Sublime
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the critic • The death of Ideals

Plato begins by deciding that the citizens are to be divided into three classes: the common people, the soldiers, and the guardians. The last, alone, are to have political power.
Bertrand Russell • History of Western Philosophy
PLATO’S most important dialogue, the Republic, consists, broadly, of three parts. The first (to near the end of Book V) consists in the construction of an ideal commonwealth; it is the earliest of Utopias.
Bertrand Russell • History of Western Philosophy
Plato, as we’ve just seen, had set out his ethical system whereby such ethical notions as goodness, virtue and justice were identified as far-off, objective concepts, known to us only by their pale imitations that we are able to perceive here on Earth. No amount of human introspection could bring us closer to these eternal truths; instead, it was t
... See moreDerren Brown • Happy: Why More or Less Everything is Absolutely Fine
Plato’s truth is identical not only with the beautiful, but with the good and the just.