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 11 - Plato, Xenophon, and the Laws of Lycurgus
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
The relation between the opening section of Plato’s Laws and Xenophon’s Constitution of the Lacedaemonians usually goes unnoticed. I draw attention to its importance for understanding Plato’s project in the dialogue. Section 1 shows that the view proposed by Plato’s Athenian Visitor that Lycurgus made virtue in its entirety the goal of his statecraft was anticipated in Xenophon’s treatise. It has to be treated as an interpretation of the Spartan politeia alternative to that advanced by the Athenian’s interlocutors, which Plato could hope to be taken seriously as such. The second section focuses on the legislative programme the Athenian says he had hoped to hear ascribed to the Cretan and Spartan lawgivers. Plato can expect recognition by the reader that the programme is properly Spartan and Cretan by virtue of its echoes of the programme attributed to Lycurgus by Xenophon. The third section argues that in making law primarily concerned with fostering the proper development, conduct, and treatment of human beings at every stage of the life cycle, above all by provision for sound customary practices and the like, Plato adopts the approach to law making taken by Xenophon’s Lycurgus.
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- Information
- How Plato WritesPerspectives and Problems, pp. 219 - 239Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023