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mistresses in their private houses, before the sun is up. Much sleep is not
required by nature, either for our souls or bodies, or for the actions which they
perform. For no one who is asleep is good for anything, any more than if he
were dead; but he of us who has the most regard for life and reason keeps
awake as long he can, reserving only so much time for sleep as is expedient
for health; and much sleep is not required, if the habit of moderation be once
rightly formed. Magistrates in states who keep awake at night are terrible to
the bad, whether enemies or citizens, and are honoured and reverenced by the
just and temperate, and are useful to themselves and to the whole state.
A night which is passed in such a manner, in addition to all the above–
mentioned advantages, infuses a sort of courage into the minds of the citizens.
When the day breaks, the time has arrived for youth to go to their
schoolmasters. Now neither sheep nor any other animals can live without a
shepherd, nor can children be left without tutors, or slaves without masters.
And of all animals the boy is the most unmanageable, inasmuch as he has the
fountain of reason in him not yet regulated; he is the most insidious, sharp–
witted, and insubordinate of animals. Wherefore he must be bound with many
bridles; in the first place, when he gets away from mothers and nurses, he
must be under the management of tutors on account of his childishness and
foolishness; then, again, being a freeman, he must be controlled by teachers,
no matter what they teach, and by studies; but he is also a slave, and in that
regard any freeman who comes in his way may punish him and his tutor and
his instructor, if any of them does anything wrong; and he who comes across
him and does not inflict upon him the punishment which he deserves, shall
incur the greatest disgrace; and let the guardian of the law, who is the director
of education, see to him who coming in the way of the offences which we
have mentioned, does not chastise them when he ought, or chastises them in a
way which he ought not; let him keep a sharp look–out, and take especial care
of the training of our children, directing their natures, and always turning
them to good according to the law.
But how can our law sufficiently train the director of education. himself;
for as yet all has been imperfect, and nothing has been said either clear or
satisfactory? Now, as far as possible, the law ought to leave nothing to him,
but to explain everything, that he may be an interpreter and tutor to others.
About dances and music and choral strains, I have already spoken both to the
character of the selection of them, and the manner in which they are to be
amended and consecrated. But we have not as yet spoken, O illustrious
guardian of education, of the manner in which your pupils are to use those
strains which are written in prose, although you have been informed what
martial strains they are to learn and practise; what relates in the first place to
the learning of letters, and secondly, to the lyre, and also to calculation,
1477
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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