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search cannot be detected, there shall be the same proclamation as in the
previous cases, and the same interdict on the murderer; and having proceeded
against him, they shall proclaim in the agora by a herald, that he who has slain
such and such a person, and has been convicted of murder, shall not set his
foot in the temples, nor at all in the country of the murdered man, and if he
appears and is discovered, he shall die, and be cast forth unburied beyond the
border. Let this one law then be laid down by us about murder; and let cases
of this sort be so regarded.
And now let us say in what cases and under what circumstances the
murderer is rightly free from guilt:—If a man catch a thief coming, into his
house by night to steal, and he take and kill him, or if he slay a footpad in
self–defence, he shall be guiltless. And any one who does violence to a free
woman or a youth, shall be slain with impunity by the injured person, or by
his or her father or brothers or sons. If a man find his wife suffering violence,
he may kill the violator, and be guiltless in the eye of the law; or if a person
kill another in warding off death from his father or mother or children or
brethren or wife who are doing no wrong, he shall assuredly be guiltless.
Thus much as to the nurture and education of the living soul of man, having
which, he can, and without which, if he unfortunately be without them, he
cannot live; and also concerning the punishments:—which are to be inflicted
for violent deaths, let thus much be enacted. Of the nurture and education of
the body we have spoken before, and next in order we have to speak of deeds
of violence, voluntary and involuntary, which men do to one another; these
we will now distinguish, as far as we are able, according to their nature and
number, and determine what will be the suitable penalties of each, and so
assign to them their proper place in the series of our enactments. The poorest
legislator will have no difficulty in determining that wounds and mutilations
arising out of wounds should follow next in order after deaths. Let wounds be
divided as homicides were divided—into those which are involuntary, and
which are given in passion or from fear, and those inflicted voluntarily and
with premeditation. Concerning all this, we must make some such
proclamation as the following:—Mankind must have laws, and conform to
them, or their life would be as bad as that of the most savage beast. And the
reason of this is that no man’s nature is able to know what is best for human
society; or knowing, always able and willing to do what is best. In the first
place, there is a difficulty in apprehending that the true art or politics is
concerned, not with private but with public good (for public good binds
together states, but private only distracts them); and that both the public and
private good as well of individuals as of states is greater when the state and
not the individual is first considered. In the second place, although a person
knows in the abstract that this is true, yet if he be possessed of absolute and
1532
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