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pleasure is it that men can find in throwing the dice?’ (for if there were any
pleasure in it, they think the doing it so often should give one a surfeit of it);
‘and what pleasure can one find in hearing the barking and howling of dogs,
which seem rather odious than pleasant sounds?’ Nor can they comprehend
the pleasure of seeing dogs run after a hare, more than of seeing one dog run
after another; for if the seeing them run is that which gives the pleasure, you
have the same entertainment to the eye on both these occasions, since that is
the same in both cases. But if the pleasure lies in seeing the hare killed and
torn by the dogs, this ought rather to stir pity, that a weak, harmless, and
fearful hare should be devoured by strong, fierce, and cruel dogs. Therefore
all this business of hunting is, among the Utopians, turned over to their
butchers, and those, as has been already said, are all slaves, and they look on
hunting as one of the basest parts of a butcher’s work, for they account it both
more profitable and more decent to kill those beasts that are more necessary
and useful to mankind, whereas the killing and tearing of so small and
miserable an animal can only attract the huntsman with a false show of
pleasure, from which he can reap but small advantage. They look on the
desire of the bloodshed, even of beasts, as a mark of a mind that is already
corrupted with cruelty, or that at least, by too frequent returns of so brutal a
pleasure, must degenerate into it.
“Thus though the rabble of mankind look upon these, and on innumerable
other things of the same nature, as pleasures, the Utopians, on the contrary,
observing that there is nothing in them truly pleasant, conclude that they are
not to be reckoned among pleasures; for though these things may create some
tickling in the senses (which seems to be a true notion of pleasure), yet they
imagine that this does not arise from the thing itself, but from a depraved
custom, which may so vitiate a man’s taste that bitter things may pass for
sweet, as women with child think pitch or tallow taste sweeter than honey; but
as a man’s sense, when corrupted either by a disease or some ill habit, does
not change the nature of other things, so neither can it change the nature of
pleasure.
“They reckon up several sorts of pleasures, which they call true ones; some
belong to the body, and others to the mind. The pleasures of the mind lie in
knowledge, and in that delight which the contemplation of truth carries with
it; to which they add the joyful reflections on a well- spent life, and the
assured hopes of a future happiness. They divide the pleasures of the body
into two sorts—the one is that which gives our senses some real delight, and
is performed either by recruiting Nature and supplying those parts which feed
the internal heat of life by eating and drinking, or when Nature is eased of any
surcharge that oppresses it, when we are relieved from sudden pain, or that
which arises from satisfying the appetite which Nature has wisely given to
54
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book Utopia"
Utopia
- Title
- Utopia
- Author
- Thomas Morus
- Date
- 1516
- Language
- English
- License
- PD
- Size
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Pages
- 86
- Keywords
- Utopia, State, Religion, English
- Categories
- International
- Weiteres Belletristik