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good only?
Assuredly.
Then God, if he be good, is not the author of all things, as the many assert,
but he is the cause of a few things only, and not of most things that occur to
men. For few are the goods of human life, and many are the evils, and the
good is to be attributed to God alone; of the evils the causes are to be sought
elsewhere, and not in him.
That appears to me to be most true, he said.
Then we must not listen to Homer or to any other poet who is guilty of the
folly of saying that two casks
“Lie at the threshold of Zeus, full of lots, one of good, the other of evil
lots,”
and that he to whom Zeus gives a mixture of the two
“Sometimes meets with evil fortune, at other times with good;”
but that he to whom is given the cup of unmingled ill,
“Him wild hunger drives o’er the beauteous earth.”
And again—
“Zeus, who is the dispenser of good and evil to us.”
And if anyone asserts that the violation of oaths and treaties, which was
really the work of Pandarus, was brought about by Athene and Zeus, or that
the strife and contention of the gods were instigated by Themis and Zeus, he
shall not have our approval; neither will we allow our young men to hear the
words of AEschylus, that
“God plants guilt among men when he desires utterly to destroy a house.”
And if a poet writes of the sufferings of Niobe—the subject of the tragedy
in which these iambic verses occur—or of the house of Pelops, or of the
Trojan War or on any similar theme, either we must not permit him to say that
these are the works of God, or if they are of God, he must devise some
explanation of them such as we are seeking: he must say that God did what
was just and right, and they were the better for being punished; but that those
who are punished are miserable, and that God is the author of their misery—
the poet is not to be permitted to say; though he may say that the wicked are
miserable because they require to be punished, and are benefited by receiving
punishment from God; but that God being good is the author of evil to anyone
is to be strenuously denied, and not to be said or sung or heard in verse or
prose by anyone whether old or young in any well-ordered commonwealth.
1067
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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