The Republic: Background Info
Author Bio
Full Name: Plato
Pen Name: 428 BC
Date of Birth: 1903
Date of Death: 348 BC
Brief Life Story: Plato’s father Ariston descended from Codrus, the last King of Athens, and his mother Perictione had ties to Solon, one of the creators of the Athenian Constitution. Plato’s brothers Glaucon and Adeimantus briefly appear in the Republic. Plato planned a political career until 404 BC, when Athens became controlled by an Oligarchy of wealthy men. After Athens was restored to democracy in 403 BC, Plato again considered politics until Socrates, Plato’s mentor, was accused of heresy and put to death in 399 BC. Plato subsequently abandoned politics for philosophy. He eventually founded the Academy, a philosophy school.
Key Facts
Full Title: Republic
Genre: Philosophical dialogues
Setting: The house of Cephalus, in the Piraeus, or port section of Athens, Greece, around the 5th century BC.
Protagonist: Socrates
Antagonist: Thrasymachus and other debaters
Point of View: First Person (Socrates is the narrator)
Historical and Literary Context
When Published: First transcribed circa fourth century BC.
Original Language: Ancient Greek
Literary Period: Classical
Related Literary Works: Plato wrote a number of other works in the form of dialogues, including The Symposium, Phaedrus, and Crito. The Republic is from the latter part of Plato’s career. Plato’s ideas regarding the ideal city influenced More’s Utopia, in which More describes the mythical “perfect place,” (Utopia literally means “no place”) based on the recollections of a traveler. Utopia’s customs and government were partly inspired by Plato’s ideal city in the Republic.
Related Historical Events: The Peloponnesian war between Sparta and Athens took place from 431–408 BC. Plato probably saw military service during the course of the war. Athens lost, and the war had a profound affect on politics and philosophy. The rise of democracy as a form of government made the ability to speak and debate more important. The Sophists, nomadic teachers who taught the arts of rhetoric to anyone who could pay them, became influential. The Sophists were particularly popular during Athens’ brief democracy when the ability to persuade large groups of people became more important than speaking the truth.
Extra Credit
The Socratic Method. The method Plato has Socrates use in Republic, that is, asking leading questions that provoke discussion and encourage his audience to follow his train of thought until they arrive at the solution he favors, is called in Greek elenchus, and in English the “Socratic method.” You can see the Socratic method particularly clearly in Book I of Republic, but Plato also uses it in many of his earlier works.
Aristotle’s Teacher. Just as Plato is the most famous follower of Socrates, Aristotle is the most famous of Plato’s students. Other followers include the Neo-Platonists, philosophers like Plotinus and Proclus who took Plato’s ideas about the nature of reality and his theory of forms and developed them even further. The Neo-Platonists influenced Saint Augustine, one of the fathers of the early Christian Church.




