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Cleinias. Which do you mean?
Athenian. Those which we were examining when we spoke of who ought to
govern whom. Did we not arrive at the conclusion that parents ought to
govern their children, and the elder the younger, and the noble the ignoble?
And there were many other principles, if you remember, and they were not
always consistent. One principle was this very principle of might, and we said
that Pindar considered violence natural and justified it.
Cleinias. Yes; I remember.
Athenian. Consider, then, to whom our state is to be entrusted. For there is
a thing which has occurred times without number in states—
Cleinias. What thing?
Athenian. That when there has been a contest for power, those who gain the
upper hand so entirely monopolize the government, as to refuse all share to
the defeated party and their descendants—they live watching one another, the
ruling class being in perpetual fear that some one who has a recollection of
former wrongs will come into power and rise up against them. Now,
according to our view, such governments are not polities at all, nor are laws
right which are passed for the good of particular classes and not for the good
of the whole state. States which have such laws are not polities but parties,
and their notions of justice are simply unmeaning. I say this, because I am
going to assert that we must not entrust the government in your state to any
one because he is rich, or because he possesses any other advantage, such as
strength, or stature, or again birth: but he who is most obedient to the laws of
the state, he shall win the palm; and to him who is victorious in the first
degree shall be given the highest office and chief ministry of the gods; and the
second to him who bears the second palm; and on a similar principle shall all
the other be assigned to those who come next in order. And when I call the
rulers servants or ministers of the law, I give them this name not for the sake
of novelty, but because I certainly believe that upon such service or ministry
depends the well– or ill–being of the state. For that state in which the law is
subject and has no authority, I perceive to be on the highway to ruin; but I see
that the state in which the law is above the rulers, and the rulers are the
inferiors of the law, has salvation, and every blessing which the Gods can
confer.
Cleinias. Truly, Stranger, you see with the keen vision of age.
Athenian. Why, yes; every man when he is young has that sort of vision
dullest, and when he is old keenest.
Cleinias. Very true.
1404
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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