Politics had become a mess as politicians and their constituents gave up seeking the common good for seeking more goods for themselves and their friends. Rampant individualism was the rule of the day and justice, if mentioned at all, was merely a pretext for self-seeking.
Against that backdrop of a decaying political culture, Plato wrote The Republic. In it Socrates challenged the prevailing notions of justice and described what he viewed as true justice in individuals and in society.
Dr. Virginia Arbery, Associate Professor of Humanities at Wyoming Catholic College holds a doctorate in Political Philosophy from The University of Dallas. She has a great love for The Republic, happily sharing the book with her students and with us.
Arithmetic, Murder, and Redemption in Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment with Dr. Thaddeus Kozinski
Gothic Cathedrals: The Architecture of Contemplation with Dr. Jason Baxter
Sacred Signs: On the Physical Side of Being Spiritual with Dr Kent Lasnoski
The Pope, Authority, and “Religious Assent” with Dr. Jeremy Holmes
Paradise Lost: A Conversation with Dr. Glenn Arbery
The Roots of Philosophy: Theories about Everything
Silence and Sacred Space
Evil Enchantment and The Weight of Glory: What Dante Taught C.S. Lewis about Poetry with Dr. Jason Baxter
Euclid and the Beauty of Numbers with Dr. Scott Olsson
Introduction to "The Great Books" with Dr. Thaddeus Kozinski
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