Platonic Legislations: An Essay on Legal Critique in Ancient Greece

Cham: Springer Verlag (2017)
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Abstract

This book discusses how Plato, one the fiercest legal critics in ancient Greece, became – in the longue durée – its most influential legislator. Making use of a vast scholarly literature, and offering original readings of a number of dialogues, it argues that the need for legal critique and the desire for legal permanence set the long arc of Plato’s corpus—from the Apology to the Laws. Modern philosophers and legal historians have tended to overlook the fact that Plato was the most prolific legislator in ancient Greece. In the pages of his Republic and Laws, he drafted more than 700 statutes. This is more legal material than can be credited to the archetypal Greek legislators—Lycurgus, Draco, and Solon. The status of Plato’s laws is unique, since he composed them for purely hypothetical cities. And remarkably, he introduced this new genre by writing hard-hitting critiques of the Greek ideal of the sovereignty of law. Writing in the milieu in which immutable divine law vied for the first time with volatile democratic law, Plato rejected both sources of law, and sought to derive his laws from what he called ‘political technique’. At the core of this technique is the question of how the idea of justice relates to legal and institutional change. Filled with sharp observations and bold claims, Platonic Legislations shows that it is possible to see Plato—and our own legal culture—in a new light “In this provocative, intelligent, and elegant work D. L. Dusenbury has posed crucial questions not only as regards Plato’s thought in the making, but also as regards our contemporaneity.”—Giorgio Camassa, University of Udine “There is a tension in Greek law, and in Greek legal thinking, between an understanding of law as unchangeable and authoritative, and a recognition that formal rules are often insufficient for the interpretation of reality, and need to be constantly revised to match it. Dusenbury’s book illuminates the sophistication of Plato’s legal thought in its engagement with this tension, and explores the potential of Plato’s reflection for modern legal theory.”—Mirko Canevaro, The University of Edinburgh.

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Chapters

Socrates’ Execution and Platonic Legislation

Platonic legislation has its origins in the Athenian law-court in which Socrates was condemned to death, in 399 bce. A young Plato was present at his trial. The injustice of the judgement against Socrates, which was handed down by some 500 citizen-judges at the conclusion of a procedurally valid tri... see more

The Platonic Dialogues and Legal Critique

Plato’s corpus is not systematic, but dramatic. This chapter introduces the drama of legal critique in his dialogues. Following a brief introduction to Plato and his chronology, with a glance at Platonism in the longue durée, the motif of legal critique is then traced up the dialogues that concern u... see more

Argument

In his supremely influential corpus, Plato lays out a critique of what he calls, in Laws IX, ‘all presently existing legislation’. Since archaic law-codes in Greece were held to have been revealed to human legislators by the gods, a critique of divine legislation is necessarily one moment of the Pla... see more

A Critique of Law and the First Platonic Law-Code

In one of his middle-period dialogues, Gorgias, Socrates says this: ‘I, being but one man, dissent.’ The question of dissent is of fundamental importance to Plato’s legal theory. And this question likely receives its most rigorous treatment in the Gorgias, where the validity of the law-state is most... see more

The Flux of Law and the Second Platonic Law-Code

In one of his late dialogues, Politicus, Plato articulates a formal critique of law. No law-code, human or divine, can comprehend ‘the fact that none of the human things is ever at rest’. The flux of things necessitates a flux of law. Nevertheless, Plato believes that a law-code’s volatility is both... see more

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