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whether the great king was a happy man?
SOCRATES: And I should speak the truth; for I do not know how he stands
in the matter of education and justice.
POLUS: What! and does all happiness consist in this?
SOCRATES: Yes, indeed, Polus, that is my doctrine; the men and women
who are gentle and good are also happy, as I maintain, and the unjust and evil
are miserable.
POLUS: Then, according to your doctrine, the said Archelaus is miserable?
SOCRATES: Yes, my friend, if he is wicked.
POLUS: That he is wicked I cannot deny; for he had no title at all to the
throne which he now occupies, he being only the son of a woman who was
the slave of Alcetas the brother of Perdiccas; he himself therefore in strict
right was the slave of Alcetas; and if he had meant to do rightly he would
have remained his slave, and then, according to your doctrine, he would have
been happy. But now he is unspeakably miserable, for he has been guilty of
the greatest crimes: in the first place he invited his uncle and master, Alcetas,
to come to him, under the pretence that he would restore to him the throne
which Perdiccas has usurped, and after entertaining him and his son
Alexander, who was his own cousin, and nearly of an age with him, and
making them drunk, he threw them into a waggon and carried them off by
night, and slew them, and got both of them out of the way; and when he had
done all this wickedness he never discovered that he was the most miserable
of all men, and was very far from repenting: shall I tell you how he showed
his remorse? he had a younger brother, a child of seven years old, who was
the legitimate son of Perdiccas, and to him of right the kingdom belonged;
Archelaus, however, had no mind to bring him up as he ought and restore the
kingdom to him; that was not his notion of happiness; but not long afterwards
he threw him into a well and drowned him, and declared to his mother
Cleopatra that he had fallen in while running after a goose, and had been
killed. And now as he is the greatest criminal of all the Macedonians, he may
be supposed to be the most miserable and not the happiest of them, and I dare
say that there are many Athenians, and you would be at the head of them, who
would rather be any other Macedonian than Archelaus!
SOCRATES: I praised you at first, Polus, for being a rhetorician rather than
a reasoner. And this, as I suppose, is the sort of argument with which you
fancy that a child might refute me, and by which I stand refuted when I say
that the unjust man is not happy. But, my good friend, where is the refutation?
I cannot admit a word which you have been saying.
184
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book The Complete Plato"
The Complete Plato
- Title
- The Complete Plato
- Author
- Plato
- Date
- ~347 B.C.
- Language
- English
- License
- PD
- Size
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Pages
- 1612
- Keywords
- Philosophy, Antique, Philosophie, Antike, Dialogues, Metaphysik, Metaphysics, Ideologie, Ideology, Englisch
- Categories
- Geisteswissenschaften
- International