Piety and Justice: Plato's 'Euthyphro'

Philosophy 43 (164):105 - 116 (1968)
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Abstract

Piety is not a theme that normally attracts the modern mind. In our own age rebellion has a more prominent position and the theme of impiety strikes a more sympathetic note. We are led to examine Plato's Euthyphro as much for the hints we find on the subject of impiety as for whatever it might contain on the seemingly drab subject of the holy. The Euthyphro is also a dialogue concerned with justice, a recurrent theme in the Platonic corpus, and it questions the accepted relationship of justice to piety and orthodoxy. The secular implications of the argument, which seem to be the more important to Socrates, himself, are as relevant to modern politics and religion as they were to the life of ancient Athens.

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Citations of this work

Therapy and Theory Reconstructed: Plato and his Successors.Stephen R. L. Clark - 2010 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 66:83-102.
Plato on the possibility of an irreligious morality.William S. Cobb - 1989 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 25 (1):3 - 12.

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