Students walking on campus during the fall

Announcements

PHIL 755 Three Ways to Utopia

Human beings time and again have dreamed of an ideal society, often disastrously. In the Republic Plato tried to build a perfect society on the basis of a realist metaphysics and a brilliant (but ultimately flawed, as he himself later realized) theory of human nature. Augustine's view of human nature was darker and induced him to abandon the classical ideal of a good society and concentrate on the moral virtues (so far as they can be achieved) of the good Christian. Thomas More was fascinated by platonizing schemes, but as a hardened Augustinian recognized their inevitable weaknesses. In this course we shall therefore look at Plato's Republic. Augustine's City of God (books 11-end) and More' Utopia. Hopefully we may be able to draw some realistic conclusions.

Credits

3