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
- Part IV Projects, Paradoxes, and Literary Registers in the Laws
- Chapter 9 Religion and Philosophy in the Laws
- Chapter 10 The Laws’ Two Projects
- Chapter 11 Plato, Xenophon, and the Laws of Lycurgus
- Chapter 12 Injury, Injustice, and the Involuntary in the Laws
- Chapter 13 Plato’s Marionette
- Chapter 14 Paradoxes of Childhood and Play in Heraclitus and Plato
- References
- Index
Chapter 13 - Plato’s Marionette
from Part IV - Projects, Paradoxes, and Literary Registers in the Laws
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
- Part IV Projects, Paradoxes, and Literary Registers in the Laws
- Chapter 9 Religion and Philosophy in the Laws
- Chapter 10 The Laws’ Two Projects
- Chapter 11 Plato, Xenophon, and the Laws of Lycurgus
- Chapter 12 Injury, Injustice, and the Involuntary in the Laws
- Chapter 13 Plato’s Marionette
- Chapter 14 Paradoxes of Childhood and Play in Heraclitus and Plato
- References
- Index
Summary
This chapter takes a fresh look at the marionette image introduced by Plato in a famous passage of Book 1 of the Laws, as he undertakes to explain the bearing of self-rule upon virtue (644b–645e). I argue that the reader of the passage is first offered a cognitive model of a unitary self, presided over by reasoning – which prompts bafflement in the Athenian Visitor’s interlocutors. The marionette image then in effect undermines that model, by portraying humans as passive subjects of contrary controlling impulses determining their behaviour. Finally the image is complicated and in the end transcended by reintroduction of reasoning as a special kind of divinely inspired impulse, with which one must actively cooperate if animal impulses are to be mastered. I examine the way Plato’s reference at this point to law (where there is a key translation problem) should be understood to bear upon the nature of the reasoning in question. In conclusion, I comment on what light is thrown by the marionette passage on self-rule, as we have been promised.
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- Chapter
- Information
- How Plato WritesPerspectives and Problems, pp. 251 - 274Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023