virtue, Ceph - alus, Myth of Er, ancient political philosophy, relation between convention and philosophyResumo
Through a reading of the Myth of Er and Socrates' conversation with Cephalus, I will argue that merely conventional virtue is highly unstable and unreliable. Virtue acquired by convention proves foundationless outside the confines of the political regime that establishes those conventions, and a tendency toward an unreflective moral complacency on the part of the conventionally virtuous leaves them in particular danger of committing unjust actions. Socrates recommends the study of philosophy because it can ground conventionally acquired virtue and, even more importantly, because it is capable of shaking the moral complacency that afflicts the conventionally virtuous.
Keywords: Republic, conventional virtue, Cephalus, Myth of Er, Ancient Political philosophy, relation between convention and philosophy
Downloads
##submission.downloads##
Publicado
Como Citar
Edição
Secção
Licença
Os autores conservam os direitos de autor e concedem à revista o direito de primeira publicação, com o trabalho simultaneamente licenciado sob a Licença Creative Commons Attribution que permite a partilha do trabalho com reconhecimento da autoria e publicação inicial nesta revista.