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Plato, Republic, Book 4, section 426c (search)
which being badly governed forewarn their citizens not to meddleCf. 497 B, Aristotle Politics 1301 b 11. Cf. the obvious imitation in the (probably spurious)Epistle vii. 330 E. For the thought, from the point of view of an enemy of democracy, cf. the statement in [Xenophon]Rep. Ath. 3. 9, that the faults of Athens cannot be corrected while she remains a democracy. The Athenians naturally guarded their constitution and viewed with equal suspicion the idealistic reformer and the oligarchical reactionary. with the general constitution of the state, denouncing death to whosoever attempts that—while whoever most agreeably servesCf. , p. 65 note d, and Laws 923 B. The
Plato, Republic, Book 6, section 489b (search)
610 A, Phaedo 62 B and D, Gorg. 501 A, etc. course of things that the pilot should beg the sailors to be ruled by him or that wise men should go to the doors of the rich.This saying was attributed to Simonides. Cf. schol. Hermann, Plato, vol. vi. p. 346, Joel, Der echte und der xenophontische Sokrates, ii.1 p .81, Aristot.Rhet. 1301 a 8 Cf. Phaedr. 245 AE)PI\ POIHTIKA\S QU/RAS,Thompson on Phaedr. 233 E, 364 BE)PI\ PLOUSI/WN QU/RAS, Laws 953 DE)PI\ TA\S TW=N PLOUSI/WN KAI\ SOFW=N QU/RAS, and for the idea cf. also 568 A and Theaet. 170 A, Timon of AthensIV iii. 17 “The learned pate ducks to the golden
Plato, Republic, Book 8, section 544a (search)
9. if this city is right. But regarding the other constitutions, my recollection is that you said there were four speciesAristot.Pol. 1291-1292 censures the limitation to four. But Cf. supra,Introd. p. xlv. Cf. Laws 693 D, where only two mother-forms of government are mentioned, monarchy and democracy, with Aristot.Pol. 1301 b 40DH=MOS KAI\ O)LIGARXI/A. Cf. also Eth. Nic. 1160 a 31 ff. The Politicus mentions seven (291 f., 301 f.). Isoc.Panath. 132-134 names three kinds—oligarchy, democracy, and monarchy—adding that others may say much more about them. See note ad loc. in Loeb Isocrates and Class. Phil. vol. vii. p.
Plato, Republic, Book 8, section 551b (search)
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 either put through by force of arms, or without resorting to that they establish their government by terrorization.Cf. 557 A. Is not that the way of it?” “It is.” “The establishment then, one may say