Episode 1: The Chronological Order of Plato's Works, and Why
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Eros and Exegesis —
There is a peculiar thing that happens when you read Plato in the wrong order. You come to the Republic first because someone told you it was the masterpiece, and you encounter the Theory of Forms, the Allegory of the Cave, the tripartite soul, and you think: this is it. This is what Plato believed. But you have just walked into the middle of a conversation that started decades earlier. You have seen the answer. You have no idea what the question was. And worse, you have no idea that Plato himself spent his final years systematically dismantling the very framework you just finished admiring.
This episode is the reading order I wish someone had handed me twenty years ago. Not chronological in the dry sense, but pedagogical — mirroring the soul's own ascent from opinion to knowledge, from critique to construction, from construction to self-critique, and finally to an embodied wisdom that knows its own limits.
We begin with the purgative discipline: Ion, Euthyphro, Apology, Crito, Phaedo, the early dialogues of aporia, and the bridge of Gorgias. Then the middle period: Meno, Cratylus, Phaedrus, Symposium, and only now — only after you have felt the erotic and epistemic groundwork — the Republic, immediately followed by Parmenides, where Plato has his most respected philosophical ancestor dismantle the very framework he just spent the Republic building. From there we turn to the late dialogues: Theaetetus, Sophist, Statesman, Philebus — philosophy as self-correcting inquiry. And finally Timaeus, Critias, and the Laws, where old men in a Cretan colony replace the philosopher-king with the rule of law, and where divine reason guides without coercing.
This is not a journey of doctrine. It is a journey of dialectic. And the parables offered here , the musician learning the Bach fugue voice by voice, the navigator turning from shore to stars, the architect discovering the flaw in her keystone — are attempts to make visible what is genuinely at stake. Philosophy, for Plato, was not a set of propositions to be believed. It was a way of life.
Referenced in this episode: Gregory Vlastos on the elenchus as self-refutation; Julia Annas on the unity of the Republic's epistemology and ethics; Myles Burnyeat on the dynamic network of kinds in the late dialogues; Christopher Bobonich and Kenneth Sayre on the transposed vision of the Laws.
No music bed. No formulaic sign-off. Just a voice close to the mic, inviting you into a conversation that is still alive, still demanding, and still worth disagreeing with.By all means, please enjoy.