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from two causes which are entirely beyond our control. In such cases the
planters are to blame rather than the plants, the educators rather than the
educated. But however that may be, we should endeavour as far as we can by
education, and studies, and learning, to avoid vice and attain virtue; this,
however, is part of another subject.
There is a corresponding enquiry concerning the mode of treatment by
which the mind and the body are to be preserved, about which it is meet and
right that I should say a word in turn; for it is more our duty to speak of the
good than of the evil. Everything that is good is fair, and the fair is not
without proportion, and the animal which is to be fair must have due
proportion. Now we perceive lesser symmetries or proportions and reason
about them, but of the highest and greatest we take no heed; for there is no
proportion or disproportion more productive of health and disease, and virtue
and vice, than that between soul and body. This however we do not perceive,
nor do we reflect that when a weak or small frame is the vehicle of a great and
mighty soul, or conversely, when a little soul is encased in a large body, then
the whole animal is not fair, for it lacks the most important of all symmetries;
but the due proportion of mind and body is the fairest and loveliest of all
sights to him who has the seeing eye. Just as a body which has a leg too long,
or which is unsymmetrical in some other respect, is an unpleasant sight, and
also, when doing its share of work, is much distressed and makes convulsive
efforts, and often stumbles through awkwardness, and is the cause of infinite
evil to its own self—in like manner we should conceive of the double nature
which we call the living being; and when in this compound there is an
impassioned soul more powerful than the body, that soul, I say, convulses and
fills with disorders the whole inner nature of man; and when eager in the
pursuit of some sort of learning or study, causes wasting; or again, when
teaching or disputing in private or in public, and strifes and controversies
arise, inflames and dissolves the composite frame of man and introduces
rheums; and the nature of this phenomenon is not understood by most
professors of medicine, who ascribe it to the opposite of the real cause. And
once more, when a body large and too strong for the soul is united to a small
and weak intelligence, then inasmuch as there are two desires natural to man,
—one of food for the sake of the body, and one of wisdom for the sake of the
diviner part of us—then, I say, the motions of the stronger, getting the better
and increasing their own power, but making the soul dull, and stupid, and
forgetful, engender ignorance, which is the greatest of diseases. There is one
protection against both kinds of disproportion:— that we should not move the
body without the soul or the soul without the body, and thus they will be on
their guard against each other, and be healthy and well balanced. And
therefore the mathematician or any one else whose thoughts are much
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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