Abstrakt: |
The paper examines the four-step degeneration of the ideal state in Books 8 and 9 of Platon's Politeia (timocracy, oligarchy, democracy, tyranny) and addresses the question of the number, choice, and succession of bad regimes. Against the common view which considers this part of the Politeia a confusing and structureless narrative, it is argued that the four steps of the devolution represent a systematic account based on the tripartition of the state and the soul. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |