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Browsing named entities in Plato, Republic. You can also browse the collection for 1915 AD or search for 1915 AD in all documents.
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with or without the consent of others,
or any possibility of mastering this alleged artThe translation gives the right meaning. Cf. 518 D, and the
examples collected in my emendation of Gorgias 503 D in
Class. Phil.
x. (1915) 325-326. The contrast between
subjects which do and those which do not admit of constitution as an art
and science is ever present to Plato's mind, as appears from the
Sophist, Politicus, Gorgias, and
Phaedrus. And he would normally express the idea by a
genitive with TE/XNH. Cf.
Protag. 357 A, Phaedrus 260 E, also
Class. Rev. xx. (1906) p.
247. See too Cic.De or.I. 4 “neque aliquod
praeceptum artis
nor indulged to repletion his
appetitive part, so that it may be lulled to sleepCf. Browning, Bishop Blougram's Apology,
“And body gets its sop and holds its noise.” Plato
was no ascetic, as some have inferred from passages in the
Republic, Laws, Gorgias, and Phaedo.
Cf. Herbert L. Stewart, “Was Plato an
Ascetic?”Philos. Re.,
1915, pp. 603-613; Dean Inge, Christian
Ethics, p. 90: “The asceticism of the true
Platonist has always been sane moderate; the hallmark of Platonism is a
combination of self-restraint and simplicity with humanism.”