Laws

Stok Kodu:
9786052882986
Boyut:
135-210
Sayfa Sayısı:
683
Baskı:
1
Basım Tarihi:
2018-03
Kapak Türü:
Karton
Kağıt Türü:
2.Hamur
Dili:
İngilizce
%20 indirimli
22.75
18.20
9786052882986
441630
Laws
Laws
18.198
The institutions of Sparta and Crete are admitted by the Lacedaemonian and Cretan to have one aim only: they were
intended by the legislator to inspire courage in war. To this the Athenian objects that the true lawgiver should frame his
laws with a view to all the virtues and not to one only. Better is he who has temperance as well as courage, than he who
has courage only; better is he who is faithful in civil broils, than he who is a good soldier only. Better, too, is peace than
war; the reconciliation than the defeat of an enemy. And he who would attain all virtue should be trained amid
pleasures as well as pains. Hence there should be convivial intercourse among the citizens, and a man's temperance
should be tested in his cups, as we test his courage amid dangers. He should have a fear of the right sort, as well as a
courage of the right sort.
At the beginning of the second book the subject of pleasure leads to education, which in the early years of life is
wholly a discipline imparted by the means of pleasure and pain. The discipline of pleasure is implanted chiefly by the
practice of the song and the dance. Of these the forms should be fixed, and not allowed to depend on the fickle breath of
the multitude. There will be choruses of boys, girls, and grown-up persons, and all will be heard repeating the same
strain, that 'virtue is happiness.' One of them will give the law to the rest; this will be the chorus of aged minstrels, who
will sing the most beautiful and the most useful of songs. They will require a little wine, to mellow the austerity of age,
and make them amenable to the laws.
After having laid down as the first principle of politics, that peace, and not war, is the true aim of the legislator, and
briefly discussed music and festive intercourse, at the commencement of the third book Plato makes a digression, in
which he speaks of the origin of society. He describes, first of all, the family; secondly, the patriarchal stage, which is
an aggregation of families; thirdly, the founding of regular cities, like Ilium; fourthly, the establishment of a military
and political system, like that of Sparta, with which he identifies Argos and Messene, dating from the return of the
Heraclidae. But the aims of states should be good, or else, like the prayer of Theseus, they may be ruinous to
themselves. This was the case in two out of three of the Heracleid kingdoms. They did not understand that the powers
in a state should be balanced. The balance of powers saved Sparta, while the excess of tyranny in Persia and the excess
The institutions of Sparta and Crete are admitted by the Lacedaemonian and Cretan to have one aim only: they were
intended by the legislator to inspire courage in war. To this the Athenian objects that the true lawgiver should frame his
laws with a view to all the virtues and not to one only. Better is he who has temperance as well as courage, than he who
has courage only; better is he who is faithful in civil broils, than he who is a good soldier only. Better, too, is peace than
war; the reconciliation than the defeat of an enemy. And he who would attain all virtue should be trained amid
pleasures as well as pains. Hence there should be convivial intercourse among the citizens, and a man's temperance
should be tested in his cups, as we test his courage amid dangers. He should have a fear of the right sort, as well as a
courage of the right sort.
At the beginning of the second book the subject of pleasure leads to education, which in the early years of life is
wholly a discipline imparted by the means of pleasure and pain. The discipline of pleasure is implanted chiefly by the
practice of the song and the dance. Of these the forms should be fixed, and not allowed to depend on the fickle breath of
the multitude. There will be choruses of boys, girls, and grown-up persons, and all will be heard repeating the same
strain, that 'virtue is happiness.' One of them will give the law to the rest; this will be the chorus of aged minstrels, who
will sing the most beautiful and the most useful of songs. They will require a little wine, to mellow the austerity of age,
and make them amenable to the laws.
After having laid down as the first principle of politics, that peace, and not war, is the true aim of the legislator, and
briefly discussed music and festive intercourse, at the commencement of the third book Plato makes a digression, in
which he speaks of the origin of society. He describes, first of all, the family; secondly, the patriarchal stage, which is
an aggregation of families; thirdly, the founding of regular cities, like Ilium; fourthly, the establishment of a military
and political system, like that of Sparta, with which he identifies Argos and Messene, dating from the return of the
Heraclidae. But the aims of states should be good, or else, like the prayer of Theseus, they may be ruinous to
themselves. This was the case in two out of three of the Heracleid kingdoms. They did not understand that the powers
in a state should be balanced. The balance of powers saved Sparta, while the excess of tyranny in Persia and the excess
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