Seite - 464 - in The Complete Plato
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souls, and do not merely live moulding and fashioning the body, say farewell
to all this; they will not walk in the ways of the blind: and when philosophy
offers them purification and release from evil, they feel that they ought not to
resist her influence, and whither she leads they turn and follow.
What do you mean, Socrates?
I will tell you, he said. The lovers of knowledge are conscious that the soul
was simply fastened and glued to the body—until philosophy received her,
she could only view real existence through the bars of a prison, not in and
through herself; she was wallowing in the mire of every sort of ignorance; and
by reason of lust had become the principal accomplice in her own captivity.
This was her original state; and then, as I was saying, and as the lovers of
knowledge are well aware, philosophy, seeing how terrible was her
confinement, of which she was to herself the cause, received and gently
comforted her and sought to release her, pointing out that the eye and the ear
and the other senses are full of deception, and persuading her to retire from
them, and abstain from all but the necessary use of them, and be gathered up
and collected into herself, bidding her trust in herself and her own pure
apprehension of pure existence, and to mistrust whatever comes to her
through other channels and is subject to variation; for such things are visible
and tangible, but what she sees in her own nature is intelligible and invisible.
And the soul of the true philosopher thinks that she ought not to resist this
deliverance, and therefore abstains from pleasures and desires and pains and
fears, as far as she is able; reflecting that when a man has great joys or
sorrows or fears or desires, he suffers from them, not merely the sort of evil
which might be anticipated—as for example, the loss of his health or property
which he has sacrificed to his lusts—but an evil greater far, which is the
greatest and worst of all evils, and one of which he never thinks.
What is it, Socrates? said Cebes.
The evil is that when the feeling of pleasure or pain is most intense, every
soul of man imagines the objects of this intense feeling to be then plainest and
truest: but this is not so, they are really the things of sight.
Very true.
And is not this the state in which the soul is most enthralled by the body?
How so?
Why, because each pleasure and pain is a sort of nail which nails and rivets
the soul to the body, until she becomes like the body, and believes that to be
true which the body affirms to be true; and from agreeing with the body and
having the same delights she is obliged to have the same habits and haunts,
464
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Buch The Complete Plato"
The Complete Plato
- Titel
- The Complete Plato
- Autor
- Plato
- Datum
- ~347 B.C.
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- PD
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 1612
- Schlagwörter
- Philosophy, Antique, Philosophie, Antike, Dialogues, Metaphysik, Metaphysics, Ideologie, Ideology, Englisch
- Kategorien
- Geisteswissenschaften
- International