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Justice in Plato’s Time and Our Time: Words that Shape Constitutions, Justice, and Governments

Justice in Plato’s Time and Our Time: Words that Shape Constitutions, Justice, and Governments

Update: 2025-11-15
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Our choice and use of words has a profound effect on the operation of justice, and a particular legal dispute now before the United States Supreme Court hangs on the meaning of three words. In this episode, Plato’s Pod host James Myers explores what eight of Plato’s works have to say about the meaning of words, and the ways that words shape constitutions, justice, and governments in our time as they did in Plato’s time, 24 centuries earlier. Socrates was executed because his jury judged him guilty of two words – impiety and corruption – which we now interpret very differently, and it’s an ancient example of how justice and injustice can still hinge on word meanings. The justices of the Supreme Court will soon render a decision on the meaning and usage of three words that have evolved from 1789 to 1977, and from 1977 to 2025. If we wrote our laws with a lengthy preamble setting out the lawmakers’ meaning and intent, as the Athenian in Plato’s Laws suggests, then justice might not be as difficult to establish at later times as it now is.

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Justice in Plato’s Time and Our Time: Words that Shape Constitutions, Justice, and Governments

Justice in Plato’s Time and Our Time: Words that Shape Constitutions, Justice, and Governments