
Note: The tonic system has been changed from polytonic to monotonic, otherwise the spelling of the book has not been changed. Footnotes have been converted to endnotes. // Σημείωση: Το τονικό σύστημα έχει αλλάξει από πολυτονικό σε μονοτονικό. Κατά τα άλλα έχει διατηρηθεί η ορθογραφία του βιβλίου. Οι υποσημειώσεις των σελίδων έχουν μεταφερθεί στο τέλος του βιβλίου.
ΒΙΒΛΙΟΘΗΚΗ ΦΕΞΗ ΑΡΧΑΙΩΝ ΕΛΛΗΝΩΝ ΣΥΓΓΡΑΦΕΩΝ
ΒΙΒΛΙΟΝ Δ'.
ΒΙΒΛΙΟΝ Ε'.
In this classic dialogue, a group of thinkers gathers to examine the foundations of a just society. Through spirited debate they question traditional myths about the gods, the afterlife, and the role of poetry, arguing that fear of death should not cripple a citizen’s courage. The conversation turns to the education of future leaders, proposing that true guardians must be shaped by reason rather than by terror‑filled stories.
The work then sketches the structure of an ideal city, where each class fulfills its proper function and the ruler is a philosopher guided by wisdom. By probing the nature of virtue, the dialogue invites listeners to consider how personal character and communal laws intertwine. As the discussion unfolds, the ideas presented lay the groundwork for the famous vision of a harmonious polis governed by enlightened minds.
Language
el
Duration
~4 hours (233K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Sophia Canoni. Book provided by Iason Konstantinides. Thanks to George Canonis for his major work in proofreading.
Release date
2012-04-20
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

-428–-348
A student of Socrates and teacher of Aristotle, this Athenian philosopher helped shape the way the Western world thinks about justice, knowledge, politics, and the soul. His dialogues still feel lively today because they ask big questions through conversation rather than simple answers.
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