Book contents
- Proclus
- Proclus
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Note on the Text and Translation
- General Introduction
- On the Republic of Plato: Essays 7–15
- Introduction to Essay 7
- Essay 7 Proclus the Successor on the demonstrations in the fourth book of the Republic on the three parts of the human soul and the virtues that are 5 in them.
- Introduction to Essays 8 and 9
- Essay 8 236 Concerning the arguments in the fifth book of the Republic showing the virtues and education of men and women to be the same.
- Essay 9 251 An examination of the arguments of Theodore of Asine that render virtue the same for men and women and concerning what 5 Socrates said.
- Introduction to Essay 10
- Essay 10 258 On the discussion in the Fifth Book of the Republic demonstrating what kind the love of 5 learning of philosophers is, and what kind that of the majority.
- Introduction to Essay 11
- Essay 11 269On the Discussion in the Republic Demonstrating What the Good Is
- Introduction to Essay 12
- Essay 12 287On the Cave in the Seventh Book of Republic
- Introduction to Essay 13
- Essay 13 1 By Proclus the Lycian, Diadochus of the Platonic School
- Introduction to Essays 14 and 15
- Essay 14 81 On the Three Arguments Showing that the Just Life is Happier than the Unjust
- Essay 15 84The major sections of the Tenth Book
- References
- English–Greek Glossary
- Greek Word Index
- General Index
Essay 7 - Proclus the Successor on the demonstrations in the fourth book of the Republic on the three parts of the human soul and the virtues that are 5 in them.
from On the Republic of Plato: Essays 7–15
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 June 2022
- Proclus
- Proclus
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Note on the Text and Translation
- General Introduction
- On the Republic of Plato: Essays 7–15
- Introduction to Essay 7
- Essay 7 Proclus the Successor on the demonstrations in the fourth book of the Republic on the three parts of the human soul and the virtues that are 5 in them.
- Introduction to Essays 8 and 9
- Essay 8 236 Concerning the arguments in the fifth book of the Republic showing the virtues and education of men and women to be the same.
- Essay 9 251 An examination of the arguments of Theodore of Asine that render virtue the same for men and women and concerning what 5 Socrates said.
- Introduction to Essay 10
- Essay 10 258 On the discussion in the Fifth Book of the Republic demonstrating what kind the love of 5 learning of philosophers is, and what kind that of the majority.
- Introduction to Essay 11
- Essay 11 269On the Discussion in the Republic Demonstrating What the Good Is
- Introduction to Essay 12
- Essay 12 287On the Cave in the Seventh Book of Republic
- Introduction to Essay 13
- Essay 13 1 By Proclus the Lycian, Diadochus of the Platonic School
- Introduction to Essays 14 and 15
- Essay 14 81 On the Three Arguments Showing that the Just Life is Happier than the Unjust
- Essay 15 84The major sections of the Tenth Book
- References
- English–Greek Glossary
- Greek Word Index
- General Index
Summary
How Socrates in the Republic arranged the account concerning the virtues, after he isolated both the political classes and the parts of the soul, is itself something that we might learn once we have first sought for ourselves an answer to this question: ‘What is the distinctive feature of every virtue?’ I do not use the word ‘virtue’ homonymously in the sense in which it is customarily applied even to things that are lifeless, as when one talks about the virtue of an implement or some such thing, but I mean instead when the term is used strictly.22 In this sense we will inevitably be speaking about something that relates to its vital character and the way that it perfects its life, since it is the cause of things going well for those in which it is present rather than of their existence.
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- Information
- Proclus: Commentary on Plato's 'Republic' , pp. 34 - 69Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022