EUTOPÍA Y <i>PÓLIS</i>: EL LUGAR DE LA INOCENCIA Y LA FELICIDAD EN LA IMAGEN DE LOS ANTIGUOS GRIEGOS

Authors

  • José Javier Benitez Prudencio
Keywords: justicia, felicidad, Edad de Oro (de Cronos), ciudad (<i>pólis</i>), lugar bueno (<i>eutopia</i>), conocimiento como <i>polumathia</i>/ingenuidad

Abstract

Human beings have imaged ideal societies across the time, with the aim of going beyond real ones, and solving the problems emerged from common life. This article intends to remark that theorical conceptions of society frequently have an ‘eutopian’ counterpart, that means, a very best physical or geographical location. It can be appreciated precisely in the Ancient Greek world. In order to approach to this subject, we will depart from the usual version in the pólis of the Golden Age given by Hesiod, and we will put it together with the eutopian reformation proposed by Pythagoreans and the ‘conservative’ presentation found in Aristotle’s Politics and Ethics.

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Author Biography

José Javier Benitez Prudencio

Departamento de Filosofía Facultad de Humanidades de Toledo Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha
How to Cite
Benitez Prudencio, J. J. (2005). EUTOPÍA Y <i>PÓLIS</i>: EL LUGAR DE LA INOCENCIA Y LA FELICIDAD EN LA IMAGEN DE LOS ANTIGUOS GRIEGOS. Daimon Revista Internacional de Filosofia, (34), 5–17. Retrieved from https://revistas.um.es/daimon/article/view/12811
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