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Plato, Republic 3 3 Browse Search
Knight's Mechanical Encyclopedia (ed. Knight) 3 3 Browse Search
Col. O. M. Roberts, Confederate Military History, a library of Confederate States Military History: Volume 12.1, Alabama (ed. Clement Anselm Evans) 2 2 Browse Search
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Plato, Republic, Book 9, section 576a (search)
they sing another tune.Cf. Phaedr. 241 AA)/LLOS GEGONW/S, Demosth. xxxiv. 13E(/TEROS H)/DH . . . KAI\ OU)X O( AU)TO/S.” “Yes indeed,” he said. “Throughout their lives, then, they never know what it is to be the friends of anybody. They are always either masters or slaves, but the tyrannical nature never tastes freedomCf. Lucian, Nigrinus 15A)/GEUSTOS ME\N E)LEUQERI/AS, A)PEI/RATOS DE\ PARRHSI/ASAristot.Eth. Nic. 1176 b 19, 1179 b 15. or true friendship.” “Quite so.” “May we not rightly call such men faithlessCf. Laws 730 C, 705 A.?” “Of course.” “Yes, and unj
Plato, Republic, Book 9, section 581c (search)
“ Cf. Aristot.Eth. Nic. 1097 a-b (i. 5. 1), also Diog. L. vii. 130 on Stoics, Plutarch, De liber. educ. x. (8 A), Renan, Avenir de Ia science, p. 8. Isoc.Antid. 217 characteristically recognizes only the three motives, pleasure, gain, and honor. For the entire argument cf. Aristot.Eth. Nic. 1176 a 31, 1177 a 10, and supra,Introd. pp. liv-lv. of men also are three, the philosopher or lover of wisdom, the lover of victory and the lover of gain.” “Precisely so” “And also that there are three forms of pleasure, corresponding respectively to each?” “By all means.” “Are you aware, then” said I, “that if you should choose to ask
Plato, Republic, Book 9, section 582a (search)
nsider it thus: By what are things to be judged, if they are to be judgedi.e. what is the criterion? Cf. 582 DDI' OU(=, Sext. Empir. Bekker, p. 60 (Pyrrh. Hypotyp. ii. 13-14) and p. 197 (Adv. Math. vii. 335). Cf. Diog. L.Prologue 21, and Laches 184 E. For the idea that the better judge cf. also Laws 663 C, Aristot.Eth. Nic. 1176 a 16-19. rightly? Is it not by experience, intelligence and discussionCf. 582 D, On Virtue 373 D, Xen.Mem. iii. 3. 11.? Or could anyone name a better criterion than these?” “How could he?” he said. “Observe, then. Of our three types of men, which has had the most experience of all the pleasures we mentioned? Do you think that the lover of