Get Free Shipping on orders over $79
Laws - Plato

Laws

By: Plato

eBook | 5 September 2016

At a Glance

eBook


$1.99

or 4 interest-free payments of $0.50 with

Instant Digital Delivery to your Kobo Reader App

The Laws is Plato's last and longest dialogue. The conversation depicted in the work's twelve books begins with the question of who is given the credit for establishing a civilization's laws. Its musings on the ethics of government and law have established it as a classic of political philosophy alongside Plato's more widely read Republic. Scholars generally agree that Plato wrote this dialogue as an older man, having failed in his effort in Syracuse on the island of Sicily to guide a tyrant's rule, instead having been thrown in prison. These events are alluded to in the Seventh Letter. The text is noteworthy as Plato's only undisputed dialogue not to feature Socrates.

on

More in Ancient Western Philosophy

Aristotle for Everybody - Mortimer J. Adler

eBOOK

Living in Love - Alexandra Stoddard

eBOOK

$4.99

Kathleen Raine : Classics and Consciousness - Dr Jenny Messenger

eBOOK

RRP $134.99

$121.99

10%
OFF
Meditations : Deluxe Classic Edition - Marcus Aurelius

eBOOK

RRP $13.47

$11.99

11%
OFF
The City Among Cities : Aristotle on War and Peace - Stephen P. Sims

eBOOK

Two Philosophers : Aristotle and Ayn Rand - James G. Lennox

eBOOK