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Aiming at Virtue in Plato
A study of Plato's ethics, focusing on the concept of virtue. Includes detailed readings of the most important texts.
Iakovos Vasiliou (Author)
9780521862967, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 6 November 2008
322 pages
23.5 x 15.8 x 2.8 cm, 0.66 kg
'… a fascinating book. It contains innovative and important insights into Plato's ethics … Aiming at Virtue in Plato is definitely worth reading for any serious philosophically oriented student of Plato. Vasiliou has an ambitious and somewhat controversial main theme, which he manages to keep in focus throughout while simultaneously engaging in many scholarly disputes with scrupulous attention to detail.' Arctos
This study of Plato's ethics focuses on the concept of virtue. Based on detailed readings of the most prominent Platonic dialogues on virtue, it argues that there is a central yet previously unnoticed conceptual distinction in Plato between the idea of virtue as the supreme aim of one's actions and the determination of which action-tokens or -types are virtuous. Appreciating the 'aiming/determining distinction' provides detailed and mutually consistent readings of the most well-known Platonic dialogues on virtue as well as original interpretations of central Platonic questions. Unlike most examinations of Plato's ethics, this study does not take as its centrepiece the 'eudaimonist framework', which focuses on the relationship between virtue and happiness. Instead, it argues that the dialogues themselves begin with the idea of the supremacy of virtue, examine how that claim can be defended, and address how to determine what constitutes the virtuous action.
Introduction
1. Socrates and the supremacy of virtue
2. Determining virtue in the here and now
3. The supremacy of virtue in the Gorgias
4. Trying (and failing) to determine what virtue is
5. Socrates and Thrasymachus: Republic I
6. The benefits of injustice
7. Early education and non-philosophers in the Republic
8. Aiming at virtue and determining what it is
9. Epilogue.
Subject Areas: Ethics & moral philosophy [HPQ], Western philosophy: Ancient, to c 500 [HPCA], Classical history / classical civilisation [HBLA1]