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Athenian. How! Then may Heaven make us to be of one mind, for now we
are of two. To me, dear Cleinias, the truth of what I am saying is as plain as
the fact that Crete is an island. And, if I were a lawgiver, I would try to make
the poets and all the citizens speak in this strain, and I would inflict the
heaviest penalties on any one in all the land who should dare to say that there
are bad men who lead pleasant lives, or that the profitable and gainful is one
thing, and the just another; and there are many other matters about which I
should make my citizens speak in a manner different from the Cretans and
Lacedaemonians of this age, and I may say, indeed, from the world in general.
For tell me, my good friends, by Zeus and Apollo tell me, if I were to ask
these same Gods who were your legislators—Is not the most just life also the
pleasantest? or are there two lives, one of which is the justest and the other
the pleasantest?—and they were to reply that there are two; and thereupon I
proceeded to ask, (that would be the right way of pursuing the enquiry),
Which are the happier—those who lead the justest, or those who lead the
pleasantest life? and they replied, Those who lead the pleasantest—that would
be a very strange answer, which I should not like to put into the mouth of the
Gods. The words will come with more propriety from the lips of fathers and
legislators, and therefore I will repeat my former questions to one of them,
and suppose him to say again that he who leads the pleasantest life is the
happiest. And to that I rejoin:—O my father, did you not wish me to live as
happily as possible? And yet you also never ceased telling me that I should
live as justly as possible. Now, here the giver of the rule, whether he be
legislator or father, will be in a dilemma, and will in vain endeavour to be
consistent with himself. But if he were to declare that the justest life is also
the happiest, every one hearing him would enquire, if I am not mistaken, what
is that good and noble principle in life which the law approves, and which is
superior to pleasure. For what good can the just man have which is separated
from pleasure? Shall we say that glory and fame, coming from Gods and men,
though good and noble, are nevertheless unpleasant, and infamy pleasant?
Certainly not, sweet legislator. Or shall we say that the not–doing of wrong
and there being no wrong done is good and honourable, although there is no
pleasure in it, and that the doing wrong is pleasant, but evil and base?
Cleinias. Impossible.
Athenian. The view which identifies the pleasant and the pleasant and the
just and the good and the noble has an excellent moral and religious tendency.
And the opposite view is most at variance with the designs of the legislator,
and is, in his opinion, infamous; for no one, if he can help, will be persuaded
to do that which gives him more pain than pleasure. But as distant prospects
are apt to make us dizzy, especially in childhood, the legislator will try to
purge away the darkness and exhibit the truth; he will persuade the citizens, in
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zurĂĽck zum
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