Πολιτικός by Plato
So, here's the setup. The book is a recounting of a dinner party held at the house of Agathon, a poet who just won a major prize. All the usual suspects are there: the comic playwright Aristophanes, the doctor Eryximachus, and of course, Socrates. The mood is celebratory, but after a heavy night of drinking the day before, they decide to take it easy. To pass the time, they agree to give speeches in praise of Eros—the god of love.
The Story
Each guest takes a turn. Phaedrus starts, calling love the greatest guide to living a good life. Pausanias distinguishes between a 'common' love and a 'heavenly' love focused on the mind. Eryximachus, the doctor, talks about love as a force of harmony in medicine and nature. Then Aristophanes tells his famous, hilarious myth: humans were originally round beings with two faces and four limbs, but Zeus split them in half out of fear. Love, he says, is our desperate search for our 'other half.' Agathon gives a flowery, poetic speech praising love's youth and beauty.
Finally, it's Socrates's turn. He doesn't just give a praise speech; he cross-examines Agathon, showing that love can't be beautiful if it desires beauty—you only desire what you lack. Then, he shares what he learned from a wise woman named Diotima. She taught him that love isn't a god, but a spirit in between mortal and immortal, need and fulfillment. Real love, Socrates argues, is a ladder. It starts with attraction to one beautiful body, then moves to an appreciation of all physical beauty, then to the beauty of minds and laws, and finally to the absolute, eternal Form of Beauty itself. Just as he finishes, the drunken Alcibiades crashes the party and delivers a chaotic, passionate speech in praise of Socrates himself, comparing him to a satyr who hides divine truths inside.
Why You Should Read It
Forget the dusty philosophy stereotype. This book is alive. The characters feel real—you can picture them lounging on couches, debating, joking. The ideas sneak up on you. One minute you're laughing at Aristophanes' story of people rolling around looking for their missing half, the next you're gripped by Socrates' description of love as a lifelong journey toward understanding. It reframes love completely. It's not about finding completion in another person, but about using that attraction as a launchpad to seek higher truths. It's ambitious, a little crazy, and incredibly moving. It makes you look at your own relationships and ask: am I climbing the ladder, or just sitting on the first step?
Final Verdict
This is for anyone who's ever thought deeply about love, creativity, or why we're drawn to certain people and ideas. It's perfect for book clubs (so much to argue about!), students looking for philosophy that doesn't put them to sleep, and curious readers who want a direct line to one of the most influential conversations in history. It's short, surprisingly accessible, and packs more insight into its pages than books ten times its length. Just be warned: you won't think about love the same way again.
Legal analysis indicates this work is in the public domain. You are welcome to share this with anyone.
Deborah Anderson
8 months agoWow.
Sandra Lopez
1 year agoThis book was worth my time since the flow of the text seems very fluid. This story will stay with me.
Sarah Gonzalez
1 year agoLoved it.
Logan Smith
1 year agoGreat read!
Margaret Rodriguez
6 months agoHaving read this twice, it creates a vivid world that you simply do not want to leave. Absolutely essential reading.