Injustice and instability in Plato’s Republic

the case of the timocracy and its rulers

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DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14195/2183-4105_25_4

Palavras-chave:

Republic, timocracy, soul, instability, fragmentation

Resumo

This paper argues that the timocracy, the first of the four corrupt cities described in Plato’s Republic, is a fragmented regime ruled by individuals with a fragmented and unstable character. The deterioration of the elements forming the positive cycle that links the good nature of Callipolis’guardians and the good quality of their education causes three levels of instability in the timocracy: the compresence of elements belonging to three different regimes, the destruction of the guardians’unity due to the emergency of the oikos, and the split of the oikos in which the timocratic man grows up.

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Publicado

2024-09-09

Como Citar

Fossati, M. (2024). Injustice and instability in Plato’s Republic: the case of the timocracy and its rulers. Plato Journal, 25, 55–66. https://doi.org/10.14195/2183-4105_25_4

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