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Platonic Autonomy

Platonic Autonomy

Platonic Autonomy

Self-Determination, Unity, and Cooperation
Olof Pettersson, Uppsala Universitet, Sweden
Pauliina Remes, Uppsala Universitet, Sweden
July 2025
Not yet published - available from July 2025
Hardback
9781009520485

    This volume highlights Plato's relevance for the notion of personal autonomy. By offering discussions of self-legislation, self-determination, self-rule, law, preference, and freedom from a wide range of perspectives, it shows how deeply they are intertwined with Plato's more familiar inquiries into knowledge, moral psychology, ethics, politics, and metaphysics. The book also reveals how some of the Platonic worries about self- and other-determination become interpreted and given explicit expression by the Neoplatonists. Many chapters question an exclusively individualistic account of autonomy. The autonomous subject, for Plato, is not primarily the possessor of individual preferences, nor someone with a personally unique take on the world, but, rather, a unified agent who in both collaborative and personal activities originates her own motions and reasons and commits in a profound sense to her own actions. It is this understanding of personal autonomy we label Platonic.

    • The first discussion of the notion of personal autonomy in Classical Greek philosophy
    • Situates questions about personal autonomy in the ancient Greek intellectual context and highlights their relevance for epistemological, ethical, and ontological sub-disciplines
    • Presupposes no knowledge of technical vocabulary and jargon

    Product details

    July 2025
    Adobe eBook Reader
    9781009520454
    0 pages
    Not yet published - available from July 2025

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction: Pauliina Remes and Olof Pettersson
    • Part I. Self-Determination: From Legislation to Giving Rational Accounts:
    • 1. Accounts and accountability: the importance of being Autologizomenos Amber Carpenter
    • Part II. Motivational Challenges to Self-Rule:
    • 2. Plato's problems with aversion Nicholas D. Smith
    • 3. A complex model of action: what is ruling? Oda Tvedt
    • Part III. Internal and External Authorities:
    • 4. Dialectic and rational agency: establishing self-rule in the republic and hippias major Franco V. Trivigno
    • 5. Socrates and conflicting epistemic requirements: autonomy and authority Toomas Lott
    • 6. Awakening autonomy: Olympiodorus' commentary on Plato's Gorgias James M. Ambury
    • Part IV. The Limits of Autonomy and Self-Rule:
    • 7. Vulnerability, dialogue, and the limits of autonomy Marina Berzins McCoy
    • 8. Plato, dialogue and epistemic autonomy Olof Pettersson
    • Part V. Reconciling between Freedom, External Authority, and Nature:
    • 9. Self-government and law in the crito and the statesman Charlotta Weigelt
    • 10. Freedom, willing servitude, and the limits to autonomy in Plato's Laws Susan Sauvé Meyer
    • 11. The natural preconditions of political freedom Andy German.
      Contributors
    • Pauliina Remes, Olof Pettersson, Amber Carpenter, Nicholas D. Smith, Oda Tvedt, Franco V. Trivigno, Toomas Lott, James M. Ambury, Marina Berzins McCoy, Olof Pettersson, Charlotta Weigelt, Susan Sauvé Meyer, Andy German

    • Editors
    • Olof Pettersson , Uppsala Universitet, Sweden

      OLOF PETTERSSON is Associate Professor (docent) in Philosophy at Uppsala University. He has published extensively on Plato and ancient philosophy and also edited several books in this field, including Plato's Protagoras: Essays on the Confrontation of Philosophy and Sophistry (2017) and Defending a Philosophical Life: Readings of Plato's Apology (2018).

    • Pauliina Remes , Uppsala Universitet, Sweden

      PAULIINA REMES is Professor in Philosophy at Uppsala University. She is also the author of Plotinus' on Self (Cambridge, 2007) and Neoplatonism (2008), and the co-editor, together with Slaveva-Griffin, of the award-winning Routledge Handbook of Neoplatonism (2014).