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composed of two such sections; one of land near the city, the other of land
which is at a distance. This arrangement shall be carried out in the following
manner: The section which is near the city shall be added to that which is on
borders, and form one lot, and the portion which is next nearest shall be added
to the portion which is next farthest; and so of the rest. Moreover, in the two
sections of the lots the same principle of equalization of the soil ought to be
maintained; the badness and goodness shall be compensated by more and less.
And the legislator shall divide the citizens into twelve parts, and arrange the
rest of their property, as far as possible, so as to form twelve equal parts; and
there shall be a registration of all. After this they shall assign twelve lots to
twelve Gods, and call them by their names, and dedicate to each God their
several portions, and call the tribes after them. And they shall distribute the
twelve divisions of the city in the same way in which they divided the
country; and every man shall have two habitations, one in the centre of the
country, and the other at the extremity. Enough of the manner of settlement.
Now we ought by all means to consider that there can never be such a
happy concurrence of circumstances as we have described; neither can all
things coincide as they are wanted. Men who will not take offence at such a
mode of living together, and will endure all their life long to have their
property fixed at a moderate limit, and to beget children in accordance with
our ordinances, and will allow themselves to be deprived of gold and other
things which the legislator, as is evident from these enactments, will certainly
forbid them; and will endure, further, the situation of the land with the city in
the middle and dwellings round about;—all this is as if the legislator were
telling his dreams, or making a city and citizens of wax. There is truth in these
objections, and therefore every one should take to heart what I am going to
say. Once more, then, the legislator shall appear and address us:—”O my
friends,” he will say to us, “do not suppose me ignorant that there is a certain
degree of truth in your words; but I am of opinion that, in matters which are
not present but future, he who exhibits a pattern of that at which he aims,
should in nothing fall short of the fairest and truest; and that if he finds any
part of this work impossible of execution he should avoid and not execute it,
but he should contrive to carry out that which is nearest and most akin to it;
you must allow the legislator to perfect his design, and when it is perfected,
you should join with him in considering what part of his legislation is
expedient and what will arouse opposition; for surely the artist who is to be
deemed worthy of any regard at all, ought always to make his work self–
consistent.”
Having determined that there is to be a distribution into twelve parts, let us
now see in what way this may be accomplished. There is no difficulty in
perceiving that the twelve parts admit of the greatest number of divisions of
1428
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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