Scott John Hammond is professor of political theory at James Madison University.
Description
Chapter One Drawing Further Meaning from Cephalus and Polemarchus Chapter Two Making Thrasymachus Blush Chapter Three Sons of Ariston Chapter Four The True City Chapter Five The True City Embodied in the Guardians Chapter Six Rough Seas Chapter Seven Building a Theory from an Account Chapter Eight The Second Best City Chapter Nine The Form of the Polis in the Second Best City: The Visible Chapter Ten The Form of the Polis in the Second Best City: The Invisible
Reviews
"With the calm assurance of someone who has inhabited Plato's dialogues for years, Hammond invites his readers into the high stakes drama of The Republic. This book is an untimely meditation is at least two senses. By focusing on Plato's teaching on the 'essence of politics,' it is out of sync with contemporary resistance to essentialism, especially in politics. By emphasizing the way Plato points out the partiality of time-bound experience, it turns us to take seriously a 'beautiful city' that is eternal and unchanging. In this captivating and often provocative close-reading, Hammond captures the excitement and allure of the philosophical quest." -- Douglas Casson, St. Olaf College