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Plato, Republic, Book 8, section 551b (search)
defining the limitsO(/RON: cf. 551 C, Laws 714 C, 962 D, 739 D, 626 B, Menex. 238 D, 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 o
Plato, Republic, Book 8, section 557e (search)
“he would not be at a loss for patterns.” “And the freedom from all compulsion to hold office in such a city, even if you are qualified,Cf. Aristot.Pol. 1271 a 12DEI= GA\R KAI\ BOULO/MENON KAI\ MH\ BOULO/MENON A)/RXEIN TO\N A)/CION TH=S A)RXH=S. cf. 347 B-C. or again, to submit to rule, unless you please, or to make war when the rest are at war,Cf. Laws 955 B-C, where a penalty is pronounced for making peace or war privately, and the parody in Aristoph.Acharn. passim. or to keep the peace when the others do so, unless you desire peace; and again, the liberty, in defiance of any law that forbids you, to hold office and sit on juries none the