A sublimed experience of the rhetoric of Plato's Republic

TitleA sublimed experience of the rhetoric of Plato's Republic
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2016
AuthorsMichael Warren1, mtumolo@csustan.edu Tumolo
JournalAtlantic Journal of Communication
Volume24
Issue2
Pagination71-82
ISSN15456870
Abstract

This article argues that Plato's Republic promotes a public memory characterized by a sublimed experience of reason. The standard understanding of the meaning and value of the Republic is a product of processes of sublimation rather than a necessary conclusion drawn from the text's propositional content. Key moments of the text illustrate this pattern of sublimation. The particular strand of arguments from the Republic addressed in this article invite readers to justify the use of deception, to forget the ethical implications of achieving and maintaining justice through deceit, and to identify with the ruling and deceiving class. Critical attention to this line of arguments offers an understanding of the symbiotic, rather than antagonistic, relationship between philosophy and rhetoric while allowing us to recognize the danger inherent in our willingness to rationalize the unethical foundation of the kallipolis.

DOI10.1080/15456870.2016.1148696