The Republic of Plato: An Ideal Commonwealth

封面
Colonial Press, 1901 - 329 頁
 

內容

I
1
II
35
III
66
V
105
VI
137
VII
176
VIII
209
IX
240
X
272
XI
299
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第 209 頁 - Above and behind them a fire is blazing at a distance, and between the fire and the prisoners there is a raised way ; and you will see, if you look, a low wall built along the way, like the screen which marionette-players have in front of them, over which they show the puppets. I see. And do you see...
第 112 頁 - It would seem, Adeimantus, that the direction in which education starts a man, will determine his future life.
第 lxxii 頁 - I had a whisper from a ghost who shall be nameless, "that these commentators always kept in the most distant quarters from their principals, in the lower world, through a consciousness of shame and guilt, because they had so horribly misrepresented the meaning of those authors to posterity.
第 324 頁 - Ardiaeus and others they bound head and foot and hand, and threw them down and flayed them with scourges, and dragged them along the road at the side, carding them on thorns like wool, and declaring to the passers-by what were their crimes, and that they were being taken away to be cast into hell.
第 153 頁 - And there is unity where there is community of pleasures and pains — where all the citizens are glad or grieved on the same occasions of joy and sorrow? No doubt. Yes ; and where there is no common but only private feeling a State is disorganized — when you have...
第 52 頁 - I have no objection. For I suspect that many will not be satisfied with the simpler way of life. They will be for adding sofas, and tables, and other furniture; also dainties, and perfumes, and incense, and courtesans, and cakes...
第 151 頁 - The proper officers will take the offspring of the good parents to the pen or fold, and there they will deposit them with certain nurses who dwell in a separate quarter; but the offspring of the inferior, or of the better when they chance to be deformed, will be put away in some mysterious, unknown place, as they should be.
第 191 頁 - He is like one who, in the storm of dust and sleet which the driving wind hurries along, retires under the shelter of a wall; and seeing the rest of mankind full of wickedness, he is content, if only he can live his own life and be pure from evil or unrighteousness, and depart in peace and good-will, with bright hopes.
第 38 頁 - If you could imagine anyone obtaining this power of becoming invisible, and never doing any wrong or touching what was another's, he would be thought by the lookers-on to be a most wretched idiot, although they would praise him to one another's faces, and keep up appearances with one another from a fear that they too might suffer injustice.
第 110 頁 - The newest song which the singers have," 1 they will be afraid that he may be praising, not new songs, but a new kind of song ; and this ought not to be praised, or conceived to be the meaning of the poet ; for any musical innovation is full of danger to the whole State, and ought to be prohibited. So Damon tells me, and I can quite believe him ; he says that when modes of music change, the fundamental laws of the State always change with them.

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