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magistrates, and the times at which the several causes should be heard, and
the votings and delays, and all the things that necessarily concern suits, and
the order of causes, and the time in which answers have to be put in and
parties are to appear—of these and other things akin to these we have indeed
already spoken, but there is no harm in repeating what is right twice or thrice:
—All lesser and easier matters which the elder legislator has omitted may be
supplied by the younger one. Private courts will be sufficiently regulated in
this way, and the public and state courts, and those which the magistrates
must use in the administration of their several offices, exist in many other
states. Many very respectable institutions of this sort have been framed by
good men, and from them the guardians of the law may by reflection derive
what is necessary, for the order of our new state, considering and correcting
them, and bringing them to the test of experience, until every detail appears to
be satisfactorily determined; and then putting the final seal upon them, and
making them irreversible, they shall use them for ever afterwards. As to what
relates to the silence of judges and the abstinence from words of evil omen
and the reverse, and the different notions of the just and good and honourable
which exist in our: own as compared with other states, they have been partly
mentioned already, and another part of them will be mentioned hereafter as
we draw near the end. To all these matters he who would be an equal judge,
shall justly look, and he shall possess writings about them that he may learn
them. For of all kinds of knowledge the knowledge of good laws has the
greatest power of improving the learner; otherwise there would be no
meaning the divine and admirable law possessing a name akin to mind (nous,
nomos). And of all other words, such as the praises and censures of
individuals which occur in poetry and also in prose, whether written down or
uttered in daily conversation, whether men dispute about them in the spirit of
contention or weakly assent to them, as is often the case—of all these the one
sure test is the writings of the legislator, which the righteous judge ought to
have in his mind as the antidote of all other words, and thus make himself and
the city stand upright, procuring for the good the continuance and increase of
justice, and for the bad, on the other hand, a conversion from ignorance and
intemperance, and in general from all unrighteousness, as far as their evil
minds can be healed, but to those whose web of life is in reality finished,
giving death, which is the only remedy for souls in their condition, as I may
say truly again and again. And such judges and chiefs of judges will be
worthy of receiving praise from the whole city.
When the suits of the year are completed the following laws shall regulate
their execution:—In the first place, the judge shall assign to the party who
wins the suit the whole property of him who loses, with the exception of mere
necessaries, and the assignment shall be made through the herald immediately
1600
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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