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good when it takes away greater pains than those which it has, or gives
pleasures greater than the pains: then if you have some standard other than
pleasure and pain to which you refer when you call actual pain a good, you
can show what that is. But you cannot.’
True, said Protagoras.
Suppose again, I said, that the world says to me: ‘Why do you spend many
words and speak in many ways on this subject?’ Excuse me, friends, I should
reply; but in the first place there is a difficulty in explaining the meaning of
the expression ‘overcome by pleasure’; and the whole argument turns upon
this. And even now, if you see any possible way in which evil can be
explained as other than pain, or good as other than pleasure, you may still
retract. Are you satisfied, then, at having a life of pleasure which is without
pain? If you are, and if you are unable to show any good or evil which does
not end in pleasure and pain, hear the consequences:—If what you say is true,
then the argument is absurd which affirms that a man often does evil
knowingly, when he might abstain, because he is seduced and overpowered
by pleasure; or again, when you say that a man knowingly refuses to do what
is good because he is overcome at the moment by pleasure. And that this is
ridiculous will be evident if only we give up the use of various names, such as
pleasant and painful, and good and evil. As there are two things, let us call
them by two names— first, good and evil, and then pleasant and painful.
Assuming this, let us go on to say that a man does evil knowing that he does
evil. But some one will ask, Why? Because he is overcome, is the first
answer. And by what is he overcome? the enquirer will proceed to ask. And
we shall not be able to reply ‘By pleasure,’ for the name of pleasure has been
exchanged for that of good. In our answer, then, we shall only say that he is
overcome. ‘By what?’ he will reiterate. By the good, we shall have to reply;
indeed we shall. Nay, but our questioner will rejoin with a laugh, if he be one
of the swaggering sort, ‘That is too ridiculous, that a man should do what he
knows to be evil when he ought not, because he is overcome by good. Is that,
he will ask, because the good was worthy or not worthy of conquering the
evil’? And in answer to that we shall clearly reply, Because it was not worthy;
for if it had been worthy, then he who, as we say, was overcome by pleasure,
would not have been wrong. ‘But how,’ he will reply, ‘can the good be
unworthy of the evil, or the evil of the good’? Is not the real explanation that
they are out of proportion to one another, either as greater and smaller, or
more and fewer? This we cannot deny. And when you speak of being
overcome—‘what do you mean,’ he will say, ‘but that you choose the greater
evil in exchange for the lesser good?’ Admitted. And now substitute the
names of pleasure and pain for good and evil, and say, not as before, that a
man does what is evil knowingly, but that he does what is painful knowingly,
288
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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