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Philosophize This!

Episode #241 ... The Tragedy of Julius Caesar - William Shakespeare

Philosophize This!

Stephen West

Philosophy, Society & Culture, Education

4.817.1K Ratings

🗓️ 16 November 2025

⏱️ 31 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Today we talk about the philosophical themes of The Tragedy of Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare. We talk about the hypocrisy and false nostalgia of political violence. The ironies of living by a moral ideal like honor. Rhetoric as a site of where political power is won and lost in a republic. And Brutus as a unique kind of tragic hero somewhere between Stoicism and Christianity. Hope you love it. :) Sponsors: The Perfect Jean: https://theperfectjean.nyc Code: PT15  ZocDoc: https://www.ZocDoc.com/PHILO Thank you so much for listening! Could never do this without your help.  Website: https://www.philosophizethis.org/ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/philosophizethis  Social: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/philosophizethispodcast X: https://twitter.com/iamstephenwest Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/philosophizethisshow Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hello, everyone. I'm Stephen West. This is Philosophize This.

0:04.4

Patreon.com slash Philosophize This, Philosophical Writing on Substack at Philosophies This on there.

0:09.7

Hope you love the show today.

0:11.1

So the following here is a guide for someone that's wanting to know more about the philosophy

0:15.1

written into the tragedy of Julius Caesar, a play written by William Shakespeare.

0:19.7

Because there's a lot he wanted to say in this play about political violence, about the

0:23.6

irony of living your life based on a moral ideal, about the importance of actually asking

0:28.1

the correct questions when it comes to rhetoric and its impact on mass psychology.

0:32.4

And out of respect to your time, I just want to get right into the story today and talk about

0:36.0

how Shakespeare makes a drama or a tragic play out of the actual assassination of Julius Caesar that occurred in the real world.

0:43.3

Should be said, there's certainly plenty about this play that's not historically accurate.

0:47.4

But look, it is truly impressive how much Shakespeare works in real people in events that were close to Julius Caesar when he was killed.

0:54.9

All of this Shakespeare takes mostly from the historian Plutarch for whatever it's worth and his description of what happened in Rome all those years ago.

1:01.7

Anyway, all these characters are going to be critical for understanding what he was going for and we'll understand it by the end of this episode.

1:07.5

The play begins, the curtain opens, and the first thing we see is a giant party that's

1:12.5

going on in the streets of Rome. A massive people have taken to the streets and are cheering

1:17.2

and celebrating the return of Julius Caesar and his army. See, Rome's a society at this point. It's

1:23.1

in a pretty messy situation internally. In the decades leading up to this moment, Rome has had a few civil

1:28.2

wars. Tyrants have ascended to power. They've been overthrown by other tyrants. There's a lot of

1:33.0

infighting about what the direction is that the country should be going in. But in the current

1:37.2

moment, though, Rome is a republic, at least for now. And the whole point of a republic to Rome is that

1:43.1

no one person is going to run everything.

...

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