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experience of the usefulness and necessity of such laws; and when they are
duly regulated let there be no alteration, but let the citizens live in the
observance of them.
Now of artisans, let the regulations be as follows:—In the first place, let no
citizen or servant of a citizen be occupied in handicraft arts; for he who is to
secure and preserve the public order of the state, has an art which requires
much study and many kinds of knowledge, and does not admit of being made
a secondary occupation; and hardly any human being is capable of pursuing
two professions or two arts rightly, or of practising one art himself, and
superintending some one else who is practising another. Let this, then, be our
first principle in the state:—No one who is a smith shall also be a carpenter,
and if he be a carpenter, he shall not superintend the smith’s art rather than his
own, under the pretext that in superintending many servants who are working
for him, he is likely to superintend them better, because more revenue will
accrue to him from them than from his own art; but let every man in the state
have one art, and get his living by that. Let the wardens of the city labour to
maintain this law, and if any citizen incline to any other art than the study of
virtue, let them punish him with disgrace and infamy, until they bring him
back into his own right course; and if any stranger profess two arts, let them
chastise him with bonds and money penalties, and expulsion from the state,
until they compel him to be one only and not many.
But as touching payments for hire, and contracts of work, or in case any
one does wrong to any of the citizens or they do wrong to any other, up to
fifty drachmae, let the wardens of the city decide the case; but if greater
amount be involved, then let the public courts decide according to law. Let no
one pay any duty either on the importation or exportation of goods; and as to
frankincense and similar perfumes, used in the service of the Gods, which
come from abroad, and purple and other dyes which are not produced in the
country, or the materials of any art which have to be imported, and which are
not necessary—no one should import them; nor again, should any one export
anything which is wanted in the country. Of all these things let there be
inspectors and superintendents, taken from the guardians of the law; and they
shall be the twelve next in order to the five seniors. Concerning arms, and all
implements which are for military purposes, if there be need of introducing
any art, or plant, or metal, or chains of any kind, or animals for use in war, let
the commanders of the horse and the generals have authority over their
importation and exportation; the city shall send them out and also receive
them, and the guardians of the law shall make fit and proper laws about them.
But let there be no retail trade for the sake of money–making, either in these
or any other articles, in the city or country at all.
1509
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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