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Plato, Republic, Book 8, section 544d (search)
where it is used of the tyranny of Peisistratus, ibid. 43 of Minos. Cf. Panegyr. 39 and NorIin on Panegyr. 105 (Loeb). Isocrates also uses it frequently of the power or sovereignty of Philip, Phil. 3, 6, 69, 133, etc. Cf. also Gorg. 492 B, Polit. 291 D. and purchasedNewman on Aristot.Pol. 1273 a 35 thinks that Plato may have been thinking of Carthage. Cf. Polyb. vi. 56. 4. kingships, and similar intermediate constitutions which one could find in even greater numbers among the barbarians than among the Greeks.Plato, as often is impatient of details, for which he was rebuked by Aristotle. Cf. also Tim. 57 D, 67 C, and the frequent leaving of minor matter
Plato, Republic, Book 8, section 550e (search)
goes on, and they advanceEI)S TO\ PRO/SQEN: cf. 437 A, 604 B, Prot. 339 D, Symp. 174 D, Polit. 262 D, Soph. 258 C, 261 B, Alc. I. 132 B, Protag. 357 D where H(=S is plainly wrong, Aristoph.Knights 751. in the pursuit of wealth, the more they hold that in honor the less they honor virtue. May not the opposition of wealth and virtueCf. 591 D, Laws 742 E, 705 B, 8931 C ff., 836 A, 919 B with Rep. 421 D; also Aristot.Pol. 1273 a 37-38. be conceived as if each lay in the scaleCf. on 544 E, Demosth. v. 12. of a balance inclining opposite ways?” “Yes, indeed,” he said. “So, when wealth is
Plato, Republic, Book 8, section 551b (search)
, Polit. 293 E, 296 E, 292 C, Lysis 209 C, Aristot.Pol. 1280 a 7, 1271 a 35, and Newman i. p. 220, Eth. Nic. 1138 b 23. Cf. also TE/LOSRhet. 1366 a 3. For the true criterion of office-holding see Laws 715 C-D and Isoc. xii. 131. For wealth as the criterion cf. Aristot.Pol. 1273 a 37. of an oligarchical polity, prescribingFor TACA/MENOI cf. Vol. I. p. 310, note c, on 416 E. a sum of money, a larger sum where it is moreCf. Aristot.Pol. 1301 b 13-14. of an oligarchy, where it is less a smaller, and proclaiming that no man shall hold office whose property does not come up to the required valuation? And this law they eith