31 March 2025
Plato’s View Regarding the Philosopher’s Involvement in Worldly Affairs
“Socrates: No one whose thoughts are truly directed towards the things that are, Adeimantus, has the leisure to look down at human affairs or to be filled with envy and hatred by competing with people. Instead, as he looks at and studies things that are organized and always the same, that neither do injustice to one another nor suffer it, being all in rational order, he imitates them and tries to become as like them as he can. Or do you think that someone can consort with things he admires without imitating them?
“Adeimantus: I do not. It’s impossible.
“Socrates: Then the philosopher, by consorting with what is ordered and divine and despite all the slanders around that say otherwise, himself becomes as divine and ordered as a human being can.
“Adeimantus: That’s absolutely true.”
(Plato, The Republic VI, translated by G.M.A. Grube and C.D.C. Reeve, Plato: Complete Works, edited by John M. Cooper, Hackett Publishing Company, Indianapolis, pages 1121 and 1122, 500b-500d, ISBN: 9780872203495)
“Socrates: The law says, doesn’t it, that it is best to keep as quiet as possible in misfortunes and not get excited about them? First, it isn’t clear whether such things will turn out to be good or bad in the end; second, it doesn’t make the future any better to take them hard; third, human affairs aren’t worth taking very seriously; and finally, grief prevents the very thing we most need in such circumstances from coming into play as quickly as possible.
“Glaucon: What are you referring to?
“Socrates: Deliberation. We must accept what has happened as we would the fall of the dice, and then arrange our affairs in whatever way reason determines to be best. We mustn’t hug the hurt part and spend our time weeping and wailing like children when they trip. Instead, we should always accustom our souls to turn as quickly as possible to healing the disease and putting the disaster right, replacing lamentation with cure.”
(Plato, The Republic X, as above, page 1209)
1. In the first quote, Plato writes that the philosopher does not have the time to look down on human affairs. In the second quote, Plato writes that human affairs aren’t worth taking very seriously.
I understand this as a result of looking at things from the perspective of eternity. From the perspective of eternity, the manifestations in the human realm are but a brief spark and when measured against the everlasting cosmic tides of time, and when measured against that which transcends time altogether, it is almost as if they never existed.
2. In some ways Plato’s point is not difficult to understand. At a more mundane level, anyone who is devoted to a field of human life will find that the time they have for other fields of human life is necessarily limited. For example, if someone is a highly trained musician, this training takes a huge amount of time. If the musician earns their living traveling and giving concerts this makes it almost impossible to spend time on the ups and downs of worldly affairs. Similarly, if one pursues an athletic endeavor, this also requires a great deal of training and commitment. Such training and commitment consumes almost all the time of one’s life outside of basic human relations such as to one’s parents and family. There is a limited amount that one can do in a life and Plato is saying, in part, that this is also true for philosophers.
The difference is that the philosopher is pursuing ‘things that are’, which is to say that which is beyond becoming and begonning. The musician, the athlete, and so forth, are pursuing tasks that are recognizable to the senses of observers whereas the pursuit of philosophy is not recognizable, or perceivable, by the senses. This is what gives rise to people thinking that philosophy is foolish or not worthwhile. But once a student of the Way of Philosophy has had even a small glimpse of the transcendent it will seem to such a student that nothing is more worthwhile than this pursuit.
3. It’s helpful to think about the passage in the first quote where Plato writes that the philosopher ‘imitates’ the things that are and tries to become like them as much as is humanly possible. When reading this I also thought of the word ‘alignment’ as appropriate; I mean that imitating the noetic realities, and the reality of the Good and the One, is a way of aligning with those realities.
Humans are highly imitative; it is one of the ways that humans learn. Imitation is a kind of learning by doing. In the quote Plato points specifically to the philosopher neither committing injustice nor suffering injustice. Justice is a major theme in The Republic and this is pointing to the source of justice in the noetic. In various dialogues, injustice is connected to harming others; for this reason I think that the philosopher must align himself with the reality of non-harming in the noetic realm, to the best of his ability in this human birth and in this material reality.
3.1 In the Loeb translation, by Chris Emlyn-Jones and William Preddy, the phrase ‘do no wrong’ is used instead of ‘injustice’ (page 63). I think this brings the discussion into a larger ethical context and would connect this to other issues such as vegetarianism.
3.2 In Jowett’s translation Jowett uses the word ‘injured’ rather than injustice or ‘do no wrong’; “he [the philosopher] sees neither injuring nor injured by one another.” By the context I would assume this means injuring the soul rather than bodily injuries since a primary purpose of philosophy is to transcend concern with the body.
3.3 The point is that the philosopher imitates, or aligns with, this noetic reality of what I might call ‘not engaging in strife’ with others. In the noetic realm strife is not a reality because noetic realities are transparent to each other and interpenetrate each other. In such a context strife would instantly rebound upon the maker of strife; one cannot get away without those consequences in the noetic realm. But since strife and division do not even arise in the noetic, this is not even an issue.
3.4 The philosopher imitates this noetic reality and thereby gets closer to the ultimate reality of the Good. But in the material world it is only possible to do this to a degree; this is because the material world is inherently a realm of strife and division. This is one reason why the path of philosophy is challenging and requires great dedication.
4. According to the second quote, when harm, injustice, and strife in general occur in our lives we must accept them and then proceed with our lives as best we can. I often feel that Platonism is mature when discussing these issues. Platonism doesn’t suggest that we can create a utopia on earth, or that we can transform the material world into a heavenly realm. This is a result of Platonism differentiating the noetic from the material, and the Good from the noetic. These three realms are related to each other, but they are also different realities. It is like differentiating between the ecology of mountain heights and the ecology of the forest below and the ecology of a river delta. They are all connected but they support different material realities. The hypostases of the metaphysical cosmos found in Platonism are similarly differentiated; what is found in one hypostasis differs from what is found in the others.
5. This realm in which we live is a difficult realm. It is filled with suffering and strife. Though there are moments of beauty and peace, those moments are brief. It is possible for those moments to inspire us to return to the source of those moments; that source being the nous, the second hypostasis, and ultimately the transcendent One. But that source is hidden. That source is hidden from our senses because our senses are unable to perceive its existence. That source is hidden from our mind, particularly in modernity, because we live at a time when the rejection of the transcendental is almost complete; in other words, the structures of our mind that our culture cultivates are a barrier to the mystical ascent to the One.
Still, it is possible to turn away from the distractions of the material world; it’s not easy, but it is possible. This is done by following the presence of beauty and peace back to their source and there it is possible to rest in true peace.