#20049
Mentioned in 1 episodes

Laws

Book • 361
In 'The Laws,' Plato presents a comprehensive dialogue on the establishment and governance of an ideal state.

The dialogue involves three characters: the Athenian Stranger, Clinias from Crete, and Megillus from Sparta.

It discusses the purpose of laws as instruments to cultivate virtue and ensure the harmony of the state, rather than merely regulating behavior.

The text outlines a detailed framework for the structure of government, including a mixed constitution balancing monarchy and democracy, and the role of the Nocturnal Council in ensuring ethical and legal standards.

Plato also addresses the importance of moral education, the regulation of family and economic activities, and the distribution of wealth to prevent social unrest.

The dialogue emphasizes the integration of moral principles with legal directives and the role of religion in fostering social cohesion and moral development.

The ultimate goal of the state, according to Plato, is to create an environment where citizens can live virtuously and happily, with laws that promote the highest good and align individual interests with the collective welfare.

Mentioned by

Mentioned in 1 episodes

Mentioned as the work tellingly named after Plato's work of the same name.
HoP 325 - Platonic Love - Gemistos Plethon
Mentioned by Peter Adamson as prescribing a top-down political structure in his works.
HoP 339 - I’d Like to Thank the Academy - Florentine Platonism
Mentioned by Donald Robertson and Robin Waterfield as a significant work by Plato.
Plato of Athens, with Robin Waterfield
Mentioned by Ron Dodson ; it discusses the basis of societies and their shared ways of life.
Episode 1199: Ending the Financialization of America w/ Ron Dodson

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