• This paper examines Plato’s underexplored conception of civic moderation in the Republic. I argue that civic moderation is the virtue of civic unity. It centrally involves friendship among all citizens, best understood as a communion (κοινωνία) characterized by shared goods, collaboration, coordination, and the proper acknowledgment of one another’s contributions to the joint enterprise of living together in a city. The resulting unity is not that of a single person, as Aristotle and later criti…Read more
  • Despite its centrality in Plato’s Republic, the conception of ignorance has received little sustained attention. This paper argues that Plato distinguishes agnoia—a broad category of cognitive deficiencies—from ignorance (amathia), understood as the vice of the rational part of the soul. Ignorance, on this account, is a particularly pernicious form of agnoia, one that renders reason inept at grasping what is good for human beings. It consists in a network of fundamental yet misguided evaluative …Read more
  • Ignorance in Plato’s Protagoras
    Phronesis 67 (3): 309-337. 2022.
    Ignorance is commonly assumed to be a lack of knowledge in Plato’s Socratic dialogues. I challenge that assumption. In the Protagoras, ignorance is conceived to be a substantive, structural psychic flaw—the soul’s domination by inferior elements that are by nature fit to be ruled. Ignorant people are characterized by both false beliefs about evaluative matters in specific situations and an enduring deception about their own psychic conditions. On my interpretation, akrasia, moral vices, and epis…Read more