ABSTRACT

The Third City, first published in 1982, offers an innovative response to the troubled relationship between Western philosophy, as it has been conducted since the Renaissance, and the everyday lives of the communities in which we live. Bebek contends that the model of philosophical reflection is to be found in Plato’s dialogues, which, rather than simply describing utopia through a series of abstract ‘concepts’, were instead designed to impel the learner towards a recognition of the true nature of reality – as much a ‘self-recognition’ as an understanding of the world ‘out there’. Thus, in order to revive the spirit of true philosophy, it is necessary to avoid both the false extremes of idealism and materialism, and to allow ethics once more to merge with epistemology.

This title presents an exposition of this ethically based philosophy, allowing the very human insights of Plato to illumine the diverse problems of today.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

part One|111 pages

Aspect and Concept

chapter One|16 pages

Dialectic

chapter Two|15 pages

Errors of Positivism

chapter Three|22 pages

The Critique of Concepts

chapter Four|18 pages

A New Materialism

chapter Five|12 pages

Plato's Parmenides

chapter Six|26 pages

The Body of Truth

part Two|63 pages

The Third City

chapter Seven|12 pages

Law of the Heart

chapter Eight|18 pages

The Ideal World

chapter Nine|20 pages

Division of Labour

chapter Ten|11 pages

The Vision of the City

part Three|59 pages

Mythos

chapter Eleven|15 pages

The Fall

chapter Twelve|18 pages

Curing the City

chapter Thirteen|17 pages

The City as the Temple

chapter Fourteen|5 pages

Reconciliation

chapter |2 pages

Conclusion