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famous deluge.
Cleinias. What are we to observe about it?
Athenian. I mean to say that those who then escaped would only be hill
shepherds—small sparks of the human race preserved on the tops of
mountains.
Cleinias. Clearly.
Athenian. Such survivors would necessarily be unacquainted with the arts
and the various devices which are suggested to the dwellers in cities by
interest or ambition, and with all the wrongs which they contrive against one
another.
Cleinias. Very true.
Athenian. Let us suppose, then, that the cities in the plain and on the sea–
coast were utterly destroyed at that time.
Cleinias. Very good.
Athenian. Would not all implements have then perished and every other
excellent invention of political or any other sort of wisdom have utterly
disappeared?
Cleinias. Why, yes, my friend; and if things had always continued as they
are at present ordered, how could any discovery have ever been made even in
the least particular? For it is evident that the arts were unknown during ten
thousand times ten thousand years. And no more than a thousand or two
thousand years have elapsed since the discoveries of Daedalus, Orpheus and
Palamedes—since Marsyas and Olympus invented music, and Amphion the
lyre—not to speak of numberless other inventions which are but of yesterday.
Athenian. Have you forgotten, Cleinias, the name of a friend who is really
of yesterday?
Cleinias. I suppose that you mean Epimenides.
Athenian. The same, my friend; he does indeed far overleap the heads of all
mankind by his invention; for he carried out in practice, as you declare, what
of old Hesiod only preached.
Cleinias. Yes, according to our tradition.
Athenian. After the great destruction, may we not suppose that the state of
man was something of this sort:—In the beginning of things there was a
fearful illimitable desert and a vast expanse of land; a herd or two of oxen
would be the only survivors of the animal world; and there might be a few
goats, these too hardly enough to maintain the shepherds who tended them?
1369
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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