"Hogyan kell cselekednünk" - igazságos egyén és igazságos állam kapcsolata Platón Államában

Balázs Katalin: "Hogyan kell cselekednünk" - igazságos egyén és igazságos állam kapcsolata Platón Államában.

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Absztrakt (kivonat)

Justice is a preferred notion in our social life. As much as we feel it important to clarify the concept and content, this notion slips out of our hands when we want to grab it and explain it more. No one can deny the actuality of the problem, but I chose to present an author who is not in any way can be described as modern - but I think we can speak about his topicality. While reading Plato the reader often has a sense of that his own society problems are the topics of the dialogues. In The Republic, the aim of the dialogue is to setting up an equitable, ideal state. Plato starts with an eschatological featured investigation. Socrates and Kephalos discuss the problem of life after death. As Plato describes him as a very old man, Kephalos is strongly concerned about the idea to see what happens after death. The main question is, how the man should live his life as to leave no debt to anyone when it comes time to say goodbye. Is there a main principle that helps to reach the peace of the soul of man - and later on the other side as well? Plato attempts to define justice on several occasions conceptually. Since they want to create an ideal state, they are talking of the same opinion that it's all about achieving a good base for it. If the base is good, the state necessarily will be perfect. In the first book three opinions are separated in relations to justice. The first one is the principle of Simonides in the interpretation of Kephalos and Polemarchos. According to this, justice is “to tell the truth and return what one has received” (331 d). The second, who is wishing to define the notion, is the sophist Thrasymachos who formulates a "new morality" which is quite the opposite of Socrates’, and the third one is Socrates himself, who transmits the calmer philosophical thinking to the others. While Thrasymachos represents the practice, the power of the stronger men, Socrates insists on the ideal opinion that being equitable is a way of life; this is the rule of the reason over our instincts. Plato is emphasizes in several places that justice is manifests if everyone does their job and does not deal with the others: it is the only way to work harmoniously in the state. In fact, not only in the state: in the individual, it is the harmony of the different parts of the soul. According to Plato’s vision to justice, we can describe it as the expression of the perfect order, or appropriate rate. If harmony is realized, justice will realize too. That is how justice is becoming a power; a power to converge virtues and people of the state.

Mű típusa: Konferencia vagy workshop anyag
Befoglaló folyóirat/kiadvány címe: Acta Szegediensia Collegii de Rolando Eötvös Nominati : Eötvözet
Dátum: 2013
Kötet: 2
ISSN: 2062-8439
ISBN: 978-963-306-223-4
Oldalak: pp. 118-125
Nyelv: magyar , angol
Közreműködők:
Közreműködés
Név
NEM RÉSZLETEZETT
Platon
Kiadó: SZTE Eötvös Loránd Kollégium
Kiadás helye: Szeged
Konferencia neve: Eötvözet (2.)
Konferencia típusa: Konferencia
Helyszin: Szeged
Dátum: 2013
Befoglaló mű URL: http://acta.bibl.u-szeged.hu/55461/
Kulcsszavak: Filozófia - ókori - görög - i.e. 4. sz., Görög irodalom - próza, Államelmélet - ókori - görög
Megjegyzések: Bibliogr.: 124. p. és a lábjegyzetekben ; összefoglalás angol nyelven
Szakterület: 06. Bölcsészettudományok
06. Bölcsészettudományok > 06.02. Nyelvek és irodalom
06. Bölcsészettudományok > 06.03. Filozófia, etika és vallástudományok
Feltöltés dátuma: 2018. okt. 19. 10:03
Utolsó módosítás: 2022. dec. 22. 11:34
URI: http://acta.bibl.u-szeged.hu/id/eprint/55600
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