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  1. Without the least tremor: the sacrifice of Socrates in Plato's Phaedo.M. Ross Romero - 2016 - Albany: State University of New York Press.
    Weaving and unweaving the fabric of sacrifice -- A description of Greek sacrificial ritual -- Sacrificing Socrates: the mise-en-scène of the death scene of the Phaedo -- The search for the most fitting cause -- The so-called genuine philosophers and the work of soul -- Athens at twilight.
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  • Index.Danielle S. Allen - 2012-12-10 - In Neville Morley (ed.), Why Plato Wrote. Blackwell. pp. 219–232.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Introduction Against Writing The Hole in the Argument Spotting the Defense of Philosophical Writing A Sociology of Symbols The Psychological Power of Symbols.
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  • On the ambiguity of democracy in Plato's statesman.Federico Zuolo - 2011 - Archai: Revista de Estudos Sobre as Origens Do Pensamento Ocidental 7:25-36.
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  • On the ambiguity of democracy in Plato's statesman.Federico Zuolo - 2011 - Archai: Revista de Estudos Sobre as Origens Do Pensamento Ocidental 7:25-36.
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  • Plato and democracy’s ambiguous beauty : the tension between philosophy and democracy.Alexandre Franco de Sá - 2017 - Archai: Revista de Estudos Sobre as Origens Do Pensamento Ocidental 20:15-38.
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  • Another Antigone: The Emergence of the Female Political Actor in Euripides' "Phoenician Women".Arlene W. Saxonhouse - 2005 - Political Theory 33 (4):472-494.
    The Phoenician Women, Euripides' peculiar retelling and refashioning of the Theban myth, offers a portrait of Antigone before she becomes the actor we mostly know today from Sophocles' play. In this under-studied Greek tragedy, Euripides portrays the political and epistemological dissolution that allows for Antigone 's appearance in public. Whereas Sophocles' Antigone appears on stage ready to confront Creon with her appeal to the universal unwritten laws of the gods and later dissolves into the female lamenting a lost womanhood, Euripides' (...)
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  • Another Antigone.Arlene W. Saxonhouse - 2005 - Political Theory 33 (4):472-494.
    The Phoenician Women, Euripides’ peculiar retelling and refashioning of the Theban myth, offers a portrait of Antigone before she becomes the actor we mostly know today from Sophocles’ play. In this under-studied Greek tragedy, Euripides portrays the political and epistemological dissolution that allows for Antigone’s appearance in public. Whereas Sophocles’ Antigone appears on stage ready to confront Creon with her appeal to the universal unwritten laws of the gods and later dissolves into the female lamenting a lost womanhood, Euripides’ Antigone (...)
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  • Speech Imperialization? Situating American Parrhesia in an Isegoria World.Harrison Michael Rosenthal - 2020 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 35 (2):1-21.
    This article explores the ideological origins of the American free-speech tradition. It analyzes the two principal categorizations of free speech in classical antiquity: isegoria, the right to voice one’s opinion, and parrhesia, the license to say what one pleases often through provocative discourse, thus grounding modern free-speech epistemology and jurisprudential philosophy in a sociohistorical context. Part 1 reviews the First Amendment corpus juris. A progression of incrementally absolute judicial holdings promotes parrhesia, highlighting democratic utility over individual self-actualization; thus, Americans no (...)
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  • Nothing to do with democracy: Athenian drama and the polis.Peter J. Rhodes - 2003 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 123:104-119.
    A fashionable approach to the interpretation of Athenian drama concentrates on its context in performance at Athenian festivals, and sees both the festivals and the plays as products of the Athenian democracy. In this paper it is argued that, whereas the institutional setting inevitably took a particular form in democratic Athens, that was an Athenian version of institutions found more generally in the Greek world, and even in the Athenian version many features do not seem distinctively democratic. Similarly in the (...)
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  • The State of the Question in the Study of Plato: Twenty Year Update.Gerald A. Press - 2018 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 56 (1):9-35.
    This article updates “The State of the Question in the Study of Plato” (Southern Journal of Philosophy, 1996) based on research covering the years from 1995–2015. Its three major parts examine: (1) how the mid‐twentieth‐century consensus has fared, (2) whether the new trends identified in that article have continued, and (3) identify trends either new or missed in the original article. On the whole, it shows the continuing decline of dogmatic and nondramatic Plato interpretation and the expansion and ramification of (...)
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  • Argumentos anticirenaicos en el programa cultural de la República de Platón.Claudia Mársico - 2019 - Dianoia 64 (83):3-26.
    Resumen Platón proyecta en la República un programa cultural que supone la redefinición del papel de la poesía tradicional en razón de su asociación con los regímenes democrático y tiránico. Esto, según pretendo mostrar, puede vincularse de manera legítima con la polémica anticirenaica de Platón contra Aristipo. Para ello, por un lado, exploraré los rasgos del biotipo tiránico y su régimen concomitante en la República VIII-IX y, por otro, analizaré sus vínculos con los planteamientos anticirenaicos en el Gorgias. Este examen (...)
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  • Clitophon and Socrates in the Platonic Clitophon.Christopher Moore - 2012 - Ancient Philosophy 32 (2):257-278.
  • The politics and gender of truth-telling in Foucault’s lectures on parrhesia.Lida Maxwell - 2019 - Contemporary Political Theory 18 (1):22-42.
    This essay challenges dominant interpretations of Foucault’s lectures on parrhesia as affirming an ethical, non-political conception of truth-telling. I read the lectures instead as depicting truth-telling as an always political predicament: of having to appear distant from power, while also having to partake in some sense of political power. Read in this way, Foucault’s lectures help us to understand and address the disputed politicality of truth-telling – over who counts as a truth-teller, and what counts as the truth – that (...)
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  • Colloquium 5: Attempting the Political Art.Christopher Long - 2012 - Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium of Ancient Philosophy 27 (1):153-182.
    The main thesis of this essay is that the practice of Socratic political speaking and the practice of Platonic political writing are intimately interconnected but distinct. The essay focuses on the famous passage from the Gorgias in which Socrates claims to be one of the few Athenians who attempt the political art truly and goes on to articulate the nature of his political practice as a way of speaking toward the best (521d6-e2). It then traces the ways Socrates attempts to (...)
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  • Plato’s open secret.Demetra Kasimis - 2016 - Contemporary Political Theory 15 (4):339-357.
  • Oligarchy and the Tripartite Soul in Plato’s Republic.Chad Jorgenson - 2020 - Apeiron 54 (1):59-88.
    In Republic VIII, oligarchy is represented as a transitional or hybrid regime combining features of aristocracy and timocracy with the rule of appetitive desire characteristic of democracy and tyranny. The apparently anomalous intermediary position of oligarchy, in which an object of appetitive soul provides the foundation for interpersonal and political norms, demonstrates the complexity of the interaction between ruling soul parts and underlying rational structures that give unity to each constitution and character type. This interaction cannot be adequately accounted for (...)
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  • The Republic between past and future: interpretation and appropriation of Plato’s political philosophy in the twentieth century.Francesco Fronterotta - 2014 - Archai: Revista de Estudos Sobre as Origens Do Pensamento Ocidental 13:99-107.
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  • The Republic between past and future: interpretation and appropriation of Plato’s political philosophy in the twentieth century.Francesco Fronterotta - 2014 - Archai: Revista de Estudos Sobre as Origens Do Pensamento Ocidental 13:99-107.
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  • Plato and the (timely) untimeliness of normative utopia: a profile of Mario Vegetti.Franco Ferrari - 2019 - Archai: Revista de Estudos Sobre as Origens Do Pensamento Ocidental 25:1-20.
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  • Plato and the mythic tradition in political thought.P. E. Digeser, Rebecca LeMoine, Jill Frank, David Lay Williams, Jacob Abolafia & Tae-Yeoun Keum - 2022 - Contemporary Political Theory 21 (4):611-639.
  • Tonneau percé, tonneau habité - Calliclès et Diogène : les leçons rivales de la nature.Simon-Pierre Chevarie-Cossette - 2015 - Philosophie Antique 15:149-178.
    Comme de nombreux penseurs antiques avant et après eux et contrairement à Socrate, Calliclès et Diogène ont déclaré avoir fondé leur éthique sur l’observation de la nature. Et pourtant, les deux discours normatifs qui sont tirés d’une nature que l’on pourrait a priori croire être la même sont on ne peut plus opposés. Calliclès croit que l’homme est appelé à dominer autrui ; Diogène pense plutôt qu’il doit se dominer lui-même ; le premier est un hédoniste débridé, le second croit (...)
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  • Plato’s myth of the noble lie and the predicaments of American civic education.Kerry Burch - 2006 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 26 (2):111-125.
  • Colloquium 6: Psychology and Legislation in Plato’s Laws.Sara Brill - 2011 - Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium of Ancient Philosophy 26 (1):211-251.
  • Politics and Aesthetics: Jacques Rancière and Louis-Gabriel Gauny.Stuart Blaney - forthcoming - Philosophy and Social Criticism.
    This paper argues that much of Jacques Rancière’s redefinition of emancipation owes a lot to one key character from his archival research on nineteenth-century worker-poets, Louis-Gabriel Gauny, the self-proclaimed plebeian philosopher. This is especially the case in regard to Rancière’s understanding of subjectivation forming a double of the self and a double of social reality as worlds within worlds. The paper puts forward that Gauny’s form of emancipation is valid today as an aesthetic revolution that reveals Rancière’s practices of equality (...)
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