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for to men we are discoursing and not to Gods. Pleasures and pains and
desires are a part of human nature, and on them every mortal being must of
necessity hang and depend with the most eager interest. And therefore we
must praise the noblest life, not only as the fairest in appearance, but as being
one which, if a man will only taste, and not, while still in his youth, desert for
another, he will find to surpass also in the very thing which we all of us desire
—I mean in having a greater amount of pleasure and less of pain during the
whole of life. And this will be plain, if a man has a true taste of them, as will
be quickly and clearly seen. But what is a true taste? That we have to learn
from the argument—the point being what is according to nature, and what is
not according to nature. One life must be compared with another, the more
pleasurable with the more painful, after this manner:—We desire to have
pleasure, but we neither desire nor choose pain; and the neutral state we are
ready to take in exchange, not for pleasure but for pain; and we also wish for
less pain and greater pleasure, but less pleasure and greater pain we do not
wish for; and an equal balance of either we cannot venture to assert that we
should desire. And all these differ or do not differ severally in number and
magnitude and intensity and equality, and in the opposites of these when
regarded as objects of choice, in relation to desire. And such being the
necessary order of things, we wish for that life in which there are many great
and intense elements of pleasure and pain, and in which the pleasures are in
excess, and do not wish for that in which the opposites exceed; nor, again, do
we wish for that in which the clements of either are small and few and feeble,
and the pains exceed. And when, as I said before, there is a balance of
pleasure and pain in life, this is to be regarded by us as the balanced life;
while other lives are preferred by us because they exceed in what we like, or
are rejected by us because they exceed in what we dislike. All the lives of
men may be regarded by us as bound up in these, and we must also consider
what sort of lives we by nature desire. And if we wish for any others, I say
that we desire them only through some ignorance and inexperience of the
lives which actually exist.
Now, what lives are they, and how many in which, having searched out and
beheld the objects of will and desire and their opposites, and making of them
a law, choosing, I say, the dear and the pleasant and the best and noblest, a
man may live in the happiest way possible? Let us say that the temperate life
is one kind of life, and the rational another, and the courageous another, and
the healthful another; and to these four let us oppose four other lives—the
foolish, the cowardly, the intemperate, the diseased. He who knows the
temperate life will describe it as in all things gentle, having gentle pains and
gentle pleasures, and placid desires and loves not insane; whereas the
intemperate life is impetuous in all things, and has violent pains and
1418
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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