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than sixty years of age, having children of their own, not adopted, shall be
required to decide; and if any one is convicted, they shall determine whether
he or she ought to die, or suffer some other punishment either greater than
death, or, at any rate, not much less. A kinsman of the offender shall not be
allowed to judge the cause, not even if he be of the age which is prescribed by
the law. If a slave in a fit of anger wound a freeman, the owner of the slave
shall give him up to the wounded man, who may do as he pleases with him,
and if be not give him up he shall himself make good the injury. And if any
one says that the slave and the wounded man are conspiring together, let him
argue the point, and if he is cast, he shall pay for the wrong three times over,
but if he gains his case, the freeman who conspired with the slave shall
reliable to an action for kidnapping. And if any one unintentionally wounds
another he shall simply pay for the harm, for no legislator is able to control
chance. In such a case the judges shall be the same as those who are
appointed in the case of children suing their parents; and they shall estimate
the amount of the injury.
All the preceding injuries and every kind of assault are deeds of violence;
and every man, woman, or child ought to consider that the elder has the
precedence of the younger in honour, both among the Gods and also among
men who would live in security and happiness. Wherefore it is a foul thing
and hateful to the Gods to see an elder man assaulted by a younger in the city;
and it is reasonable that a young man when struck by an elder should lightly
endure his anger, laying up in store for himself a like honour when he is old.
Let this be the law:—Every one shall reverence his elder in word and deed; he
shall respect any one who is twenty years older than himself, whether male or
female, regarding him or her as his father or mother; and he shall abstain from
laying hands on any one who is of an age to have been his father or his
mother, out of reverence to the Gods who preside over birth; similarly he shall
keep his hands from a stranger, whether he be an old inhabitant or newly
arrived; he shall not venture to correct such an one by blows, either as the
aggressor or in self–defence. If he thinks that some stranger has struck him
out of wantonness or insolence, and ought to be punished, he shall take him to
the wardens of the city, but let him not strike him, that the stranger may be
kept far away from the possibility of lifting up his hand against a citizen, and
let the wardens of the city take the offender and examine him, not forgetting
their duty to the God of Strangers, and in case the stranger appears to have
struck the citizen unjustly, let them inflict upon him as many blows with the
scourge as he has himself inflicted, and quell his presumption. But if he be
innocent, they shall threaten and rebuke the man who arrested him, and let
them both go. If a person strikes another of the same age or somewhat older
than himself, who has no children, whether he be an old man who strikes an
1536
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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