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due form, or to which a people that is neither oppressed with tyranny nor
circumvented by fraud has consented, for distributing those conveniences of
life which afford us all our pleasures.
“They think it is an evidence of true wisdom for a man to pursue his own
advantage as far as the laws allow it, they account it piety to prefer the public
good to one’s private concerns, but they think it unjust for a man to seek for
pleasure by snatching another man’s pleasures from him; and, on the contrary,
they think it a sign of a gentle and good soul for a man to dispense with his
own advantage for the good of others, and that by this means a good man
finds as much pleasure one way as he parts with another; for as he may expect
the like from others when he may come to need it, so, if that should fail him,
yet the sense of a good action, and the reflections that he makes on the love
and gratitude of those whom he has so obliged, gives the mind more pleasure
than the body could have found in that from which it had restrained itself.
They are also persuaded that God will make up the loss of those small
pleasures with a vast and endless joy, of which religion easily convinces a
good soul.
“Thus, upon an inquiry into the whole matter, they reckon that all our
actions, and even all our virtues, terminate in pleasure, as in our chief end and
greatest happiness; and they call every motion or state, either of body or
mind, in which Nature teaches us to delight, a pleasure. Thus they cautiously
limit pleasure only to those appetites to which Nature leads us; for they say
that Nature leads us only to those delights to which reason, as well as sense,
carries us, and by which we neither injure any other person nor lose the
possession of greater pleasures, and of such as draw no troubles after them.
But they look upon those delights which men by a foolish, though common,
mistake call pleasure, as if they could change as easily the nature of things as
the use of words, as things that greatly obstruct their real happiness, instead of
advancing it, because they so entirely possess the minds of those that are once
captivated by them with a false notion of pleasure that there is no room left
for pleasures of a truer or purer kind.
“There are many things that in themselves have nothing that is truly
delightful; on the contrary, they have a good deal of bitterness in them; and
yet, from our perverse appetites after forbidden objects, are not only ranked
among the pleasures, but are made even the greatest designs, of life. Among
those who pursue these sophisticated pleasures they reckon such as I
mentioned before, who think themselves really the better for having fine
clothes; in which they think they are doubly mistaken, both in the opinion
they have of their clothes, and in that they have of themselves. For if you
consider the use of clothes, why should a fine thread be thought better than a
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Buch Utopia"
Utopia
- Titel
- Utopia
- Autor
- Thomas Morus
- Datum
- 1516
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- PD
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 86
- Schlagwörter
- Utopia, State, Religion, English
- Kategorien
- International
- Weiteres Belletristik