
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In The Republic, Plato outlines a role for women in his ideal society that seems revolutionary, i.e. that they should occupy the highest position in public life. In Athenian society at the time, women were completely excluded from politics, so this is a radical proposal. But elsewhere, Plato expresses doubt about women’s natural abilities. What did he really think? And how does this tension persist today for women in philosophy?
By ABC, ABC Australia4.5
191191 ratings
In The Republic, Plato outlines a role for women in his ideal society that seems revolutionary, i.e. that they should occupy the highest position in public life. In Athenian society at the time, women were completely excluded from politics, so this is a radical proposal. But elsewhere, Plato expresses doubt about women’s natural abilities. What did he really think? And how does this tension persist today for women in philosophy?

97 Listeners

64 Listeners

127 Listeners

88 Listeners

17 Listeners

43 Listeners

1,736 Listeners

785 Listeners

1,540 Listeners

755 Listeners

315 Listeners

142 Listeners

60 Listeners

61 Listeners

46 Listeners

470 Listeners

161 Listeners

1,050 Listeners

8 Listeners

195 Listeners

114 Listeners

237 Listeners

1,009 Listeners

55 Listeners