"The argument is not about just any question, but about the way one should live." Plato, Republic 352d
This semester we will focus on texts by Plato and Aristotle. We will begin with readings from Aristotle concerning wisdom, nature, causes, and soul. We will then take up Plato's Republic, the classic treatment of the problem of justice. In this dialogue Socrates is challenged by his young friends, Glaucon and Adeimantus, to demonstrate that justice is intrinsically good - that the just man is happy, even if he isn't rewarded for his justice, and that the unjust man is unhappy, even if he isn't punished. To meet this challenge and to exhibit the true nature of justice, Socrates calls on his friends to join him in founding, in speech, a radically new kind of political community whose shocking innovations include the censorship of poetry and music, equality of the sexes, communism, and the rule of philosophers. We will consider what we are meant to learn from these proposals (just how serious are they?) and how they bear on the question of justice.
Note that you are required to obtain a hard copy of the Republic in the translation by Allan Bloom (see details below on this syllabus).
A note on the use of "artificial intelligence"
Our purpose in this class is to do our own reading, writing, and thinking, not to outsource these tasks to a machine. I recommend avoiding generative AI entirely. But if you do choose to make use of it for your work in this course, then to avoid plagiarism you must cite AI in accordance with JCU guidelines: https://johncabot.libguides.com/artificial-intelligence/citing. If you wish to use an AI-assisted grammar tool such as Grammarly, please consult me first.