Book contents
- How Plato Writes
- How Plato Writes
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Part I Approaches to the Corpus
- Part II Argument and Dialogue Architecture
- Part III Myth and Allegory in the Republic
- Chapter 7 The Noble Lie
- Chapter 8 The Cave
- Part IV Projects, Paradoxes, and Literary Registers in the Laws
- References
- Index
Chapter 8 - The Cave
from Part III - Myth and Allegory in the Republic
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 July 2023
- How Plato Writes
- How Plato Writes
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Part I Approaches to the Corpus
- Part II Argument and Dialogue Architecture
- Part III Myth and Allegory in the Republic
- Chapter 7 The Noble Lie
- Chapter 8 The Cave
- Part IV Projects, Paradoxes, and Literary Registers in the Laws
- References
- Index
Summary
The Cave analogy in Book 7 of the Republic admits of no single consistent interpretation. It communicates not one philosophical vision but two. One is developed in the initial narrative, which tells its own compelling story, dropping plenty of hints – varying in directness or mysteriousness – on how it is to be read. The other vision is articulated mostly in the philosophical commentary on the Cave that Plato’s Socrates supplies when he tells his interlocutor Glaucon how to decode it. We should take the commentary as enunciating inter alia a set of instructions not on what the narrative means as originally articulated, but on how it is to be reread as an allegory of the trainee philosopher’s education. The Cave as narrated begins as a moral and political allegory of the condition of ordinary people in the city – in the first instance, the democratic city – and of their need for redemption from it. The Cave as reinterpreted in philosophical commentary is an image of the reorientation of the soul which can be achieved by the practice of mathematics. Consistency of interpretation as between original narrative and subsequent commentary is therefore not mandatory.
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- Information
- How Plato WritesPerspectives and Problems, pp. 163 - 180Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023