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Live Unbroken.
Enduring wisdom endures
for a reason
Plato’s Republic.
There is something timeless about Plato’s Republic, something that feels both impossibly distant and uncomfortably close. It is a work that demands confrontation—not only with the world around us but with the worlds within us. Plato takes us by the hand, or perhaps grabs us by the collar, pulling us into a dialogue that questions the very foundations of our existence. What is justice? Why does it matter? And, more hauntingly, what kind of person must we become to live justly?
Reading the Republic is less like following a guidebook and more like embarking on a pilgrimage, full of detours and moments of breathtaking clarity. Plato, through Socrates, doesn’t simply sketch an ideal society—he forces us to consider the messy, dangerous terrain of our own desires, ambitions, and delusions.
It is a book about cities, yes, but also about souls. Its questions cut deeper than we often care to admit, lingering in the mind long after the dialogue has ended. What follows is an attempt to walk alongside Plato and his companions, book by book, tracing the arc of their journey and, perhaps, our own.
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Silence External Noise
A Pathway to Self-Discovery and an Unbreakable Spirit
Hell is other people?
Exploring Emotional Autonomy and the Dangers of Dependency
Balance In All Things
Aristotle's Golden Mean: Living Unbroken through Balance and Virtue
The Labyrinth of Life
What Borges can teach us about meaning
Live Unbroken
Enduring wisdom endures for a reason.
