Blindness and Reorientation
Problems in Plato's Republic
C.D.C. Reeve
Reviews and Awards
"...it is evident that the book is full of first-rate Plato scholarship, and that its readers are more likely to be the specialist scholars... Nevertheless, I have no doubt that this book deserves a place among books that all serious students of Plato should consult... I am convinced, moreover, that Reeve's love of the Republic, which has 'intensified over the intervening years' since he wrote the Philosopher-Kings, has led to greater insight and not blindness, even though love can have the reverse effect too (p. xiii)." --POLIS, The Journal for Ancient Greek Political Thought
"Reeve's explorations of problems in the Republic illuminate familiar and unfamiliar places, and in Platonic fashion spark fresh thinking in us about knowledge, beauty and the good. Reeve's deep and easy familiarity with Plato's writing can be felt through this engaging study, which can be enjoyed by readers at several levels of knowledge of Plato."--Julia Annas, University of Arizona
"David Reeve's fascinating and beautifully written book on Plato's Republic draws on a lifetime of engagement with the dialogue as both translator and interpreter. Full of insightful and novel ideas on a raft of topics--the cast of characters both on and off stage, the transformation of Socratic philosophy into mature Platonism, erotic love and beauty, moral education and the ascent to the Form of the Good, the Platonic conception of happiness, and much else--this book will appeal to novice and expert alike, both of whom will come away from this delightful read with a deeper knowledge of the Republic."--David Keyt, University of Washington
"In his new book David Reeve returns to Plato's Republic, and offers the reader a characteristically provocative menu of fresh perspectives. These include a prefatory look at the Apology's presentation of Socratic wisdom and reconsiderations of eros and beauty (not forgetting sex) in the Symposium. Cephalus (at the start of the Republic) and Odysseus (at its end) are paired in an unusually rewarding treatment. The ultimate goal is illumination of Plato's conception of philosophy and the philosopher, but along the way highlights include masterly chapters on Thrasymachean Realpolitik and the theory of the tripartite soul."--Malcolm Schofield, Emeritus Professor of Ancient Philosophy, University of Cambridge