Metaphysics as Rhetoric: Alfarabi's Summary of Plato's

Metaphysics as Rhetoric: Alfarabi's Summary of Plato's "Laws"

by Joshua Parens
Metaphysics as Rhetoric: Alfarabi's Summary of Plato's

Metaphysics as Rhetoric: Alfarabi's Summary of Plato's "Laws"

by Joshua Parens

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Overview

The most widely accepted view in the West today, particularly among postmodernists, is that Plato attempted to ground politics on a rational metaphysics and initiated the tradition of foundationalism that has given rise to systems of oppression ranging from racism, sexism, and ethnocentrism to the technological mastery of the earth. Metaphysics as Rhetoric controverts this view, arguing that Plato was not the originator of this metaphysical tradition. Using as a basis the tenth-century Muslim philosopher Alfarabi's interpretation of Plato, especially his Summary of Plato's "Laws", Parens shows that what appears to be Plato's metaphysics was intended as a rhetorical defense of his politics. Parens demonstrates that rather than seek to establish politics on the definitive metaphysical ground, Alfarabi's Plato analyzes politics on its own terms, phenomenologically.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781438415499
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Publication date: 02/24/2016
Series: SUNY series in Middle Eastern Studies
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 195
File size: 7 MB

About the Author

Joshua Parens is Bradley Fellow and Adjunct Assistant Professor in the Government Department at Georgetown University.

Table of Contents

Preface

Acknowledgments

Introduction

1. The uniqueness of the Summary of Plato's "Laws"
2. Alfarabi's unmethodical method of reading Plato
3. Alfarabi's access to the Laws
4. The Summary's textual tradition: The contemporary debate
5. This book's structure
6. This book's audience

Part I. Metaphysics as Rhetorical Foundation of Law

1. The Roots of Laws

1. Jurisprudence and kalam
2. Why are the roots the theme of the Laws and the Summary ?
3. How philosophical kalam becomes misconstrued as metaphysical doctrine
4. The roots of the laws revisited

2. Alfarabi's Platonism

1. Alfarabi as metaphysical Neoplatonist
2. Alfarabi as political Middle Platonist: Richard Walzer
3. Alfarabi as political Aristotelian: Galston's Politics and Excellence

3. Natural Right versus Natural Law

1. Plato as ethical theorist of natural law
2. Plato as legalistic theorist of natural law

Part II. The Divergence Between Law and Intellect

4. Is the Best City Ruled by Law?

1. According to the Philosophy of Plato
2. According to the Summary

5. Plato's City and Alfarabi's Regime

1. Persian monarchy and Athenian democracy
2. The titles to rule
3. The ruling offices
4. The regime's size

6. War as a Purpose of the Second-Best Regime

1. The denigration of war as a purpose of the city
2. The rehabilitation of war and as a purpose
3. The relation between war and law

7. Legal Innovation: Law as an Imitation of Intellect

1. Changes of place: Differing natural dispositions and customs
2. Changes of time: Conservation and innovation

Part III. Shame, Indignation, and Inquiry

8. The Role of Law and Good Breeding

1. Prudence and good breeding
2. Shame, law, and honoring the body
3. Good breeding, praise and blame, and honoring the soul

9. Pleasure and Indignation

1. Divinizing pleasure or undermining shame
2. The critique of tragic music as a critique of shame
3. War games and drinking parties: Pleasure and indignation

10. Poetry and Inquiry into Law

1. The permissibility of inquiring into law
2. Artisans versus courageous men
3. Poetry, kalam, dialectic, and political science

Conclusion

Notes

Bibliography

Index

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