The Republic
by Plato
📚 Related Sacred Texts
Phaedrus
by Plato
The Phaedrus begins on a sunlit riverbank, where Socrates and Phaedrus wander among plane trees and cicadas and talk of desire, persuasion, and the soul. Through playful speeches the dialogue turns to the vision of the soul as a charioteer struggling to lift its horses toward beauty remembered from a higher realm. Love appears as divine madness that can heal and guide. True rhetoric becomes the art of leading souls, grounded in knowledge of their forms and needs. In a final turn, Plato contrasts lifeless writing with living dialogue. The result is a shimmering bridge between eros and philosophy, intimate, probing, and alive.
Enneads (Selections)
by Plotinus
Plotinus invites you to turn inward and taste the source from which all reality flows. In these selections from the Enneads, he unfolds a luminous map of the One, Intellect, and Soul, showing how the world streams from unity and how the soul can ascend by purification, love of beauty, and silent contemplation. He probes where emotions and thought truly live, the relation between sense and intellection, and why evil is lack rather than a power. The prose moves like a calm river becoming a bright sea, part philosophy, part prayer. For seekers of clarity and depth, this is a guide to the intimate sky within.
Symposium
by Plato
Plato’s Symposium is a glittering night of talk where philosophers, poets, and a tipsy Alcibiades pass the cup and praise Eros. Each speech shapes love like a different lamp, from witty comedy to noble seriousness, until Socrates recalls the teaching of Diotima, who leads the soul up a living ladder from desire for a single body to contemplation of Beauty itself. In this mingling of myth, argument, and theater, love appears as guide, goad, and god, binding mortal longing to immortal vision. The dialogue’s warmth and irony invite you to sit at the table and listen for what your own heart seeks.
Critias
by Plato
Critias is Plato’s tantalizing fragment where philosophy walks into legend. Continuing from Timaeus, the elder Critias recalls Solon’s Egyptian tale of prehistoric Athens and the island empire of Atlantis, a glittering power framed by concentric seas and laws under Poseidon. Athens appears as an ideal city tested by vast ambition, while Atlantis slowly decays as its divine alloy gives way to human excess. The narrative breaks off mid sentence just as judgment gathers like a storm, leaving a deliberate hush. Half history and half mirror, Critias uses myth to probe political virtue, cultural memory, and the rise and ruin of civilizations.
Porphyry: Life of Plotinus
by Porphyry
Porphyry’s Life of Plotinus is a luminous doorway into Neoplatonism, giving the philosopher as a living presence rather than a remote system. In Rome we meet a man who hid his origins, refused portraits, and sought the One beyond all images, asking if we must leave an image of an image. Porphyry records the school’s rhythms, acts of quiet charity, moments of mystical union, and the failed dream of Platonopolis. He arranges the Enneads and explains their birth, pages that pulse with the heat of thought. This is a humane, intimate narrative that lets metaphysics breathe through daily gestures and invites the reader toward inward ascent.