Philosopher kings and our republic
Two years and a midterm election into his presidency, we are still trying to figure out Barack Obama. Stanley Kurtz says he’s a socialist, whereas to Dinesh D’Souza, he’s an anti-colonialist. James T. Kloppenberg, in his book Reading Obama, argues that the president is philosophically driven, coming from the tradition of American pragmatism. Obama is a kind of philosopher president. Whether he is or not, he has been trying to govern as though he were a philosopher king. Hence, the election results.
In The Republic, Plato presents the philosopher king as the ideal form of government: rule by one wise person who is whole-heartedly devoted to the truth and therefore incorruptible. The philosopher king, by this definition, would understand the science of all things, including the science of government, its technique and its proper ends, and so also the science of what is good for human beings as such. Because of his unparalleled wisdom and public-spiritedness, he would, of course, govern without the restraint of law. After all, any restraint upon science would be, to that extent, the rule of ignorance, which cannot be good.
President Obama has emphasized his administration’s scientific foundation from the start. He signaled this in his inaugural address:
“We’ll restore science to its rightful place, and wield technology’s wonders to raise health care’s quality and lower its cost. We will harness the sun and the winds and the soil to fuel our cars and run our factories. And we will transform our schools and colleges and universities to meet the demands of a new age. All this we can do. All this we will do.”
Most recently, he criticized the mass of angry voters for being hostile to science in their hostility to his administration:
“Part of the reason that our politics seems so tough right now and facts and science and argument does [sic.] not seem to be winning the day all the time is because we’re hardwired not to always think clearly when we’re scared. And the country’s scared.”
To reject Obama’s policies is to oppose the rule of reason. Is it any wonder that even New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg said, according to Rupert Murdoch, “I never met in my life such an arrogant man”? But philosopher kings just seem that way to those who don’t know any better.
For these past two years, Obama has pressed ahead with reordering American society scientifically: government from the center by technocrats. We have seen a federalization of healthcare, of home financing, of our colleges and universities (all the major expenditures of life), and his government was eager to regulate all energy consumption. In this way, he has sought to move our government (as he promised he would) beyond left and right, which is to say beyond politics into scientific administration. As political questions become administrative matters for technocrats to decide—questions about right and wrong, about my good, your good, and the common good—the reign of the philosopher king extends itself.
But philosopher kings are antithetical to republican democracy, that is, to the structured system of popular self-government. Politics presupposes that there are questions pertaining to our life together that science cannot answer, questions like how best to help the poor, whether we should execute murderers, and what constitutes a marriage and grounds for it dissolution. There are answers to be had, but they’re controversial, and modern science by its very nature can’t settle them. So we vote, and we abide by the majority decision, at least until we vote again.
The 2010 election was about big, presumptuous government. The people rebelled against government over-activity and Washington’s disconnect from the people. The president thinks his problem has been a failure of communication. But it’s deeper than that. Unwittingly, he has been working from the wrong model: Plato instead of Aristotle. In The Politics, Aristotle holds that, for a free people, i.e., a law-abiding people who are capable of participating in government intelligently and responsibly, the best form of government combines a strong executive, a selection of the best citizens, and an active role for the people at large. Under those circumstances, the benevolent but autocratic rule of a philosopher king would be unjust because it would deny capable citizens the chance to govern themselves.
As the recent election results suggest, most people have concluded that politicians who don’t trust a free people to govern their private affairs and their common affairs don’t deserve to be in office. And voters are unlikely to have forgotten that by 2012.

















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back to top20 Comments to “Philosopher kings and our republic”
What a wonderful, insightful piece. He has overreached and put incredible distance between himself and those who elected him. Is he a fool? Hardly. but he does need wisdom and I pray that he’ll receive a hearty does of it.
David
Red Letter Believers, “Salt and Light”
http://www.RedLetterBelievers.com
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Obama is a product of Rev. Wright and the Black Liberation theology.
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“Part of the reason that our politics seems so tough right now and facts and science and argument does [sic.] not seem to be winning the day all the time is because we’re hardwired not to always think clearly when we’re scared. And the country’s scared.”
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Who has scared this Country? Fear is used by the Dem Party to win elections. Obama and his people are the ones who have scared this country.
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Considering his White House fiddled the report on offshore drilling and misrepresented the scientists’ views, he’s got nothing.
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Philosopher king? More like arrogant narcissist.
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More like Chicago thug.
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As Joseph Sobran wrote in: http://www.wildwestcycle.com/f_pensees.htm
“He who is unaware of his ignorance,” writes Richard Whately, “will only be misled by his knowledge.”
Or, as Thomas Sowell so wisely puts it, “Only people with high IQs can do real damage.” It is the arrogance of the Ruling Class who see themselves as the sole repository of all wisdom and knowledge and all the facts that seem dumfounded that bitter clingers don’t fall at their feet in thanksgiving at their benevolence.
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#7 Ken, there is no “like” button on WMB but if there were I’d click it under your post!
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This is a stupid article. Innes calls Obama the “Philosopher King” (which in this one schizophrenic instance of Conservativeness is bad) with nothing to back the analogy but the shocking revelation that Obama considers his on policies well-reasoned. He then tries to disparage Obama for saying that his policies are rational.
And since when did conservatives start hating Plato? I thought you were all down with calling Obama’s public address skills a “false art” for “sheep”? What we’re seeing here is just another instance of FAKE conservative populism that doesn’t look any better because you try to dress it up like Aristotle.
And then we just get into the true wack parts >>
“Politics presupposes that there are questions pertaining to our life together that science cannot answer..”
No it doesn’t. It absolutely doesn’t. Politics supposes that people who ignore or are ignorant of science still get a say in the management of society. And politics supposes that people will disagree about what the boundaries of any scientific test should be. But politics does not exist in order to fill in sciences limitations, and no one thinks it does.
“As the recent election results suggest, most people have concluded that politicians who don’t trust a free people to govern their private affairs and their common affairs don’t deserve to be in office.”
Unless of course we are talking about people governing their bedrooms or their wombs.
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P.S. It shows poor political acumen than you’d use that exact explanation from Aristotle–”a selection of the best citizens”–in a year so many Republican candidates were advocating for the return of literacy tests!
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Oh, but the next two years are going to be strange around here….
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Science has NOTHING to do with a lot of things.
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Obama is one step ahead of us. He doesn’t need a second term. His goal is to crush the U.S. so as to better set himself up into some kind of world leadership position post-2012. Understanding that this is his motivation makes all of his moves make sense, as well as his supposed explanations for the results of the 2010 general election.
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“Obama is a kind of philosopher president.”
That is absolutely true and one of the most frustrating things about modern American politics is that politicians will not state their philosophy. Instead they are content to demean their opponents with mudslinging. Ken provided a good link in #7 which I hope to spend some time with. It is very long.
Obama declares himself to be the scientific president and routinely denigrates his critics as know-nothings. He promised to heal the planet and create heaven on earth.
Instead he has presided over one of the worst ecological disasters in American history and his only response is to blame others. He and other global leftists are determined to create a global “green economy” which will redistribute wealth based on tentative and disputable arguments of science. If the speculation turns out to be false, he could go down in history as the least scientific president.
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This is by far DC INNES’ silliest essay yet.
Now that we’ve considered The Republic, let’s on to Rhetoric, ok?
According to Aristotle, we can employ science to decide everything that science could ever determine, and still, we’ll never run out of political and ethical questions whose conclusions cannot be compelled by learned methods, but only argued among us ad infinitum, and decided by persuasion, election, a coin toss, or arbitrary force.
There’s no harm in using pseudo-science to settle matters that can be stated otherwise. Speakers love to do it and listeners love to hear it. Appealing to science for answers that science cannot provide is one rhetorical strategy among many that can be countered as easily as it can be evoked, with no more ingenuity. As Bush said, “fool me twice — oh, Hell.”
On the other hand, arguing over matters that really are determined by science is a waste of life and expense of time.
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Here is what academics, environmentalists and federal investigators think about the scientific philosopher god-king:
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And as long as the left is invoking science, why not invoke mathematics: if you don’t have the money, you don’t spend it. I have no doubt that the cold science of numbers won’t go over well with the leftys here. In other words, they are all talk, and the talk is against the non-leftys and common sense.
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I’m dismayed that the Obama administration disregards scientific advice and that tea party Republicans are using the Bible to refudiate science.
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Top line: I’d rather have “Obama the Philosopher” than “Bush the Profit.”
Buzzy: Remember when Conservative accused Bill Clinton of wanting to take over the world?! Cause I certainly do. OMG-d did they have fun when he was half being considered for UN Secretary General. This is a basic meme of conservative ideologues. Every Democratic president is hell bent on being head of the new world order, yet only Republican presidents seem to invade countries!
NJL: “as long as the left is invoking science, why not invoke mathematics: if you don’t have the money, you don’t spend it.”
That isn’t math. There are negative numbers in math, but no math section on the LSAT!
This is still by-the-way a ridiculous discussion, since conservatives have decided only at this moment (and only for this moment) that Plato and philosophy are bad. I can’t count the times conservatives I have known ave admonished me for contradicting The Republic.
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The conjecture that Obama is a philosopher King following Science is completely unfounded. There is no data showing Obama is ruling by science. There is data showing that he has no regard for the science or the truth. His supreme court appointee Kagan changed a report from Doctors on partial birth abortion to match her ideology and his Department of Interior head Salazar changed a report from experts to match his ideology. Today’s headline is “Scientists question Obama administration’s handling of reports related to Gulf oil spill.” The data shows the Obama administration places ideology above science. The article never proves its’ hypothesis.
“In God we trust; all others must bring data.” W. Edwards Deming, pHD
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