Women guardians should share all duties, including war and defense, with lighter labors assigned due to weaker nature; ridicule of naked training misunderstands that the useful is the noble.

By Plato, from The Republic

Key Arguments

  • Equal duties are mandated; only labor distribution is moderated by relative strength.
  • Ridicule is condemned as ignorant; true measure identifies the useful with the noble and the hurtful with the base.

Source Quotes

True. Then let the wives of our guardians strip, for their virtue will be their robe, and let them share in the toils of war and the defence of their country; only in the distribution of labours the lighter are to be assigned to the women, who are the weaker natures, but in other respects their duties are to be the same. And as for the man who laughs at naked women exercising their bodies from the best of motives, in his laughter he is plucking 'A fruit of unripe wisdom,' and he himself is ignorant of what he is laughing at, or what he is about;—for that is, and ever will be, the best of sayings, That the useful is the noble and the hurtful is the base.
Then let the wives of our guardians strip, for their virtue will be their robe, and let them share in the toils of war and the defence of their country; only in the distribution of labours the lighter are to be assigned to the women, who are the weaker natures, but in other respects their duties are to be the same. And as for the man who laughs at naked women exercising their bodies from the best of motives, in his laughter he is plucking 'A fruit of unripe wisdom,' and he himself is ignorant of what he is laughing at, or what he is about;—for that is, and ever will be, the best of sayings, That the useful is the noble and the hurtful is the base. Very true.

Key Concepts

  • let the wives of our guardians strip, for their virtue will be their robe, and let them share in the toils of war and the defence of their country; only in the distribution of labours the lighter are to be assigned to the women, who are the weaker natures, but in other respects their duties are to be the same.
  • he is plucking 'A fruit of unripe wisdom,'
  • That the useful is the noble and the hurtful is the base.

Context

Practical prescription and normative rebuke to anticipated mockery about women’s public exercise.

Perspectives

Plato
Agrees that ergon and chreia ground nobility; beauty is measured by usefulness to the Good.
Socrates
Maintains equal service with proportional adjustments; rebukes conventional shame with a utility-based kalon.