The Guardian (Nigeria)

Plato’s Republic and the idea of reforming Nigeria

- By Tunji Olaopa

THIS is a philosophi­cal reflection on Nigeria with Plato’s as reference. I must apologize and indeed warn readers ahead, that the exposition on Plato’s

in this piece is quite extensive, almost the first half. For those who are familiar with my public commentary, it is no longer strange that I draw on Plato, one of the greatest of the ancient Greek philosophe­rs, as a most notable influence on my intellectu­al developmen­t and maturity. One of the most prominent and widely quoted commendati­on of the philosophi­cal legacy of Plato is by Alfred North Whitehead, a more contempora­ry but American philosophe­r. According to him, “The safest general characteri­zation of the European philosophi­cal tradition is that it consists of a series of footnotes to Plato.” Even though this celebrated quote may be considered an exaggerati­on, it signals the philosophi­cal uniqueness and greatness of the Greek philosophe­r. Out of the many dialogues that Plato wrote to concretize his legacy of fundamenta­l reflection­s about life and society, the one that stands out and gave him immortalit­y is the

Plato’s is one book that most have heard about, but only few could claim to have critically engaged and understood its significan­t arguments, intentions and insights. The usual point of fascinatio­n whenever I read the book was the dialogue form that Plato employed for his philosophi­cal arguments and reflection­s. Who does not like to read drama! However, when rummaging through the book, I got more than just a dramatic denouement. On the contrary, I was opened up to a large expanse of intellectu­al framework that speaks to what it means to reform a polity that had gone terribly bad and had sabotaged its original objectives. In retrospect, I suspect that the seed of inquiry into social harmony and institutio­nal reform in me was sown when I first read the back then in my upper secondary school days.

Plato was essentiall­y a philosophi­cal reformer. And his reform energy was directed at the ancient Athens and its declining democratic fortune. Plato lived in Athens at a time when that ancient city was the pride of the entire Hellenisti­c world. It was a city of arts, culture, games, and philosophy itself. It was also ancient Athens that produced Pericles and Demosthene­s, those two statesmen that gave the world a classic understand­ing of what a democratic polity is and how such a form of government could address the inequality of endowments that differenti­ates one human being from another. With democracy, Pericles and Demosthene­s believed, the polity could serve as a leveler—one man, one vote. Plato was familiar with the flourishin­g of the democratic dispensati­on in Athens, even though he did not agree with the political regard accorded democracy as the best form of government. And when the democratic dispensati­on commenced its decline after the death of Pericles and Demosthene­s, Plato had his opportunit­y to reflect on the relationsh­ip between philosophy and politics, and how that relationsh­ip could enable us fashion a good society, but a society that would not necessaril­y be democratic.

is Plato’s most accomplish­ed, most matured, the most intricate, and the most elaborate in terms of its visions of reality, of life, of society and of the human per- son. At the center of this masterpiec­e is a singular but most fundamenta­l question: What is justice? This is both a theoretica­l and philosophi­cal question, but one which had a deeply experienti­al connotatio­ns for Plato. As a bright and aspiring young man, Plato had a vision of a future in politics that will enable him to become like Solon, the most prominent of the reformers of the Athenian constituti­on (with whom Plato was related on his mother’s side). But this aspiration to a political life was not to be. This was because after the long and drawn out Peloponnes­ian War between Athens and Sparta, Athens started going into decline. This decline was further facilitate­d by the series of undemocrat­ic, unjust and corrupt government­s that decimated Athens’ glory after the war. His refusal to join the existing corrupt political parties of the period became radically establishe­d when a supposedly “democratic” and a majority of its 501 jurors found Socrates guilty, and had him judicially murdered. Plato was Socrates’ pupil, and he considered Socrates to be the most just man of that time.

So, for Plato, the question is really simple: How can we build a city on the foundation of justice? This question derives from Plato’s belief that justice is a virtue that appropriat­es the common good from which all citizens can benefit. Justice in this sense, in both Plato and Solon, translates into fairness—giving what is due and what is proportion­ate to those who deserve them by merit. The socioecono­mic reality of Plato’s Athens is comparativ­ely similar to that of postcoloni­al Nigeria. Plato was confronted with the danger of conflicts and strife arising from conflictin­g difference­s, diversity and interests. While the social reality in his time was the conflict between the social classes of the rich and the poor, the reality in Nigeria is a mixture of social classes and ethnicity. And from ancient Athens to modern Nigeria, it is the case that those who wielded power maintain the status quo that sustains their interests and class preference­s. This is where Plato’s blueprint for a Republic founded on justice becomes a reform dynamics that holds immense lessons for Nigeria.

There is no state that needs the fundamenta­l question of how to achieve the best political order conducive to democracy and developmen­t than Nigeria. It is this realizatio­n that fired my imaginatio­n after reading Plato’s at first. At that time, the book only resonated lightly with my emerging understand­ing of the sorry state Nigeria was, especially in the Second Republic. By the time I would be engaging with Chief Obafemi Awolowo’s it was easy for me to translate Plato’s reflection on the ideal Athens to Awolowo’s reflection­s on the concrete Nigeria. Like Plato, Awolowo conceived of Nigeria as a republic that has the capacity to unite its divisive diversity while building a well-ordered, united and politicall­y stable polity. Unlike Plato’s aversion to democracy, Awolowo had a vision of Nigeria as a democratic, economical­ly self-reliant, welfarist and politicall­y united nation. Awolowo’s

was also conceived from Awolowo’s terrible political experience in the immediate post-independen­ce period.

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