This phrase is used generally to consider the embodiment of the philosophical question as to how power can be held to account. It is sometimes incorrectly attributed as a direct quotation from Plato's Republic in both popular media and academic contexts. There is no exact parallel in the Republic, but it is used by modern authors to express Socrates' concerns about the guardians, the solution to which is to properly train their souls.
~Reference to political power[ediCt]
Socrates proposed a guardian class to protect that society, and the custodes (watchmen) from the Satires are often interpreted as being parallel to the Platonic guardians (phylakes in Greek). Socrates' answer to the problem is, in essence, that the guardians will be manipulated to guard themselves against themselves via a deception often called the "noble lie" in English. As Leonid Hurwicz pointed out in his 2007 lecture on accepting the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, one of Socrates' interlocutors in the Republic, Glaucon, even goes so far as to say
"it would be absurd that a guardian should need a guard."
al·ter·cate
/ˈôltərˌkāt/
verb ARCHAIC
dispute or argue noisily and publicly.
shun
/SHən/
verb
persistently avoid, ignore, or reject (someone or something) through antipathy or caution.
I thought the phrase had more to do with who held the key to a chastity belt!
Interesting video, although some of the scenes show the opposite of the text .
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Provocative, my friend.
At 2:22!! That.
🐱👓
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ACK!!!
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.
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