Plato, 427-347 B.C., Greek philosopher. In 407 B.C. he became a pupil and friend
of Socrates. After living for a time at the Syracuse court, Plato founded (c.387
B.C.) near Athens the most influential school of the ancient world, the Academy,
where he taught until his death. His most famous pupil there was Aristotle.
Plato's extant work is in the form of epistles and dialogues, divided according
to the probable order of composition. The early, or Socratic, dialogues, e.g.,
the Apology, Meno, and Gorgias, present Socrates in conversations that
illustrate his major ideas-the unity of virtue and knowledge and of virtue and
happiness. They also contain Plato's moving account of the last days and death
of Socrates. Plato's goal in dialogues of the middle years, e.g., the Republic,
Phaedo, Symposium, and Timaeus, was to show the rational relationship between
the soul, the state, and the cosmos. The later dialogues, e.g., the Laws and
Parmenides, contain treatises on law, mathematics, technical philosophic
problems, and natural science. Plato regarded the rational soul as immortal, and
he believed in a world soul and a Demiurge, the creator of the physical world.
He argued for the independent reality of Ideas, or Forms, as the immutable
archetypes of all temporal phenomena and as the only guarantee of ethical
standards and of objective scientific knowledge. Virtue consists in the harmony
of the human soul with the universe of Ideas, which assure order, intelligence,
and pattern to a world in constant flux. Supreme among them is the Idea of the
Good, analogous to the sun in the physical world. Only the philosopher, who
understands the harmony of all parts of the universe with the Idea of the Good,
is capable of ruling the just state. In Plato's various dialogues he touched
upon virtually every problem that has occupied subsequent philosophers; his
teachings have been among the most influential in the history of Western
civilization, and his works are counted among the world's finest literature.
The
Republic of Plato is the longest of his works with the exception of the Laws,
and is certainly the greatest of them. There are nearer approaches to modern
metaphysics in the Philebus and in the Sophist; the Politicus or Statesman is
more ideal; the form and institutions of the State are more clearly drawn out in
the Laws; as works of art, the Symposium and the Protagoras are of higher
excellence. But no other Dialogue of Plato has the same largeness of view and
the same perfection of style; no other shows an equal knowledge of the world, or
contains more of those thoughts which are new as well as old, and not of one age
only but of all. Nowhere in Plato is there a deeper irony or a greater wealth of
humor or imagery, or more dramatic power. Nor in any other of his writings is
the attempt made to interweave life and speculation, or to connect politics with
philosophy. The Republic is the centre around which the other Dialogues may be
grouped; here philosophy reaches the highest point to which ancient thinkers
ever attained. Plato among the Greeks, like Bacon among the moderns, was the
first who conceived a method of knowledge, although neither of them always
distinguished the bare outline or form from the substance of truth; and both of
them had to be content with an abstraction of science which was not yet
realized. He was the greatest metaphysical genius whom the world has seen; and
in him, more than in any other ancient thinker, the germs of future knowledge
are contained. The sciences of logic and psychology, which have supplied so many
instruments of thought to after-ages, are based upon the analyses of Socrates
and Plato. The principles of definition, the law of contradiction, the fallacy
of arguing in a circle, the distinction between the essence and accidents of a
thing or notion, between means and ends, between causes and conditions; also the
division of the mind into the rational, concupiscent, and irascible elements, or
of pleasures and desires into necessary and unnecessary --these and other great
forms of thought are all of them to be found in the Republic, and were probably
first invented by Plato. The greatest of all logical truths, and the one of
which writers on philosophy are most apt to lose sight, the difference between
words and things, has been most strenuously insisted on by him, although he has
not always avoided the confusion of them in his own writings. But he does not
bind up truth in logical formulae, --logic is still veiled in metaphysics; and
the science which he imagines to "contemplate all truth and all existence" is
very unlike the doctrine of the syllogism which Aristotle claims to have
discovered.
Neither must we forget that the Republic is but the third part of a still larger
design which was to have included an ideal history of Athens, as well as a
political and physical philosophy. The fragment of the Critias has given birth
to a world-famous fiction, second only in importance to the tale of Troy and the
legend of Arthur; and is said as a fact to have inspired some of the early
navigators of the sixteenth century. This mythical tale, of which the subject
was a history of the wars of the Athenians against the Island of Atlantis, is
supposed to be founded upon an unfinished poem of Solon, to which it would have
stood in the same relation as the writings of the logographers to the poems of
Homer. It would have told of a struggle for Liberty, intended to represent the
conflict of Persia and Hellas. We may judge from the noble commencement of the
Timaeus, from the fragment of the Critias itself, and from the third book of the
Laws, in what manner Plato would have treated this high argument. We can only
guess why the great design was abandoned; perhaps because Plato became sensible
of some incongruity in a fictitious history, or because he had lost his interest
in it, or because advancing years forbade the completion of it; and we may
please ourselves with the fancy that had this imaginary narrative ever been
finished, we should have found Plato himself sympathizing with the struggle for
Hellenic independence, singing a hymn of triumph over Marathon and Salamis,
perhaps making the reflection of Herodotus where he contemplates the growth of
the Athenian empire--"How brave a thing is freedom of speech, which has made the
Athenians so far exceed every other state of Hellas in greatness!" or, more
probably, attributing the victory to the ancient good order of Athens and to the
favor of Apollo and Athene.
Again, Plato may be regarded as the "captain" ('arhchegoz') or leader of a
goodly band of followers; for in the Republic is to be found the original of
Cicero's De Republica, of St. Augustine's City of God, of the Utopia of Sir
Thomas More, and of the numerous other imaginary States which are framed upon
the same model. The extent to which Aristotle or the Aristotelian school were
indebted to him in the Politics has been little recognized, and the recognition
is the more necessary because it is not made by Aristotle himself. The two
philosophers had more in common than they were conscious of; and probably some
elements of Plato remain still undetected in Aristotle. In English philosophy
too, many affinities may be traced, not only in the works of the Cambridge
Platonists, but in great original writers like Berkeley or Coleridge, to Plato
and his ideas. That there is a truth higher than experience, of which the mind
bears witness to herself, is a conviction which in our own generation has been
enthusiastically asserted, and is perhaps gaining ground. Of the Greek authors
who at the Renaissance brought a new life into the world Plato has had the
greatest influence. The Republic of Plato is also the first treatise upon
education, of which the writings of Milton and Locke, Rousseau, Jean Paul, and
Goethe are the legitimate descendants. Like Dante or Bunyan, he has a revelation
of another life; like Bacon, he is profoundly impressed with the un unity of
knowledge; in the early Church he exercised a real influence on theology, and at
the Revival of Literature on politics. Even the fragments of his words when
"repeated at second-hand" have in all ages ravished the hearts of men, who have
seen reflected in them their own higher nature. He is the father of idealism in
philosophy, in politics, in literature. And many of the latest conceptions of
modern thinkers and statesmen, such as the unity of knowledge, the reign of law,
and the equality of the sexes, have been anticipated in a dream by him.
ARGUMENT
The
argument of the Republic is the search after Justice, the nature of which is
first hinted at by Cephalus, the just and blameless old man --then discussed on
the basis of proverbial morality by Socrates and Polemarchus --then caricatured
by Thrasymachus and partially explained by Socrates --reduced to an abstraction
by Glaucon and Adeimantus, and having become invisible in the individual
reappears at length in the ideal State which is constructed by Socrates. The
first care of the rulers is to be education, of which an outline is drawn after
the old Hellenic model, providing only for an improved religion and morality,
and more simplicity in music and gymnastic, a manlier strain of poetry, and
greater harmony of the individual and the State. We are thus led on to the
conception of a higher State, in which "no man calls anything his own," and in
which there is neither "marrying nor giving in marriage," and "kings are
philosophers" and "philosophers are kings;" and there is another and higher
education, intellectual as well as moral and religious, of science as well as of
art, and not of youth only but of the whole of life. Such a State is hardly to
be realized in this world and would quickly degenerate. To the perfect ideal
succeeds the government of the soldier and the lover of honor, this again
declining into democracy, and democracy into tyranny, in an imaginary but
regular order having not much resemblance to the actual facts. When "the wheel
has come full circle" we do not begin again with a new period of human life; but
we have passed from the best to the worst, and there we end. The subject is then
changed and the old quarrel of poetry and philosophy which had been more lightly
treated in the earlier books of the Republic is now resumed and fought out to a
conclusion. Poetry is discovered to be an imitation thrice removed from the
truth, and Homer, as well as the dramatic poets, having been condemned as an
imitator, is sent into banishment along with them. And the idea of the State is
supplemented by the revelation of a future life.
The
division into books, like all similar divisions, is probably later than the age
of Plato. The natural divisions are five in number; --(1) Book I and the first
half of Book II down to the paragraph beginning, "I had always admired the
genius of Glaucon and Adeimantus," which is introductory; the first book
containing a refutation of the popular and sophistical notions of justice, and
concluding, like some of the earlier Dialogues, without arriving at any definite
result. To this is appended a restatement of the nature of justice according to
common opinion, and an answer is demanded to the question --What is justice,
stripped of appearances? The second division (2) includes the remainder of the
second and the whole of the third and fourth books, which are mainly occupied
with the construction of the first State and the first education. The third
division (3) consists of the fifth, sixth, and seventh books, in which
philosophy rather than justice is the subject of inquiry, and the second State
is constructed on principles of communism and ruled by philosophers, and the
contemplation of the idea of good takes the place of the social and political
virtues. In the eighth and ninth books (4) the perversions of States and of the
individuals who correspond to them are reviewed in succession; and the nature of
pleasure and the principle of tyranny are further analyzed in the individual
man. The tenth book (5) is the conclusion of the whole, in which the relations
of philosophy to poetry are finally determined, and the happiness of the
citizens in this life, which has now been assured, is crowned by the vision of
another.
Or a
more general division into two parts may be adopted; the first (Books I - IV)
containing the description of a State framed generally in accordance with
Hellenic notions of religion and morality, while in the second (Books V - X) the
Hellenic State is transformed into an ideal kingdom of philosophy, of which all
other governments are the perversions. These two points of view are really
opposed, and the opposition is only veiled by the genius of Plato. The Republic,
like the Phaedrus, is an imperfect whole; the higher light of philosophy breaks
through the regularity of the Hellenic temple, which at last fades away into the
heavens. Whether this imperfection of structure arises from an enlargement of
the plan; or from the imperfect reconcilement in the writer's own mind of the
struggling elements of thought which are now first brought together by him; or,
perhaps, from the composition of the work at different times --are questions,
like the similar question about the Iliad and the Odyssey, which are worth
asking, but which cannot have a distinct answer. In the age of Plato there was
no regular mode of publication, and an author would have the less scruple in
altering or adding to a work which was known only to a few of his friends. There
is no absurdity in supposing that he may have laid his labors aside for a time,
or turned from one work to another; and such interruptions would be more likely
to occur in the case of a long than of a short writing. In all attempts to
determine the chronological he order of the Platonic writings on internal
evidence, this uncertainty about any single Dialogue being composed at one time
is a disturbing element, which must be admitted to affect longer works, such as
the Republic and the Laws, more than shorter ones. But, on the other hand, the
seeming discrepancies of the Republic may only arise out of the discordant
elements which the philosopher has attempted to unite in a single whole, perhaps
without being himself able to recognize the inconsistency which is obvious to
us. For there is a judgment of after ages which few great writers have ever been
able to anticipate for themselves. They do not perceive the want of connection
in their own writings, or the gaps in their systems which are visible enough to
those who come after them. In the beginnings of literature and philosophy, amid
the first efforts of thought and language, more inconsistencies occur than now,
when the paths of speculation are well worn and the meaning of words precisely
defined. For consistency, too, is the growth of time; and some of the greatest
creations of the human mind have been wanting in unity. Tried by this test,
several of the Platonic Dialogues, according to our modern ideas, appear to be
defective, but the deficiency is no proof that they were composed at different
times or by different hands. And the supposition that the Republic was written
uninterruptedly and by a continuous effort is in some degree confirmed by the
numerous references from one part of the work to another.
The
second title, "Concerning Justice," is not the one by which the Republic is
quoted, either by Aristotle or generally in antiquity, and, like the other
second titles of the Platonic Dialogues, may therefore be assumed to be of later
date. Morgenstern and others have asked whether the definition of justice, which
is the professed aim, or the construction of the State is the principal argument
of the work. The answer is, that the two blend in one, and are two faces of the
same truth; for justice is the order of the State, and the State is the visible
embodiment of justice under the conditions of human society. The one is the soul
and the other is the body, and the Greek ideal of the State, as of the
individual, is a fair mind in a fair body. In Hegelian phraseology the State is
the reality of which justice is the ideal. Or, described in Christian language,
the kingdom of God is within, and yet develops into a Church or external
kingdom; "the house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens," is reduced to
the proportions of an earthly building. Or, to use a Platonic image, justice and
the State are the warp and the woof which run through the whole texture. And
when the constitution of the State is completed, the conception of justice is
not dismissed, but reappears under the same or different names throughout the
work, both as the inner law of the individual soul, and finally as the principle
of rewards and punishments in another life. The virtues are based on justice, of
which common honesty in buying and selling is the shadow, and justice is based
on the idea of good, which is the harmony of the world, and is reflected both in
the institutions of States and in motions of the heavenly bodies. The Timaeus,
which takes up the political rather than the ethical side of the Republic, and
is chiefly occupied with hypotheses concerning the outward world, yet contains
many indications that the same law is supposed to reign over the State, over
nature, and over man.
Too
much, however, has been made of this question both in ancient and in modern
times. There is a stage of criticism in which all works, whether of nature or of
art, are referred to design. Now in ancient writings, and indeed in literature
generally, there remains often a large element which was not comprehended in the
original design. For the plan grows under the author's hand; new thoughts occur
to him in the act of writing; he has not worked out the argument to the end
before he begins. The reader who seeks to find some one idea under which the
whole may be conceived, must necessarily seize on the vaguest and most general.
Thus Stallbaum, who is dissatisfied with the ordinary explanations of the
argument of the Republic, imagines himself to have found the true argument "in
the representation of human life in a State perfected by justice and governed
according to the idea of good." There may be some use in such general
descriptions, but they can hardly be said to express the design of the writer.
The truth is, that we may as well speak of many designs as of one; nor need
anything be excluded from the plan of a great work to which the mind is
naturally led by the association of ideas, and which does not interfere with the
general purpose. What kind or degree of unity is to be sought after in a
building, in the plastic arts, in poetry, in prose, is a problem which has to be
determined relatively to the subject-matter. To Plato himself, the inquiry "what
was the intention of the writer," or "what was the principal argument of the
Republic" would have been hardly intelligible, and therefore had better be at
once dismissed.
Is
not the Republic the vehicle of three or four great truths which, to Plato's own
mind, are most naturally represented in the form of the State? Just as in the
Jewish prophets the reign of Messiah, or "the day of the Lord," or the suffering
Servant or people of God, or the "Sun of righteousness with healing in his
wings" only convey, to us at least, their great spiritual ideals, so through the
Greek State Plato reveals to us his own thoughts about divine perfection, which
is the idea of good --like the sun in the visible world; --about human
perfection, which is justice --about education beginning in youth and continuing
in later years --about poets and sophists and tyrants who are the false teachers
and evil rulers of mankind --about "the world" which is the embodiment of them
--about a kingdom which exists nowhere upon earth but is laid up in heaven to be
the pattern and rule of human life. No such inspired creation is at unity with
itself, any more than the clouds of heaven when the sun pierces through them.
Every shade of light and dark, of truth, and of fiction which is the veil of
truth, is allowable in a work of philosophical imagination. It is not all on the
same plane; it easily passes from ideas to myths and fancies, from facts to
figures of speech. It is not prose but poetry, at least a great part of it, and
ought not to be judged by the rules of logic or the probabilities of history.
The writer is not fashioning his ideas into an artistic whole; they take
possession of him and are too much for him. We have no need therefore to discuss
whether a State such as Plato has conceived is practicable or not, or whether
the outward form or the inward life came first into the mind of the writer. For
the practicability of his ideas has nothing to do with their truth; and the
highest thoughts to which he attains may be truly said to bear the greatest
"marks of design" --justice more than the external frame-work of the State, the
idea of good more than justice. The great science of dialectic or the
organization of ideas has no real content; but is only a type of the method or
spirit in which the higher knowledge is to be pursued by the spectator of all
time and all existence. It is in the fifth, sixth, and seventh books that Plato
reaches the "summit of speculation," and these, although they fail to satisfy
the requirements of a modern thinker, may therefore be regarded as the most
important, as they are also the most original, portions of the work.
It
is not necessary to discuss at length a minor question which has been raised by
Boeckh, respecting the imaginary date at which the conversation was held (the
year 411 B. C. which is proposed by him will do as well as any other); for a
writer of fiction, and especially a writer who, like Plato, is notoriously
careless of chronology, only aims at general probability. Whether all the
persons mentioned in the Republic could ever have met at any one time is not a
difficulty which would have occurred to an Athenian reading the work forty years
later, or to Plato himself at the time of writing (any more than to Shakespeare
respecting one of his own dramas); and need not greatly trouble us now. Yet this
may be a question having no answer "which is still worth asking," because the
investigation shows that we can not argue historically from the dates in Plato;
it would be useless therefore to waste time in inventing far-fetched
reconcilements of them in order avoid chronological difficulties, such, for
example, as the conjecture of C. F. Hermann, that Glaucon and Adeimantus are not
the brothers but the uncles of Plato, or the fancy of Stallbaum that Plato
intentionally left anachronisms indicating the dates at which some of his
Dialogues were written.
CHARACTERS
The
principal characters in the Republic are Cephalus, Polemarchus, Thrasymachus,
Socrates, Glaucon, and Adeimantus. Cephalus appears in the introduction only,
Polemarchus drops at the end of the first argument, and Thrasymachus is reduced
to silence at the close of the first book. The main discussion is carried on by
Socrates, Glaucon, and Adeimantus. Among the company are Lysias (the orator) and
Euthydemus, the sons of Cephalus and brothers of Polemarchus, an unknown
Charmantides --these are mute auditors; also there is Cleitophon, who once
interrupts, where, as in the Dialogue which bears his name, he appears as the
friend and ally of Thrasymachus.
Cephalus, the patriarch of house, has been appropriately engaged in offering a
sacrifice. He is the pattern of an old man who has almost done with life, and is
at peace with himself and with all mankind. He feels that he is drawing nearer
to the world below, and seems to linger around the memory of the past. He is
eager that Socrates should come to visit him, fond of the poetry of the last
generation, happy in the consciousness of a well-spent life, glad at having
escaped from the tyranny of youthful lusts. His love of conversation, his
affection, his indifference to riches, even his garrulity, are interesting
traits of character. He is not one of those who have nothing to say, because
their whole mind has been absorbed in making money. Yet he acknowledges that
riches have the advantage of placing men above the temptation to dishonesty or
falsehood. The respectful attention shown to him by Socrates, whose love of
conversation, no less than the mission imposed upon him by the Oracle, leads him
to ask questions of all men, young and old alike, should also be noted. Who
better suited to raise the question of justice than Cephalus, whose life might
seem to be the expression of it? The moderation with which old age is pictured
by Cephalus as a very tolerable portion of existence is characteristic, not only
of him, but of Greek feeling generally, and contrasts with the exaggeration of
Cicero in the De Senectute. The evening of life is described by Plato in the
most expressive manner, yet with the fewest possible touches. As Cicero remarks
(Ep. ad Attic. iv. 16), the aged Cephalus would have been out of place in the
discussion which follows, and which he could neither have understood nor taken
part in without a violation of dramatic propriety.
His
"son and heir" Polemarchus has the frankness and impetuousness of youth; he is
for detaining Socrates by force in the opening scene, and will not "let him off"
on the subject of women and children. Like Cephalus, he is limited in his point
of view, and represents the proverbial stage of morality which has rules of life
rather than principles; and he quotes Simonides as his father had quoted Pindar.
But after this he has no more to say; the answers which he makes are only
elicited from him by the dialectic of Socrates. He has not yet experienced the
influence of the Sophists like Glaucon and Adeimantus, nor is he sensible of the
necessity of refuting them; he belongs to the pre-Socratic or pre-dialectical
age. He is incapable of arguing, and is bewildered by Socrates to such a degree
that he does not know what he is saying. He is made to admit that justice is a
thief, and that the virtues follow the analogy of the arts. From his brother
Lysias we learn that he fell a victim to the Thirty Tyrants, but no allusion is
here made to his fate, nor to the circumstance that Cephalus and his family were
of Syracusan origin, and had migrated from Thurii to Athens.
The
"Chalcedonian giant," Thrasymachus, of whom we have already heard in the
Phaedrus, is the personification of the Sophists, according to Plato's
conception of them, in some of their worst characteristics. He is vain and
blustering, refusing to discourse unless he is paid, fond of making an oration,
and hoping thereby to escape the inevitable Socrates; but a mere child in
argument, and unable to foresee that the next "move" (to use a Platonic
expression) will "shut him up." He has reached the stage of framing general
notions, and in this respect is in advance of Cephalus and Polemarchus. But he
is incapable of defending them in a discussion, and vainly tries to cover his
confusion in banter and insolence. Whether such doctrines as are attributed to
him by Plato were really held either by him or by any other Sophist is
uncertain; in the infancy of philosophy serious errors about morality might
easily grow up --they are certainly put into the mouths of speakers in
Thucydides; but we are concerned at present with Plato's description of him, and
not with the historical reality. The inequality of the contest adds greatly to
the humor of the scene. The pompous and empty Sophist is utterly helpless in the
hands of the great master of dialectic, who knows how to touch all the springs
of vanity and weakness in him. He is greatly irritated by the irony of Socrates,
but his noisy and imbecile rage only lays him more and more open to the thrusts
of his assailant. His determination to cram down their throats, or put "bodily
into their souls" his own words, elicits a cry of horror from Socrates. The
state of his temper is quite as worthy of remark as the process of the argument.
Nothing is more amusing than his complete submission when he has been once
thoroughly beaten. At first he seems to continue the discussion with reluctance,
but soon with apparent good-will, and he even testifies his interest at a later
stage by one or two occasional remarks. When attacked by Glaucon he is
humorously protected by Socrates "as one who has never been his enemy and is now
his friend." From Cicero and Quintilian and from Aristotle's Rhetoric we learn
that the Sophist whom Plato has made so ridiculous was a man of note whose
writings were preserved in later ages. The play on his name which was made by
his contemporary Herodicus, "thou wast ever bold in battle," seems to show that
the description of him is not devoid of verisimilitude.
When
Thrasymachus has been silenced, the two principal respondents, Glaucon and
Adeimantus, appear on the scene: here, as in Greek tragedy, three actors are
introduced. At first sight the two sons of Ariston may seem to wear a family
likeness, like the two friends Simmias and Cebes in the Phaedo. But on a nearer
examination of them the similarity vanishes, and they are seen to be distinct
characters. Glaucon is the impetuous youth who can "just never have enough of
fechting" (cf. the character of him in Xen. Mem. iii. 6); the man of pleasure
who is acquainted with the mysteries of love; the "juvenis qui gaudet canibus,"
and who improves the breed of animals; the lover of art and music who has all
the experiences of youthful life. He is full of quickness and penetration,
piercing easily below the clumsy platitudes of Thrasymachus to the real
difficulty; he turns out to the light the seamy side of human life, and yet does
not lose faith in the just and true. It is Glaucon who seizes what may be termed
the ludicrous relation of the philosopher to the world, to whom a state of
simplicity is "a city of pigs," who is always prepared with a jest when the
argument offers him an opportunity, and who is ever ready to second the humor of
Socrates and to appreciate the ridiculous, whether in the connoisseurs of music,
or in the lovers of theatricals, or in the fantastic behavior of the citizens of
democracy. His weaknesses are several times alluded to by Socrates, who,
however, will not allow him to be attacked by his brother Adeimantus. He is a
soldier, and, like Adeimantus, has been distinguished at the battle of Megara.
The
character of Adeimantus is deeper and graver, and the profounder objections are
commonly put into his mouth. Glaucon is more demonstrative, and generally opens
the game. Adeimantus pursues the argument further. Glaucon has more of the
liveliness and quick sympathy of youth; Adeimantus has the maturer judgment of a
grown-up man of the world. In the second book, when Glaucon insists that justice
and injustice shall be considered without regard to their consequences,
Adeimantus remarks that they are regarded by mankind in general only for the
sake of their consequences; and in a similar vein of reflection he urges at the
beginning of the fourth book that Socrates falls in making his citizens happy,
and is answered that happiness is not the first but the second thing, not the
direct aim but the indirect consequence of the good government of a State. In
the discussion about religion and mythology, Adeimantus is the respondent, but
Glaucon breaks in with a slight jest, and carries on the conversation in a
lighter tone about music and gymnastic to the end of the book. It is Adeimantus
again who volunteers the criticism of common sense on the Socratic method of
argument, and who refuses to let Socrates pass lightly over the question of
women and children. It is Adeimantus who is the respondent in the more
argumentative, as Glaucon in the lighter and more imaginative portions of the
Dialogue. For example, throughout the greater part of the sixth book, the causes
of the corruption of philosophy and the conception of the idea of good are
discussed with Adeimantus. Then Glaucon resumes his place of principal
respondent; but he has a difficulty in apprehending the higher education of
Socrates, and makes some false hits in the course of the discussion. Once more
Adeimantus returns with the allusion to his brother Glaucon whom he compares to
the contentious State; in the next book he is again superseded, and Glaucon
continues to the end.
Thus
in a succession of characters Plato represents the successive stages of
morality, beginning with the Athenian gentleman of the olden time, who is
followed by the practical man of that day regulating his life by proverbs and
saws; to him succeeds the wild generalization of the Sophists, and lastly come
the young disciples of the great teacher, who know the sophistical arguments but
will not be convinced by them, and desire to go deeper into the nature of
things. These too, like Cephalus, Polemarchus, Thrasymachus, are clearly
distinguished from one another. Neither in the Republic, nor in any other
Dialogue of Plato, is a single character repeated.
The
delineation of Socrates in the Republic is not wholly consistent. In the first
book we have more of the real Socrates, such as he is depicted in the
Memorabilia of Xenophon, in the earliest Dialogues of Plato, and in the Apology.
He is ironical, provoking, questioning, the old enemy of the Sophists, ready to
put on the mask of Silenus as well as to argue seriously. But in the sixth book
his enmity towards the Sophists abates; he acknowledges that they are the
representatives rather than the corrupters of the world. He also becomes more
dogmatic and constructive, passing beyond the range either of the political or
the speculative ideas of the real Socrates. In one passage Plato himself seems
to intimate that the time had now come for Socrates, who had passed his whole
life in philosophy, to give his own opinion and not to be always repeating the
notions of other men. There is no evidence that either the idea of good or the
conception of a perfect State were comprehended in the Socratic teaching, though
he certainly dwelt on the nature of the universal and of final causes (cp. Xen.
Mem. i. 4; Phaedo 97); and a deep thinker like him in his thirty or forty years
of public teaching, could hardly have falled to touch on the nature of family
relations, for which there is also some positive evidence in the Memorabilia (Mem.
i. 2, 51 foll.) The Socratic method is nominally retained; and every inference
is either put into the mouth of the respondent or represented as the common
discovery of him and Socrates. But any one can see that this is a mere form, of
which the affectation grows wearisome as the work advances. The method of
inquiry has passed into a method of teaching in which by the help of
interlocutors the same thesis is looked at from various points of view.
The
nature of the process is truly characterized by Glaucon, when he describes
himself as a companion who is not good for much in an investigation, but can see
what he is shown, and may, perhaps, give the answer to a question more fluently
than another.
Neither can we be absolutely certain that, Socrates himself taught the
immortality of the soul, which is unknown to his disciple Glaucon in the
Republic; nor is there any reason to suppose that he used myths or revelations
of another world as a vehicle of instruction, or that he would have banished
poetry or have denounced the Greek mythology. His favorite oath is retained, and
a slight mention is made of the daemonium, or internal sign, which is alluded to
by Socrates as a phenomenon peculiar to himself. A real element of Socratic
teaching, which is more prominent in the Republic than in any of the other
Dialogues of Plato, is the use of example and illustration ('taphorhtika auto
prhospherhontez'): "Let us apply the test of common instances." "You," says
Adeimantus, ironically, in the sixth book, "are so unaccustomed to speak in
images." And this use of examples or images, though truly Socratic in origin, is
enlarged by the genius of Plato into the form of an allegory or parable, which
embodies in the concrete what has been already described, or is about to be
described, in the abstract. Thus the figure of the cave in Book VII is a
recapitulation of the divisions of knowledge in Book VI. The composite animal in
Book IX is an allegory of the parts of the soul. The noble captain and the ship
and the true pilot in Book VI are a figure of the relation of the people to the
philosophers in the State which has been described. Other figures, such as the
dog in the second, third, and fourth books, or the marriage of the portionless
maiden in the sixth book, or the drones and wasps in the eighth and ninth books,
also form links of connection in long passages, or are used to recall previous
discussions.
Plato is most true to the character of his master when he describes him as "not
of this world." And with this representation of him the ideal State and the
other paradoxes of the Republic are quite in accordance, though they can not be
shown to have been speculations of Socrates. To him, as to other great teachers
both philosophical and religious, when they looked upward, the world seemed to
be the embodiment of error and evil. The common sense of mankind has revolted
against this view, or has only partially admitted it. And even in Socrates
himself the sterner judgment of the multitude at times passes into a sort of
ironical pity or love. Men in general are incapable of philosophy, and are
therefore at enmity with the philosopher; but their misunderstanding of him is
unavoidable: for they have never seen him as he truly is in his own image; they
are only acquainted with artificial systems possessing no native force of truth
--words which admit of many applications. Their leaders have nothing to measure
with, and are therefore ignorant of their own stature. But they are to be pitied
or laughed at, not to be quarrelled with; they mean well with their nostrums, if
they could only learn that they are cutting off a Hydra's head. This moderation
towards those who are in error is one of the most characteristic features of
Socrates in the Republic. In all the different representations of Socrates,
whether of Xenophon or Plato, and the differences of the earlier or later
Dialogues, he always retains the character of the unwearied and disinterested
seeker after truth, without which he would have ceased to be Socrates.