Key Idea: Plato is answering one question: what is justice, and why be just? He builds a model of the just soul and the just city, then argues that only those who know the Forms — above all the Form of the Good — are fit to rule, and that the just person is the happiest. This text is assessed on Paper 2, a 25-mark open-book essay on the studied text. You study The Republic, Books IV–IX only — not the whole dialogue.
🧠 The five moves, one card each
10.8 (Books IV–IX) at a glance
- 10.8.1 · The tripartite soul — The soul has three parts — reason (which knows and plans), spirit (drive, honour, anger) and appetite (bodily desires). The soul is JUST when reason rules, spirit supports it, and appetite obeys.
- 10.8.2 · Justice in the soul and the city — Justice is each part doing its own job and not another's. The city mirrors the soul: rulers (reason), guardians/auxiliaries (spirit), producers (appetite). Justice is this harmony at both scales.
- 10.8.3 · The philosopher-king and the Forms — The Forms are the perfect, unchanging realities behind the changing world; the Form of the Good is highest, the source of truth and value. Only those who know it truly understand justice — so philosophers must rule.
- 10.8.4 · The Cave and the Divided Line — Knowledge is not the same as opinion. The Divided Line ranks levels of awareness up to knowledge of the Forms; the Cave dramatises the painful climb from shadows (appearances) to the sunlit Good.
- 10.8.5 · Why be just? — The book's real question: is justice worth it for its own sake? Plato ranks souls and regimes down to the tyrant, and argues the just, reason-ruled person is the happiest and the tyrant the most miserable.
Justice is harmony — each part doing its own job. That single idea works at BOTH scales: in the SOUL (reason rules, spirit supports, appetite obeys) and in the CITY (rulers, guardians, producers). Get this, and the soul, the city, the philosopher-king and 'why be just' all lock together.
✍️ Bring it together — a Paper 2 question
Evaluate Plato's claim that only philosophers who know the Form of the Good are fit to rule the state.
🔒 Model answer plan
See the mark-by-mark plan — for / against / judgement, with marking guidance — in study mode.
Using your text in the open-book exam
- Bring a CLEAN copy — IB rule: your text must be UN-annotated — no notes in the margins, no underlining or highlighting. A marked-up copy is not allowed in the exam. Check it well before the day.
- Know the map — You have the book, but not time to read it — and only Books IV–IX are examined. Memorise WHERE each argument lives (tripartite soul in IV, philosopher-kings and Forms in V–VI, Divided Line and Cave in VI–VII, decline of regimes in VIII–IX). Keep your study notes in a SEPARATE document.
- Quote to evidence, then EVALUATE — Use the open book to cite a passage precisely so it backs a specific point — then argue about it. Never let a quotation replace your own analysis; a copied passage with no evaluation earns little.
- Plan then write — A quick argument map — position, support, objection, weighing, conclusion — beats flipping pages mid-essay. Decide your line first, then dip into the text for evidence. Watch the clock.
Important: Retelling the dialogue instead of evaluating it. Narrating the Cave or listing the three parts of the soul, however accurately, is not an answer to 'Evaluate'. You must weigh the claim — strongest support, strongest objection, then a reasoned decision. The open book also punishes inaccurate use of the text and straying outside Books IV–IX: cite precisely, and stay within the studied books.
✅ Check yourself
If you can answer these six, you have the spine of the studied books.
What are the three parts of the soul? Reason (knows and plans), spirit (drive, honour, anger) and appetite (bodily desires). The soul is just when reason rules.
What is Plato's definition of justice? Each part doing its own job and not another's — harmony in the soul, mirrored by rulers, guardians and producers in the city.
What is the Form of the Good? The highest Form, the source of truth and value; knowing it is what makes a philosopher fit to rule.
What does the Cave dramatise? The painful climb from shadows (appearances and opinion) up to the sunlit Good — from ignorance to knowledge of the Forms.
What does the Divided Line show? That knowledge is not opinion: it ranks levels of awareness, rising from images and beliefs to reasoning and knowledge of the Forms.
How does Plato answer 'why be just'? By ranking souls and regimes down to the tyrant, and arguing the just, reason-ruled person is the happiest, the tyrant the most wretched.
Exam Tips
- Paper 2 is a 25-mark OPEN-BOOK essay on this text — and only Books IV–IX are examined, so keep every point inside them.
- Bring a clean, un-annotated copy and know where each argument sits so you can cite fast.
- Quote precisely to evidence a point, then argue about it — never let the text speak for you.
- Always weigh the strongest case each way and end on a reasoned conclusion, not a summary.