We've Got Papers!
Find Your Term Paper:    
    NAVIGATE
  Home
  Join Now!
  Got Questions?
  Contact Us

    MEMBERS
  Username: 
  Password: 

    SUBJECTS
  Arts & Plays
  Biographies
  Book Reports
  Business
  Computers
  Creative Writing
  English
  Geography
  Health & Medicine
  History
  Legal & Government
  Miscellaneous
  Music
  Poetry & Poets
  Religion
  Science
  Social Issues


THIS IS A FREE EXCERPT FROM THE TERMPAPER
Join today to see the rest of this paper instantly
Plato's Argument For A Just Life

Plato's argument for the benefits of a just life is intrinsically linked to his definition of good and its relation to people's desires. He begins by showing that when the objective of a desire is simple (e.g. quenching a thirst), the desire must be correspondingly simple. Since thirst is a simple desire, the man's objective must also be simplistic and should we assign an adjective to his objective, we would falsely complicate it. In addition, Plato believes that we would be seriously erring if we assign a value of good to an desire. In common use, the adjective good ....

Word count: 1680 - Page count: 7

GotPapers has one of the largest term paper databases online. Join today to view this essay and over 45000 other essays in our members' only section. Your subsription is activated immediately after payment, which is perfect for those times when you are up late working on an important paper that is due tomorrow.

Membership Option Price PayPal
30 days (recurring) $19.95
90 days (recurring) $39.95
180 days (non-recurring) $69.95

Copyright © 2025 Got Papers.com. All rights reserved.
Home | Forgot Password | Cancel Subscription | Contact Us