Skip to product information
1 of 1

Plato and the Invention of Life

Regular price $39.00
Sale price $39.00 Regular price $39.00
Sale Sold out
Beginning with a reading of Plato’s Statesman, this work interrogates the relationship between life and being in Plato’s thought. It argues that in his later dialogues Plato discovers—or invents—...
Read More
  • Format:
  • 03 April 2018
View Product Details

The question of life, Michael Naas argues, though rarely foregrounded by Plato, runs through and structures his thought. By characterizing being in terms of life, Plato in many of his later dialogues, including the Statesman, begins to discover—or, better, to invent—a notion of true or real life that would be opposed to all merely biological or animal life, a form of life that would be more valuable than everything we call life and every life that can actually be lived.

This emphasis on life in the Platonic dialogues illuminates the structural relationship between many of Plato’s most time-honored distinctions, such as being and becoming, soul and body. At the same time, it helps to explain the enormous power and authority that Plato’s thought has exercised, for good or ill, over our entire philosophical and religious tradition.

Lucid yet sophisticated, Naas’s account offers a fundamental rereading of what the concept of life entails, one that inflects a range of contemporary conversations, from biopolitics, to the new materialisms, to the place of the human within the living world.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $39.00
Pages: 288
Publisher: Fordham University Press
Imprint: Fordham University Press
Publication Date: 03 April 2018
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780823279685
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

PHILOSOPHY / Metaphysics, LITERARY CRITICISM / Semiotics & Theory, SCIENCE / Philosophy & Social Aspects

Michael Naas's remarkable account of Plato traces the contemporary line between bios and zōē, which has been an abiding feature of recent discussions of biopolitics, to reveal the original Platonic invention of the division between 'Life itself' and all other forms of living, including eternal life. Perhaps another way of saying this, according to Naas, is that already in Plato there is Platonism, the opposite of Platonism, and the deconstruction of every future Platonism.---Gregg Lambert, Syracuse University

Introduction: Philosophy’s Gigantomachia over Life and Being
1. The Lifelines of the Statesman
2. Life and Spontaneity
3. The Shepherd and the Weaver: A Foucauldian Fable

4. The Measure of Life and Logos

5. Fruits of the Poisonous Tree: Plato and Alcidamas on the Evils of Writing

6. The Life of Law and the Law of Life

7. Plato and the Invention of Life Itself

Conclusion: Life on the Line


Acknowledgments

Notes

Index