Page - 956 - in The Complete Plato
Image of the Page - 956 -
Text of the Page - 956 -
he did not desist from evil, he would continually be changed into some brute
who resembled him in the evil nature which he had acquired, and would not
cease from his toils and transformations until he followed the revolution of
the same and the like within him, and overcame by the help of reason the
turbulent and irrational mob of later accretions, made up of fire and air and
water and earth, and returned to the form of his first and better state. Having
given all these laws to his creatures, that he might be guiltless of future evil in
any of them, the creator sowed some of them in the earth, and some in the
moon, and some in the other instruments of time; and when he had sown them
he committed to the younger gods the fashioning of their mortal bodies, and
desired them to furnish what was still lacking to the human soul, and having
made all the suitable additions, to rule over them, and to pilot the mortal
animal in the best and wisest manner which they could, and avert from him all
but self-inflicted evils.
When the creator had made all these ordinances he remained in his own
accustomed nature, and his children heard and were obedient to their father’s
word, and receiving from him the immortal principle of a mortal creature, in
imitation of their own creator they borrowed portions of fire, and earth, and
water, and air from the world, which were hereafter to be restored—these they
took and welded them together, not with the indissoluble chains by which
they were themselves bound, but with little pegs too small to be visible,
making up out of all the four elements each separate body, and fastening the
courses of the immortal soul in a body which was in a state of perpetual influx
and efflux. Now these courses, detained as in a vast river, neither overcame
nor were overcome; but were hurrying and hurried to and fro, so that the
whole animal was moved and progressed, irregularly however and irrationally
and anyhow, in all the six directions of motion, wandering backwards and
forwards, and right and left, and up and down, and in all the six directions.
For great as was the advancing and retiring flood which provided
nourishment, the affections produced by external contact caused still greater
tumult—when the body of any one met and came into collision with some
external fire, or with the solid earth or the gliding waters, or was caught in the
tempest borne on the air, and the motions produced by any of these impulses
were carried through the body to the soul. All such motions have
consequently received the general name of ‘sensations,’ which they still
retain. And they did in fact at that time create a very great and mighty
movement; uniting with the ever-flowing stream in stirring up and violently
shaking the courses of the soul, they completely stopped the revolution of the
same by their opposing current, and hindered it from predominating and
advancing; and they so disturbed the nature of the other or diverse, that the
three double intervals (i.e. between 1, 2, 4, 8), and the three triple intervals
956
back to the
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