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treasure up his anger, and takes vengeance on the instant, and without malice
prepense, approaches to the involuntary; and yet even he is not altogether
involuntary, but only the image or shadow of the involuntary; wherefore
about homicides committed in hot blood, there is a difficulty in determining
whether in legislating we shall reckon them as voluntary or as partly
involuntary. The best and truest view is to regard them respectively as
likenesses only of the voluntary and involuntary, and to distinguish them
accordingly as they are done with or without premeditation. And we should
make the penalties heavier for those who commit homicide with angry
premeditation, and lighter for those who do not premeditate, but smite upon
the instant; for that which is like a greater evil should be punished more
severely, and that which is like a less evil should be punished less severely:
this shall be the rule of our laws.
Cleinias. Certainly.
Athenian. Let us proceed:—If any one slays a free man with his own hand,
and the deed be done in a moment of anger, and without premeditation, let the
offender suffer in other respects as the involuntary homicide would have
suffered, and also undergo an exile of two years, that he may learn to school
his passions. But he who slays another from passion, yet with premeditation,
shall in other respects suffer as the former; and to this shall be added an exile
of three instead of two years—his punishment is to be longer because his
passion is greater. The manner of their return shall be on this wise: (and here
the law has difficulty in determining exactly; for in some cases the murderer
who is judged by the law to be the worse may really be the less cruel, and he
who is judged the less cruel may be really the worse, and may have executed
the murder in a more savage manner, whereas the other may have been
gentler. But in general the degrees of guilt will be such as we have described
them. Of all these things the guardians of the law must take cognisance):—
When a homicide of either kind has completed his term of exile, the guardians
shall send twelve judges to the borders of the land; these during the interval
shall have informed themselves of the actions of the criminals, and they shall
judge respecting their pardon and reception; and the homicides shall abide by
their judgment. But if after they have returned home, any one of them in a
moment of anger repeats the deed, let him be an exile, and return no more; or
if he returns, let him suffer as the stranger was to suffer in a similar case. He
who kills his own slave shall undergo a purification, but if he kills the slave of
another in anger, he shall pay twice the amount of the loss to his owner. And
if any homicide is disobedient to the law, and without purification pollutes the
agora, or the games, or the temples, he who pleases may bring to trial the next
of kin to the dead man for permitting him, and the murderer with him, and
may compel the one to exact and the other to suffer a double amount of fines
1526
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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