Page - 991 - in The Complete Plato
Image of the Page - 991 -
Text of the Page - 991 -
diarrhoeas and dysenteries, and all such disorders. When the constitution is
disordered by excess of fire, continuous heat and fever are the result; when
excess of air is the cause, then the fever is quotidian; when of water, which is
a more sluggish element than either fire or air, then the fever is a tertian; when
of earth, which is the most sluggish of the four, and is only purged away in a
four-fold period, the result is a quartan fever, which can with difficulty be
shaken off.
Such is the manner in which diseases of the body arise; the disorders of the
soul, which depend upon the body, originate as follows. We must
acknowledge disease of the mind to be a want of intelligence; and of this
there are two kinds; to wit, madness and ignorance. In whatever state a man
experiences either of them, that state may be called disease; and excessive
pains and pleasures are justly to be regarded as the greatest diseases to which
the soul is liable. For a man who is in great joy or in great pain, in his
unreasonable eagerness to attain the one and to avoid the other, is not able to
see or to hear anything rightly; but he is mad, and is at the time utterly
incapable of any participation in reason. He who has the seed about the spinal
marrow too plentiful and overflowing, like a tree overladen with fruit, has
many throes, and also obtains many pleasures in his desires and their
offspring, and is for the most part of his life deranged, because his pleasures
and pains are so very great; his soul is rendered foolish and disordered by his
body; yet he is regarded not as one diseased, but as one who is voluntarily
bad, which is a mistake. The truth is that the intemperance of love is a disease
of the soul due chiefly to the moisture and fluidity which is produced in one
of the elements by the loose consistency of the bones. And in general, all that
which is termed the incontinence of pleasure and is deemed a reproach under
the idea that the wicked voluntarily do wrong is not justly a matter for
reproach. For no man is voluntarily bad; but the bad become bad by reason of
an ill disposition of the body and bad education, things which are hateful to
every man and happen to him against his will. And in the case of pain too in
like manner the soul suffers much evil from the body. For where the acid and
briny phlegm and other bitter and bilious humours wander about in the body,
and find no exit or escape, but are pent up within and mingle their own
vapours with the motions of the soul, and are blended with them, they
produce all sorts of diseases, more or fewer, and in every degree of intensity;
and being carried to the three places of the soul, whichever they may
severally assail, they create infinite varieties of ill-temper and melancholy, of
rashness and cowardice, and also of forgetfulness and stupidity. Further, when
to this evil constitution of body evil forms of government are added and evil
discourses are uttered in private as well as in public, and no sort of instruction
is given in youth to cure these evils, then all of us who are bad become bad
991
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