John R. Wallach is Associate Professor of Political Science at Hunter College, CUNY. His previous book, co-edited with J. Peter Euben and Josiah Ober, is Athenian Political Thought and the Reconstruction of American Democracy (1994).
“An ambitious and instructive work, which explains the development of Plato’s political thought as a critical reflection on the relation between ethics and power in Athens. Few books on Plato have both the sense and the scope of this one.” —Melissa Lane, Cambridge University “One may disagree with Wallach’s critical judgments, with his theoretical constructivism, or with the critical historicism that defines his interpretative approach. But one cannot help being pushed to think harder and deeper by a book that is so consistently enlightening, stimulating, and informed.” —Peter Euben, University of California, Santa Cruz “The Platonic Political Art is a learned, politically and theoretically ambitious, hugely bibliographic work. Its arrival will be welcomed by students of contemporary debates about democracy, especially those who try to glean insights from parallels drawn to ancient Athenian democracy—a literature that has grown in recent years.” —Gregory Bruce Smith Canadian Journal of Political Science “In The Platonic Political Art, a book that every political theorist interested in Greek thought will certainly want to read, John Wallach argues powerfully that the search for a true ‘political art’— a master techne that would unite politics with ethics, governance with living well—stands at the center of Plato’s moral philosophy. It is the great success of Wallach’s passionate and erudite account of the Platonic political art that it presents today’s political theorists with a complex and rebarbative Plato, a crucial thinker who is in no simple sense an enemy of democracy, and who is entirely worth the trouble of reading with great care and close attention to history.” —Josiah Ober Polis “Notwithstanding these difficulties, Wallach’s book is clearly written, encompasses an impressive breadth of historical and philosophical material, and strenuously engages a mountain of recent and not so recent scholarly debate about Plato. . . . In the measure that Wallach succeeds in problematizing a widespread tendency to read Plato through the analytic or radically historicizing lenses developed especially during the last century, his book deserves serious consideration and makes an important contribution.” —Aristide Tessitore American Political Science Review (APSR) “If for no other reason, this book is worth reading for the attention Professor Wallach affords the methods of interpretation.” —Richard G. Avramenko Review of Metaphysics “John Wallach has written a remarkably wide-ranging, erudite, and provocative book. His resuscitation/construction of a rational, ethically informed Platonic political art as a critical mirror on ancient and ‘post-liberal’ democracies and contemporary thought, from postmodern to skepticism, pragmatism, contextualism to Platonism itself, is done with daring, originality, and independence. In his hands Plato becomes a political thinker who has no one final or complete version of the political art since that would contradict what a political art must be. Insisting that the volatility in the relationship between words and deeds precluded a systematic Platonic political philosophy, Wallach argues that we must read the dialogues as discursive efforts to deal with particular political challenges as they emerged in late 5th and early 4th century B.C.E. Athens. ” —