Book contents
- Frontmatter
- 1 The Protreptic Rhetoric of the Republic
- 2 The Place of the Republic in Plato’s Political Thought
- 3 Rewriting the Poets in Plato’s Characters
- 4 Wise Guys and Smart Alecks in Republic 1 and 2
- 5 Justice and Virtue: The Republic’s Inquiry into Proper Difference
- 6 The Noble Lie
- 7 The Three-Part Soul
- 8 Eros in the Republic
- 9 The Utopian Character of Plato’s Ideal City
- 10 Philosophy, the Forms, and the Art of Ruling
- 11 Sun and Line: The Role of the Good
- 12 Beginning the “Longer Way”
- 13 The City-Soul Analogy
- 14 The Unhappy Tyrant and the Craft of Inner Rule
- 15 What Is Imitative Poetry and Why Is It Bad?
- 16 The Life-and-Death Journey of the Soul: Interpreting the Myth of Er
- Bibliography
- Index of Passages
- Index of Names and Subjects
- Series List
16 - The Life-and-Death Journey of the Soul: Interpreting the Myth of Er
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 November 2007
- Frontmatter
- 1 The Protreptic Rhetoric of the Republic
- 2 The Place of the Republic in Plato’s Political Thought
- 3 Rewriting the Poets in Plato’s Characters
- 4 Wise Guys and Smart Alecks in Republic 1 and 2
- 5 Justice and Virtue: The Republic’s Inquiry into Proper Difference
- 6 The Noble Lie
- 7 The Three-Part Soul
- 8 Eros in the Republic
- 9 The Utopian Character of Plato’s Ideal City
- 10 Philosophy, the Forms, and the Art of Ruling
- 11 Sun and Line: The Role of the Good
- 12 Beginning the “Longer Way”
- 13 The City-Soul Analogy
- 14 The Unhappy Tyrant and the Craft of Inner Rule
- 15 What Is Imitative Poetry and Why Is It Bad?
- 16 The Life-and-Death Journey of the Soul: Interpreting the Myth of Er
- Bibliography
- Index of Passages
- Index of Names and Subjects
- Series List
Summary
Puis elle commençait à me devenir inintelligible, comme après la métempsycose les pensees d'une existence antèrieure.
ProustThe story of Er, a Pamphylian soldier who died in battle but several days later returned to life on his funeral pyre and reported what his soul had seen and heard in the world beyond, brings the Republic to a close in a visionary mode whose complexity tests the limits of understanding. For three (overlapping) reasons, the narrative raises more questions than it can answer: first, because it undertakes the profoundly ambitious task of presenting a symbolic perspective on the whole of reality, a figurative equivalent of Book 6's theme of “the contemplation of all time and all being” (486a); second, because its densely allusive texture yields a surplus of possible meanings that cannot be adequately encompassed by any single interpretation; and third, because it stands in a kind of challenging counterpoint, combining harmony and dissonance, with the rest of the Republic. Plato weaves into the account of Er's experience numerous strands from the materials of Greek philosophy, science, religion (not least, mystery religion), poetry, historiography, and even visual art. This fascinating multiplicity of sources and associations is not my primary concern here, though some pointers will be provided parenthetically as I proceed. I do, however, want to explore the character of the passage as an elaborate piece of philosophical writing, rather than as the vehicle for a set of putative authorial beliefs. While the myth’s overall significance as an ultimate (i.e., cosmic and eternal) vindication of justice looks clear enough at first sight, it leads us, I shall contend, into realms of irreducibly difficult interpretation.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Plato's Republic , pp. 445 - 473Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007
- 12
- Cited by