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and there is thieving, and the hunting which is practised by robbers, and that
of armies against armies. Now the legislator, in laying down laws about
hunting, can neither abstain from noting these things, nor can he make
threatening ordinances which will assign rules and penalties about all of them.
What is he to do? He will have to praise and blame hunting with a view to the
exercise and pursuits of youth. And, on the other hand, the young man must
listen obediently; neither pleasure nor pain should hinder him, and he should
regard as his standard of action the praises and injunctions of the legislator
rather than the punishments which he imposes by law. This being premised,
there will follow next in order moderate praise and censure of hunting; the
praise being assigned to that kind which will make the souls of young men
better, and the censure to that which has the opposite effect.
And now let us address young men in the form of a prayer for their welfare:
O friends, we will say to them, may no desire or love of hunting in the sea, or
of angling or of catching the creatures in the waters, ever take possession of
you, either when you are awake or when you are asleep, by hook or with
weels, which latter is a very lazy contrivance; and let not any desire of
catching men and of piracy by sea enter into your souls and make you cruel
and lawless hunters. And as to the desire of thieving in town or country, may
it never enter into your most passing thoughts; nor let the insidious fancy of
catching birds, which is hardly worthy of freemen, come into the head of any
youth. There remains therefore for our athletes only the hunting and catching
of land animals, of which the one sort is called hunting by night, in which the
hunters sleep in turn and are lazy; this is not to be commended any more than
that which has intervals of rest, in which the will strength of beasts is subdued
by nets and snares, and not by the victory of a laborious spirit. Thus, only the
best kind of hunting is allowed at all—that of quadrupeds, which is carried on
with horses and dogs and men’s own persons, and they get the victory over
the animals by running them down and striking them and hurling at them,
those who have a care of godlike manhood taking them with their own hands.
The praise and blame which is assigned to all these things has now been
declared; and let the law be as follows:—Let no one hinder these who verily
are sacred hunters from following the chase wherever and whither soever they
will; but the hunter by night, who trusts to his nets and gins, shall not be
allowed to hunt anywhere. The fowler in the mountains and waste places shall
be permitted, but on cultivated ground and on consecrated wilds he shall not
be permitted; and any one who meets him may stop him. As to the hunter in
waters, he may hunt anywhere except in harbours or sacred streams or
marshes or pools, provided only that he do not pollute the water with
poisonous juices. And now we may say that all our enactments about
education are complete.
1491
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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