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[...]... neither there nor in the Timaeus do we find the Idea ofthe Good The Idea ofthe Good, we are told, stands in relation to the other Ideas as the sun does in relation to the visible and living things around us; as the sun is the source of their life and visibility, so is the Idea ofthe Good the source both ofthe existence and ofthe intelligibility ofthe Ideas.2 They derive from it, and are to be understood... education ofthe Guardians seems to be a programme ofthe studies that were to be pursued there ' ;5 the Idea ofthe Good, on the other hand, he assigns to the influence not of Socrates but of Euclides of Megara.6 However, the view of these two scholars that a major portion ofPlato' s positive philosophy (in particular the Theory of Forms and the metaphysics ofthe soul) can be assigned to Socrates has met... outside the Republic there are two passages in Plato which help to point to a correct view, one earlier than theRepublic and one later, viz Phaedo 97 B ff and Timaeus 28 A ff The former is also relevant to the simile ofthe line in its use ofthe notion of hypothesis.1 But the conception of teleological explanation in the Phaedo does not go as far as the Republic, and neither there nor in the Timaeus... ofPlato' s attitude to the Forms.3 5 THE BACKGROUND TO THE'REPUBLIC' We must on the whole count it prudent of Adam that he scarcely committed himself at all on the controversial questions of Platonic chronology: on the one hand there remain matters which are still today in dispute, and on the other the whole range of issues was at the beginning ofthe century in a more fluid state than it is now The. .. Burnet's text of the Republic, ibid, xvi (1902), 215-19 xvi INTRODUCTION chapters I have made much use of MS notes for lectures by my husband.' Two essays in The Vitality of Platonism and Other Essays (ed A M Adam, 1911) touch upon Plato and, among other works, upon the Republic, ' The Vitality of Platonism' and ' The Doctrine ofthe Celestial Origin ofthe Soul from Pindar to Plato' ; the latter Adam had... Murphy, 'The "Simile of Light" in Plato' s Republic' , Class Quart, xxvi (1932), 93-102; Idem, 'Back to the Cave', Class Quart, xxvm (1934), 211-13; Idem, The Interpretation ofPlato' s Republic (1951), ch 8; P Shorey, What Plato Said (1933), pp 230-5; Idem, Introduction to vol 11 of edition of theRepublic (Loeb series, 1935); J A Notopoulos, 'The Meaning of ecKaala in the Divided Line ofPlato' s Republic' ,... But the correctness or incorrectness of Adam's more controversial theses of interpretation, as on the objects of mathematical study and the subject-matter of astronomy, or the astronomy ofthe myth of Er (let alone the 'nuptial number' of Book VIII), will not, I think, be in any way affected by the maintenance of any chronological ordering among the dialogues that is at all plausible 1 2 3 4 'Plato' s... seems to minimize the sharp gap for Plato between the sensible and the intelligible when he discusses the applicability of mathematics to the sensible world,6 and, somewhat similarly, when he appears to suggest that the Idea ofthe Good provides an explanation and justification ofthe totality of things, i.e the framework for a kind of theodicy with an impersonal Good in the place of a personal God.7... on the nature ofthe Platonic Forms or Ideas he found himself in sharp disagreement with some ofthe most influential expositions of his day, and in particular with those of Bernard Bosanquet (A Companion to Plato' s Republic, 1895)2 and R L Nettleship (Lectures on the Republicof Plato, posthumous, 1897).3 Students and admirers as they were ofthe critical philosophy the transcendental idealism of. .. for the study ofPlato' s philosophy attaches, for instance, to the treatment ofthe soul in Book iv, studied by F M Cornford ('Psychology and Social Structure in the Republicof Plato' , Class Quart, vi (1912), 246-65, and 'The Division ofthe Soul', Hibbert J xxvm (1929-30), 206-19); R Hackforth ( 'The Modification of Plan in Plato' s Republic' , Class Quart, vn (1913), 26572); J L Stocks (' Plato and the . means of a commentary. In
one sense of the term, indeed, there can never be a definitive or
final interpretation of the Republic, for the Republic is one of
those. claim the right to interpret the fountain-head of idealism
for themselves, in the light of their own experience and needs.
But in another sense of the word,