Republic Book VI

E190160

Republic Book VI is a section of Plato’s Republic in which Socrates develops his theory of philosophical rulers and introduces the central metaphysical and ethical role of the Form of the Good.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Republic Book VI canonical 2

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (46)

Predicate Object
instanceOf book section
part of philosophical dialogue
argues knowledge of the Good is necessary for just rule
only philosophers are fit to rule the ideal city
the Good is beyond being in dignity and power
author Plato
centralClaim philosophical education is necessary for just governance
political justice requires rule by those who know the Good
contains analogy of the sun
description of the divided line
discusses contrast between true philosophers and pseudo‑philosophers
corruption of political power without philosophy
difference between the visible and intelligible realms
hierarchy of cognitive states
qualification of rulers by knowledge of the Good
role of mathematics in education
epistemologicalFocus difference between doxa and epistēmē
structure of knowledge and belief
ethicalFocus nature of justice in rulers
relation between the Good and virtuous action
featuresCharacter Adeimantus
Glaucon
Socrates
influenced Christian philosophical conceptions of God as the Good
Neoplatonism
later metaphysical theories of the Good
modern political philosophy discussions of meritocratic rule
introducesConcept Form of the Good as highest principle
divided line analogy
philosophical rulers as ideal governors
language Ancient Greek
mainTheme the Good (Form of the Good)
surface form: Form of the Good

distinction between knowledge and opinion
education of rulers
metaphysics and ethics
nature of philosophical knowledge
philosopher‑kings
metaphysicalFocus Forms
supremacy of the Form of the Good
partOf Plato's Republic
philosophicalSchool Platonism
philosophicalTradition Greek philosophy
surface form: Ancient Greek philosophy
setsUp Republic, Book VII (Allegory of the Cave)
surface form: Allegory of the Cave in Book VII
setting dialogue in Athens
timeOfComposition 4th century BCE
workType Socratic dialogue

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

the Good (Form of the Good) discussedIn Republic Book VI
subject surface form: Form of the Good
Divided Line discussedInBook Republic Book VI