Philosopher - Kings : The Argument of Plato's "Republic" by C. D. Reeve (1989, Hardcover)

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Notes: Previous owner’s information on front free end-paper. Otherwise clean and straight with clean text and a strong binding. Dust jacket is lightly creased along extremities. Publisher: Princeton University Press.

About this product

Product Identifiers

PublisherPrinceton University Press
ISBN-100691073260
ISBN-139780691073262
eBay Product ID (ePID)2182225

Product Key Features

Number of Pages368 Pages
LanguageEnglish
Publication NamePhilosopher-Kings : the Argument of Plato's "Republic"
SubjectHistory & Surveys / Ancient & Classical
Publication Year1989
FeaturesReprint
TypeTextbook
AuthorC. D. Reeve
Subject AreaPhilosophy
FormatHardcover

Additional Product Features

Intended AudienceCollege Audience
LCCN88-020919
Dewey Edition19
IllustratedYes
Dewey Decimal321/.07
Edition DescriptionReprint
SynopsisThe distinctive aim of Philosopher-Kings is to show, by giving a rational reconstruction of its overall argument, that the Republic is not the flawed patchwork it is usually made out to be by interpreters, but a deeply consistent and systematic work, which raises fundamental problems for philosophy and develops powerful and probing solutions to them. The book's central innovative thesis is that Plato's psychology, more specifically his theory of desires, holds the key to this, his most ambitious work. Although the Republic has come to seem frazzled from too much use in introductory courses, in Reeve's hands it is new and refreshing.--Paul Woodruff, Ancient Philosophy Although the philosopher-kings of Reeve's title are central to the argument of this handsomely produced book, it is in reality nothing less than a complete reinterpretation of the Republic. . . . [Reeve], if I understand him correctly, has the temerity to work on the principle that Plato was a philosopher of genius, and that therefore a reading which makes coherence and sense of what he wrote is more likely to be acceptable than one which does not.--R.S.W. Hawtrey, The Classical Review, The distinctive aim of Philosopher-Kings is to show, by giving a rational reconstruction of its overall argument, that the Republic is not the flawed patchwork it is usually made out to be by interpreters, but a deeply consistent and systematic work, which raises fundamental problems for philosophy and develops powerful and probing solutions to them. The book's central innovative thesis is that Plato's psychology, more specifically his theory of desires, holds the key to this, his most ambitious work. "Although the Republic has come to seem frazzled from too much use in introductory courses, in Reeve's hands it is new and refreshing."--Paul Woodruff, Ancient Philosophy "Although the philosopher-kings of Reeve's title are central to the argument of this handsomely produced book, it is in reality nothing less than a complete reinterpretation of the Republic. . . . Reeve], if I understand him correctly, has the temerity to work on the principle that Plato was a philosopher of genius, and that therefore a reading which makes coherence and sense of what he wrote is more likely to be acceptable than one which does not."--R.S.W. Hawtrey, The Classical Review, The distinctive aim of Philosopher-Kings is to show, by giving a rational reconstruction of its overall argument, that the Republic is not the flawed patchwork it is usually made out to be by interpreters, but a deeply consistent and systematic work, which raises fundamental problems for philosophy and develops powerful and probing solutions to them. The book's central innovative thesis is that Plato's psychology, more specifically his theory of desires, holds the key to this, his most ambitious work. "Although the Republic has come to seem frazzled from too much use in introductory courses, in Reeve's hands it is new and refreshing."--Paul Woodruff, Ancient Philosophy "Although the philosopher-kings of Reeve's title are central to the argument of this handsomely produced book, it is in reality nothing less than a complete reinterpretation of the Republic. . . . [Reeve], if I understand him correctly, has the temerity to work on the principle that Plato was a philosopher of genius, and that therefore a reading which makes coherence and sense of what he wrote is more likely to be acceptable than one which does not."--R.S.W. Hawtrey, The Classical Review
LC Classification NumberJC71.P6R43 1988

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