
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Is it always better to be just than unjust? That is the central question of Plato's Republic, discussed here by Melvyn Bragg and guests. Writing in c380BC, Plato applied this question both to the individual and the city-state, considering earlier and current forms of government in Athens and potential forms, in which the ideal city might be ruled by philosophers. The Republic is arguably Plato's best known and greatest work, a dialogue between Socrates and his companions, featuring the allegory of the cave and ideas about immortality of the soul, the value of poetry to society, and democracy's vulnerability to a clever demagogue seeking tyranny.
With
Angie Hobbs
MM McCabe
and
James Warren
Producer: Simon Tillotson.
4.6
50155,015 ratings
Is it always better to be just than unjust? That is the central question of Plato's Republic, discussed here by Melvyn Bragg and guests. Writing in c380BC, Plato applied this question both to the individual and the city-state, considering earlier and current forms of government in Athens and potential forms, in which the ideal city might be ruled by philosophers. The Republic is arguably Plato's best known and greatest work, a dialogue between Socrates and his companions, featuring the allegory of the cave and ideas about immortality of the soul, the value of poetry to society, and democracy's vulnerability to a clever demagogue seeking tyranny.
With
Angie Hobbs
MM McCabe
and
James Warren
Producer: Simon Tillotson.
7,695 Listeners
3,216 Listeners
301 Listeners
502 Listeners
526 Listeners
293 Listeners
1,061 Listeners
1,885 Listeners
595 Listeners
722 Listeners
281 Listeners
860 Listeners
221 Listeners
294 Listeners
4,770 Listeners
345 Listeners
228 Listeners
318 Listeners
3,156 Listeners
3,159 Listeners
14,013 Listeners
79 Listeners
695 Listeners
1,001 Listeners
497 Listeners
2,312 Listeners
324 Listeners
615 Listeners
224 Listeners
276 Listeners
25 Listeners
91 Listeners
8 Listeners