The Oldest Law: Rediscovering the Minos

Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2007 (138):43-68 (2007)
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Abstract

In the concluding section of the Minos (318c ff), Socrates praises the oldest law, that given to Crete by Minos, who in Socrates's characterization obtained this law as a result of his status as confidant of Zeus, Minos's father (319d-e). The law that is unchanging, permanent, is therefore the best law, and arguably the only law that truly reflects the “lawness” of law, other possible senses of law being incomplete, as the dialogue shows. There is, moreover, something divine about the character of the best law—though this divinity would seem to have little to do with its tenuous relationship to…

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