
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?
4.5
192192 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?
127 Listeners
771 Listeners
96 Listeners
141 Listeners
29 Listeners
903 Listeners
15 Listeners
63 Listeners
102 Listeners
1,526 Listeners
67 Listeners
50 Listeners
48 Listeners
1,707 Listeners
303 Listeners
334 Listeners
13 Listeners
133 Listeners
330 Listeners
710 Listeners
197 Listeners
103 Listeners
229 Listeners
42 Listeners