Saturday, October 26, 2019
Platos Argument For A Just Life :: essays research papers
 Plato's Argument For A Just Life      Plato's argument for the benefits of a just life is intrinsically linked to his  definition of good and its relation to people's desires. He begins by showing  that when the objective of a desire is simple (e.g. quenching a thirst), the  desire must be correspondingly simple. Since thirst is a simple desire, the  man's objective must also be simplistic and should we assign an adjective to his  objective, we would falsely complicate it. In addition, Plato believes that we  would be seriously erring if we assign a value of good to an desire.    In common use, the adjective good would denote something that is good in  relation to others of its kind. We consider a drink good if it contains  characteristics that we look for in a drink (e.g. pleasantness or taste). Plato  takes this a step further and states that something that is good must not only  be good in relation to others but it must be wholly good. Thus a drink cannot  be truly good if evil results from it. This poses an interesting question for  Plato's readers namely, since no one wants bad things to happen to them, why do  people engage in self-destructive activities? The answer lies in the fact that  the only reason that we desire to drink is that we anticipate the result of our  thirst being quenched. Our appetites see no further consequences than the  immediate fulfillment of our desires; they do not contemplate the results of the  actions we take to fulfill our desires.    For this reason, Plato believes that we must separate the soul based on how it  reacts to desires. There must be a part of the soul, Plato reasons, that  contemplates the end result of our actions and makes decisions based on a higher  reasoning than desire. So we see two distinct parts of the soul. The first is  said to be appetite (which desires without reason) and reason (which considers  the consequences). Reason may thus work against anything that is not for the  total good of the man. Plato holds that if the desire were truly for a good  drink, reason would never oppose it. Our usage of the word good, however, has  come to denote an expectation of usefulness to our purpose; although this may be  relative to the end result that we experience from the object. For example, we  call a knife good because it is sharp and cuts well but if the end result is  that we cut ourselves, we would say that the knife would have been better if it    					    
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