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Demotic Virtues in Plato’s Laws

  • Mariana Beatriz Noé ORCID logo EMAIL logo
From the journal Apeiron

Abstract

I argue that, in Plato’s Laws, demotic virtues (δημόσιαι ἀρεταί, 968a2) are the virtues that non-divine beings can attain. I consider two related questions: what demotic virtues are and how they relate to divine virtue. According to my interpretation, demotic virtues are an attainable – but unreliable – type of virtue that non-divine beings can improve through knowledge. These virtues are not perfect; only divine beings possess perfect virtue. However, this does not mean that perfect virtue plays no part in the ethical lives of non-divine beings. It serves as a “regulative ideal” for everyone who is not a god.


Corresponding author: Mariana Beatriz Noé, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA, E-mail:

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Received: 2023-04-21
Accepted: 2024-01-12
Published Online: 2024-02-01

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