Socratic Contempt for Wealth in Plato's Republic
Abstract
In the Republic, Plato’s Socrates argues that the wealthy feel contempt for the poor, and
the poor feel hatred for the rich. But why is Socrates, leading a life of scandalous poverty
without taking wages for philosophical work, an exception to this rule? Instead of
hatred, envy, or no emotion at all, Socrates consistently treats wealth and the wealthy
with ridicule and kataphronēsis – active looking-down or contempt – while meditating
on the temptation of the poor to appropriate the excess flesh of the wealthy
(Resp. 556d). It is contempt that allows Socrates to remain free and wageless, away
from the tempting distortion wealth has on the soul (Resp. 330c, 554a–b). Socrates
therefore insists his philosopher-kings should be paid only in food, the same reward
he proposes for himself in the Apology. Instead of securing freedom from murderous
epithumia through moderate property, Socrates implies only contemptuous poverty
can safeguard a philosophic life.