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The Intelligent Troglodyte’s Guide to Plato’s Republic, 2016a

The Intelligent Troglodyte’s Guide to Plato’s Republic, 2016a

The Intelligent Troglodyte’s Guide to Plato’s Republic, 2016a

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Imagine a person who is obsessed with pursuing the answer <strong>to</strong> an<br />

exceptionally challenging problem in mathematics. This is all he cares<br />

about. Everything in his life is subordinated <strong>to</strong> finding the answer <strong>to</strong> this<br />

problem. He has contempt for his fellow human beings – “mere<br />

particulars,” he calls them – and thinks nothing of stealing from them or<br />

manipulating them in other ways if it will help him as he works <strong>to</strong>wards his<br />

problem’s solution. Would this person have a tyrannical soul? Socrates<br />

assumes that a person ruled by the rational part of the soul will live an<br />

orderly, virtuous life. But he also assumes that such a person either knows<br />

the form of the good or aspires <strong>to</strong> attain this knowledge. What then of the<br />

obsessed mathematician? Is this example psychologically possible, or does<br />

the pursuit of the forms, even of relatively unimportant mathematical forms,<br />

inevitably cleanse the soul of selfishness and moral insensitivity?

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