Results for ' The Republic'

954 found
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  1.  17
    Remaking the republic: black politics and the creation of American citizenship.Amy Cools - 2023 - Intellectual History Review 33 (2):362-363.
    Christopher James Bonner’s Remaking the Republic is a fascinating study of African Americans’ struggle to be recognized as citizens in the antebellum and Civil War-era United States. One of Bonner’...
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  2.  20
    The Republic.Raymond Larson (ed.) - 1979 - Wiley-Blackwell.
    This highly regarded volume features a modern translation of all ten books of _The Republic_ along with a synoptic table of contents, a prefatory essay, and an appendix on The Spindle of Necessity by the translator and editor, Raymond Larson. Also included are an introduction by Eva T. H. Brann, a list of principal dates in the life of Plato, and a bibliography.
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  3.  18
    The Republic of Plato: Volume 1, Books I–V.James Adam (ed.) - 1902 - Cambridge University Press.
    James Adam was a Scottish classics scholar who taught at Emmanuel College, Cambridge. A strong defender of the importance of Greek philosophy in a well-rounded education, Adam published a number of Plato's works including Protagoras and Crito. This two-volume critical edition of the Republic was another major contribution to the field. Though his preface claims 'an editor cannot pretend to have exhausted its significance by means of a commentary,' Adam's depth of knowledge and erudite analysis of the Greek text (...)
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  4.  13
    On the Republic" and "on the Laws.Marcus Tullius Cicero - 2014 - Cornell University Press.
    Cicero's On the Republic and On the Laws are his major works of political philosophy. They offer his fullest treatment of fundamental political questions: Why should educated people have any concern for politics? Is the best form of government simple, or is it a combination of elements from such simple forms as monarchy, aristocracy, and democracy? Can politics be free of injustice? The two works also help us to think about natural law, which many people have considered since ancient (...)
  5. The Republic of Letters: A Cultural History of the French Enlightenment.Dena GOODMAN - 1996
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  6. The Republic. Plato - 2006 - In Thomas L. Cooksey (ed.), Masterpieces of philosophical literature. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press.
    Ostensibly a discussion of the nature of justice, The Republic presents Plato's vision of the ideal state, covering a wide range of topics: social, educational, psychological, moral, and philosophical. It also includes some of Plato's most important writing on the nature of reality and the theory of the "forms." Translated with an Introduction by Desmond Lee.
     
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  7.  12
    The Republic.Dominic Scott - 2008 - In Gail Fine (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Plato. New York: Oxford University Press.
    The Republic happens to be Plato's most important work. The article throws light on Plato's Magnum Opus. The debate rages over the idea of a city; rather an ideal city state comprising three classes—producers, auxiliaries, and guardians. The first to provide for the material needs of the state, the second for its defence, and the third to rule. Each has a specific function of its own, and none is to interfere with the others. Above all, the just city will (...)
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  8.  39
    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 (...)
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  9.  48
    The Semiosis of Death in Lang's M : Film and the Limits of Representation in the Weimar Republic.Joel Freeman - 2004 - Film-Philosophy 8 (1).
    _M_ Directed by Fritz Lang Germany, 1931.
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  10.  21
    The Republic: the Odyssey of philosophy.Jacob Howland - 2004 - Philadelphia: Paul Dry Books.
    "Jacob Howland's book is an engaging, readable, and extremely suggestive addition to the literature on Plato's magnum opus." --Ancient Philosophy.
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  11. The Republic of Plato: Volume 2, Books Vi–X and Indexes.James Adam (ed.) - 2010 - Cambridge University Press.
    James Adam was a Scottish classics scholar who taught at Emmanuel College, Cambridge. A strong defender of the importance of Greek philosophy in a well-rounded education, Adam published a number of Plato's works including Protagoras and Crito. This two-volume critical edition of the Republic was another major contribution to the field. Though his preface claims 'an editor cannot pretend to have exhausted its significance by means of a commentary,' Adam's depth of knowledge and erudite analysis of the Greek text (...)
     
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  12.  25
    The Republic of Plato.Plato . (ed.) - 1901 - New York: Oxford University Press USA.
    Essestially an inquiry into morality, the Republic is the central work of the Western world's most famous philosopher. Containing crucial arguments and insights into many other areas of philosophy, it is also a literary masterpiece: the philosophy is presented for the most part for ordinary readers, who are carried along by the wit and intensity of the dialogue and by Plato's unforgettable images of the human condition. This new, lucid translation is complemented by full explanatory notes and an up-to-date (...)
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  13.  20
    Open republic, multiculturalism and citizenship: the French debate.Alastair Davidson - 1999 - Theory and Event 3 (2).
  14.  24
    Reading the republic: Is utopianism redundant?Costas Stratilatis - 2008 - History of Political Thought 29 (4):565-584.
    The aim of this essay is to present a reading of Plato's utopianism, as expressed mainly through the 'big letters' of the Republic, which will lead us beyond Karl Popper's and Leo Strauss' modernist understandings of Plato and of his world. The author argues that, despite the 'transcendent' aspects of Platonic utopianism, the ideal city should be understood neither as a blueprint to be realized through some totalitarian political project nor as a mere fiction that cannot by definition give (...)
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  15.  14
    The Republic of Plato 2 Volume Paperback Set.James Adam (ed.) - 2010 - Cambridge University Press.
    James Adam was a Scottish classics scholar who taught at Emmanuel College, Cambridge. A strong defender of the importance of Greek philosophy in a well-rounded education, Adam published a number of Plato's works including Protagoras and Crito. This two-volume critical edition of the Republic was another major contribution to the field. Though his preface claims 'an editor cannot pretend to have exhausted its significance by means of a commentary,' Adam's depth of knowledge and erudite analysis of the Greek text (...)
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  16.  45
    Conceiving the Republic of Mankind: The Political Thought of Anacharsis Cloots.Alexander Bevilacqua - 2012 - History of European Ideas 38 (4):550-569.
    Summary During the French Revolution, Jean-Baptiste ?Anacharsis? Cloots (1755?1794) developed a theory of the world state as the means to guarantee perpetual peace for mankind. Though his ideas have largely been misunderstood, Cloots's political writings were in fact an extensive plea for a more cosmopolitan understanding of the French Revolution. His system adapted institutions and concepts of the French revolutionary republic for a world state, the republic of mankind. This essay recovers his political vision and connects it both (...)
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  17.  7
    The Republic: The Influential Classic.Tom Butler-Bowdon - 2012 - Capstone.
    The newest deluxe edition in the bestselling Capstone Classics Series This ancient classic has had a make-over. In recent years these Capstone Classic deluxe editions have caught the book buying public's imagination. The volumes of international bestsellers such as Think and Grow Rich and The Art of War have quickly become the market leaders. Now Plato's best known work, one of the most intellectually and historically influential works of philosophy and political theory, has been brought to life in this luxury, (...)
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  18. The True State In Plato's «republic».Thomas Morris - 2006 - Existentia 16 (3-4):195-208.
  19. The Republic of Letters.Marc Fumaroli - 1988 - Diogenes 36 (143):129-152.
    The expression “République des lettress” is still used today. It appears in most recent dictionaries of the French language, and it even occasionally occurs in ordinary conversation or in the press, a pompous and ironic circumlocution to designate the Parisian literary “milieu.” This archaistic and pejorative survival masks (somewhat similarly to the word “rhetoric”) the attention that researchers are now according to the older meaning of this surviving expression, and to the concept of an international exchange of ideas that it (...)
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  20. The President of the French Republic, last and only head of state in the world that still called bishops.R. Metz - 1986 - Revue des Sciences Religieuses 60 (1-2):63-89.
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  21.  53
    The Republic of Plato.W. A. H. & James Adam - 1905 - Philosophical Review 14 (3):371.
  22.  28
    John Witherspoon and the Founding of the American Republic.Jeffry H. Morrison - 2005 - University of Notre Dame Press.
    Jeffry H. Morrison offers readers the first comprehensive look at the political thought and career of John Witherspoon—a Scottish Presbyterian minister and one of America’s most influential and overlooked founding fathers. Witherspoon was an active member of the Continental Congress and was the only clergyman both to sign the Declaration of Independence and to ratify the federal Constitution. During his tenure as president of the College of New Jersey at Princeton, Witherspoon became a mentor to James Madison and influenced many (...)
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  23.  19
    The Construction of the Concepts "Democracy" and "Republic" in Arabic in the Eastern and Southern Mediterranean, 1798–1878.Wael Abu-ʿUksa - 2019 - Journal of the History of Ideas 80 (2):249-270.
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  24. Writing the Republic: Politics and Polemics in The German Ideology.Charles Barbour & Thomas Kemple - 2005 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2005 (130):9-37.
     
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  25.  66
    The Republic of Learning.Scott Buchanan - 1941 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 16 (4):608-610.
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  26.  27
    Keys to Decrypt the Republic Against Democracy.Ricardo Sanín-Restrepo & Marinella Machado Araujo - 2022 - Law and Critique 33 (1):41-62.
    The concept of the republic is a complex meta-principle that facilitates and conceals global relations of domination. Specifically, it enables the invisibility of racism as the core of political power. From its very origins the concept of republic serves to seize constituent power or politeia. In modernity, as it merges with private property, it will serve as the launchpad of a vast colonization project that then evolves in a new form of power in coloniality. The article applies the (...)
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  27.  32
    Censure and Exclusion of The Republic in the Light of the Timaeus.Henar Lanza - 2014 - Eidos: Revista de Filosofía de la Universidad Del Norte 20:95-108.
    Censure and exclusion of The Republic are characteristics of many utopias, which become dystopias precisely because of turning to them. Plato´s reasons to censure certain types of poetry are ethical and political ones, although his arguments are epistemological . This paper proposes reading these two aspects of the platonic proposal in the light of three specific points of the Timaeus: 1) the theory of discourse about the concept of verisimilar , 2) its relation to the question of whether we (...)
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  28. On the establishment of institutions and expressions of disagreement according to Machiavelli: Reflections on the historicity of the machiavellian concept of" Republic".T. Menissier - 1999 - Archives de Philosophie 62 (2):221-239.
  29.  25
    The Republic of Armenia, Vol. 2.J. R. Russell & Richard G. Hovannisian - 1987 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 107 (2):381.
  30.  59
    The Impiety of the Republic's Imitator.Nickolas Pappas - 2013 - Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 17 (2):219-232.
    The Republic rarely speaks of piety; yet religious concerns inform more of its treatment of poetry than readers acknowledge. A pair of tripartite rankings in Book 10 has puzzled interpreters: first the triad Form-couch-painting, then the ostensibly equivalent triad of a flute’s or bridle’s user-maker-imitator. The tripartitions work better together if one recognizes the divinity at work behind Athena’s gifts the flute and bridle. This mythic reading reveals the imitator to stand, yet again, in opposition to the gods; but (...)
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  31.  37
    The Relation Between the Divided line and the Constitutions in Plato's Republic.Eli Diamond - 2006 - Polis 23 (1):74-94.
    This essay argues that there is an important analogy between the hierarchically ordered divisions of the divided line in Republic Book VI and the hierarchy of constitutions described in Books VIII-IX. Imagination corresponds to tyranny, belief to democracy, mathematical understanding to oligarchy, and dialectical reason to timocracy. The unhypothetical principle disclosed through the activity of dialectic, the idea of the Good itself, corresponds to the aristocratic rule of philosopher kings.
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  32.  39
    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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  33.  14
    The Republic and the Laws of Plato: proceedings of the first Symposium Platonicum Pragense.Aleš Havlíček & Filip Karfík (eds.) - 1998 - Prague: OIKOUMENH.
  34.  23
    The republic of reasons: public reasoning, depoliticisation and nondomination.Richard Bellamy - 2009 - In Samantha Besson & José Luis Martí (eds.), Legal Republicanism: National and International Perspectives. Oxford University Press. pp. 102--120.
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  35.  1
    Mapping the ‘Republic of Letters’ in East Central European Correspondences.Aron L. Ouwerkerk - 2024 - Journal of Early Modern Studies 13 (2):107-142.
    The significance of the ‘Republic of Letters’ as a Pan-European and cross-national concept is often addressed in scholarship on early modern intel­lectual history. Focusing on an extensive digital epistolary corpus of authors of East Central European descent from c. 1600 to c. 1800, this article aims to readdress this argument by analyzing the currency of the most frequently used terms in Latin that denote a sense of scholarly community (viz. respu­blica literaria and orbis literatus) from a combined quantitative and (...)
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  36.  6
    The Republic is a Feminist Issue.Helen Irving - 1996 - Feminist Review 52 (1):87-101.
    The growth during the 1990s of a republican movement in Australia has stimulated among other things a feminist examination of both the gendered nature of republicanism and the under-representation of women in senior positions in republican organizations. Feminists have adopted several critical perspectives on Australian republicanism: one involves the claim for the redesign of Australian political institutions in order to maximize the representation of women and women's interests; another suggests that the neglected history of women's involvement in constitutional politics during (...)
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  37. The Republic of Plato, edited with critical Notes, Commentary and Appendices.James Adam - 1903 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 55:679-681.
     
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  38.  32
    The Republic of Plato.Thomas Halton - 1965 - New Scholasticism 39 (3):404-405.
  39. The "Republic" in the Light of the Socratic Method.Henry C. Wolz - 1954 - Modern Schoolman 32:115.
     
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  40.  18
    The Role of the Intelligentsia in the Weimar Republic.Walter Laqueur - 1972 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 39.
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  41.  32
    Reconstructing the Roman Republic: An Ancient Political Culture and Modern Research.Thomas Habinek - 2013 - The European Legacy 18 (6):768-770.
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  42.  26
    The Incorporation of Several Dialogues in Plato's Republic.G. B. Hussey - 1896 - The Classical Review 10 (02):81-85.
  43.  41
    The republic revisited: The dilemma of liberty and authority.Leonard Eslick - 1971 - World Futures 10 (3):171-212.
  44.  6
    Healing the Republic: The Language of Health and the Culture of Nationalism in Nineteenth-Century AmericaJoan Burbick.Cynthia Russett - 1995 - Isis 86 (3):510-511.
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  45.  9
    The Politics of Pessimism. Albert de Broglie and Conservative Politics in the Early Third Republic.S. Hazareesingh - 1998 - History of European Ideas 24 (2):169-173.
  46.  6
    The Fitful Republic: Economy, Society, and Politics in Argentina.P. M. Hughes - 1985 - Télos 1985 (65):178-184.
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  47. (1 other version)How to play the Platonic flute: Mimêsis and Truth in Republic X.Gene Fendt - 2018 - In How to play the Platonic flute: Mimêsis and Truth in Republic X. Sioux city, Iowa: pp. 37-48.
    The usual interpretation of Republic 10 takes it as Socrates’ multilevel philosophical demonstration of the untruth and dangerousness of mimesis and its required excision from a well ordered polity. Such readings miss the play of the Platonic mimesis which has within it precisely ordered antistrophes which turn its oft remarked strophes perfectly around. First, this argument, famously concluding to the unreliability of image-makers for producing knowledge begins with two images—the mirror (596e) and the painter. I will show both undercut (...)
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  48.  46
    Governing the republic of letters: The politics of culture in the French enlightenment.Dena Goodman - 1991 - History of European Ideas 13 (3):183-199.
  49.  17
    Aviation infrastructures in the Republic of China, 1920–37.Mary Augusta Brazelton - 2023 - History of Science 61 (1):102-120.
    This essay investigates technical aspects of the history of aviation in the Republic of China, focusing on the period between 1920 and 1937. It suggests that Chinese authors and administrators came to see the establishment of technical infrastructure as dependent on the education of personnel who could assume responsibility for maintaining and expanding Chinese aviation ventures, rather than on specific technologies or practices. Magazines and journals in the 1920s reflected concerns with the establishment of weather observation and reporting, radio (...)
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  50. Departed Souls? Tripartition at the Close of Plato’s Republic.Nathan Bauer - 2017 - History of Philosophy & Logical Analysis 20 (1):139-157.
    Plato’s tripartite soul plays a central role in his account of justice in the Republic. It thus comes as a surprise to find him apparently abandoning this model at the end of the work, when he suggests that the soul, as immortal, must be simple. I propose a way of reconciling these claims, appealing to neglected features of the city-soul analogy and the argument for the soul’s division. The original true soul, I argue, is partitioned, but in a finer (...)
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