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is deceived he has committed a noble error. For he has proved that for his part
he will do anything for anybody with a view to virtue and improvement, than
which there can be nothing nobler. Thus noble in every case is the acceptance
of another for the sake of virtue. This is that love which is the love of the
heavenly godess, and is heavenly, and of great price to individuals and cities,
making the lover and the beloved alike eager in the work of their own
improvement. But all other loves are the offspring of the other, who is the
common goddess. To you, Phaedrus, I offer this my contribution in praise of
love, which is as good as I could make extempore.
Pausanias came to a pause—this is the balanced way in which I have been
taught by the wise to speak; and Aristodemus said that the turn of
Aristophanes was next, but either he had eaten too much, or from some other
cause he had the hiccough, and was obliged to change turns with
Eryximachus the physician, who was reclining on the couch below him.
Eryximachus, he said, you ought either to stop my hiccough, or to speak in
my turn until I have left off.
I will do both, said Eryximachus: I will speak in your turn, and do you
speak in mine; and while I am speaking let me recommend you to hold your
breath, and if after you have done so for some time the hiccough is no better,
then gargle with a little water; and if it still continues, tickle your nose with
something and sneeze; and if you sneeze once or twice, even the most violent
hiccough is sure to go. I will do as you prescribe, said Aristophanes, and now
get on.
Eryximachus spoke as follows: Seeing that Pausanias made a fair
beginning, and but a lame ending, I must endeavour to supply his deficiency. I
think that he has rightly distinguished two kinds of love. But my art further
informs me that the double love is not merely an affection of the soul of man
towards the fair, or towards anything, but is to be found in the bodies of all
animals and in productions of the earth, and I may say in all that is; such is
the conclusion which I seem to have gathered from my own art of medicine,
whence I learn how great and wonderful and universal is the deity of love,
whose empire extends over all things, divine as well as human. And from
medicine I will begin that I may do honour to my art. There are in the human
body these two kinds of love, which are confessedly different and unlike, and
being unlike, they have loves and desires which are unlike; and the desire of
the healthy is one, and the desire of the diseased is another; and as Pausanias
was just now saying that to indulge good men is honourable, and bad men
dishonourable:—so too in the body the good and healthy elements are to be
indulged, and the bad elements and the elements of disease are not to be
indulged, but discouraged. And this is what the physician has to do, and in
559
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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