Lexington Books
Pages: 264
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-1-66695-857-7 • Hardback • August 2024 • $115.00 • (£88.00)
978-1-66695-858-4 • eBook • August 2024 • $50.00 • (£38.00)
Russell Winslow teaches philosophy at St. John's College, Santa Fe.
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1: Philosophical Nature: Natural Necessity
Chapter 2: The Necessity of the Greatest Study: The Good
Chapter 3: Child of the Good: on Light and Desire
Chapter 4: Necessity in the Intelligible Region of the Divided Line
Chapter 5: Necessity in the Cave
Chapter 6: Necessity and the Highest Studies
Chapter 7: Necessity and the Song itself: Dialectic
Chapter 8: On Bastards and Orphans
Chapter 9: Necessity and Democracy
Chapter 10: The Spindle of Necessity
Bibliography
"In the past few decades, there has been significant attention paid to the ways in which vegetal and non-human animal life figures centrally in the drama of Plato's masterpiece and to the ways in which these representations compare to the depiction of material and soul, as creation and creature, in Timaeus. Winslow draws upon the findings of this important work to offer the first comprehensive analysis of the system of necessity that undergirds, or perhaps to stay with his organicism, provides the fertile soil for the contest of the just and unjust soul that constitutes the central argumentative concern of Republic. However intrinsically attuned other readers of Plato may be, we all stand to benefit greatly from careful consideration of this genuinely novel reading of this incredibly well-read text."
— Michael Weinman, Indiana University
“It’s uncommon at this point in the history of philosophy to offer something novel regarding Plato, let alone about his Republic, but Russell Winslow has done so in the beautifully written and well-argued Necessity and Philosophy in Plato’s Republic. Winslow reinterprets the Republic on the basis of a “destabilizing irrationality” at work within its concept of necessity, an irrationality that betrays a tragic finitude inherent in human life and logos. Encountering this finitude, the book argues, produces the art forms of tragedy, comedy, and philosophy. Winslow’s book is a welcomed challenge to revisit and re-think a dialogue that has become perhaps only too familiar.”
— Sonja Tanner, University of Colorado