I’ve run
rivers. One would think that floating
down a river provides the perfect opportunity to enjoy the beauties of
nature. However, if the river is fast
flowing and filled with rapids, falls, and eddies there is little opportunity
to enjoy that beauty; the challenge and the joy of such a river trip comes from
staying afloat. For me, reading Plato’s Statesman was just such a head long
rush. Sometimes, to get even a peek the
truths through which the cascade of ideas dragged my mind, I had to claw my way
back up stream, struggling back through the ideas to attempt a glimpse at their
meaning. It was a struggle but here are
some glimpses of the good I found. All quotes are form: Plato – Complete
Works, Edited by John M. Cooper,
Associate Editor, D. S. Hutchinson, Hackett Publishing Company,
Indianapolis/Cambridge, 1997.
From Statesman on the Divisions on Knowledge:
Visitor: Well, divided all cases of knowledge in this way, calling
the one sort practical knowledge, the other purely theoretical. p. 297
From Statesman on Creation & Spontaneous Generation:
Visitor: . . . From all these considerations, it follows that one
must neither say that the cosmos is always itself responsible for its own
turning, nor say at all that it is turned by god in a pair of opposed
revolutions, nor again that it is turned by some pair of gods whose thoughts
are opposed to each other; it is turned by what was said just now, which is the
sole remaining possibility, that at times it is helped by the guidance of
another, divine, cause, acquiring life once more and receiving a restored
immortality from its craftsman, while at other times, when it is let go, it
goes on its own way under its own power, having been let go at such a time as
to travel backwards for many tens of thousands of revolutions because of the very
fact that its movement combines the effects of its huge size, perfect balance,
and its resting on the smallest of bases.
p. 311
From Statesman on a King – v – a Tyrant:
Visitor: I think we made a mistake before. . . We put king and
tyrant into the same category, when both they themselves and the manner of
their rule are very unlike one another.
p. 318
From Statesman on the Relative and the Absolute:
Visitor: . . . and at the same time that greater and less are
measured not only in relation to each other but also in relation to the coming
into being of what is in due measure. p.
327
From Statesman on the Types of Government:
Visitor: We recognize monarchy, don’t we, as one of the varieties of
rule in cities?
Young Socrates*:
Yes.
Visitor: After monarchy one would, I think, list the holding of power
by the few.
Young Socrates: Of course.
Visitor: And isn’t a third type of constitution rule by the mass of
the people, called by the name of ‘democracy’?
Young Socrates: Most certainly.
Visitor: So there are three of them – but don’t they in a certain
way become five, giving birth from among them to two other names in addition to
themselves?
Young Socrates: What are these?
Visitor: I think that as things are people refer to the aspects of
force and consent, poverty and wealth, and law and lawlessness as they occur in
them, and use these to divide each of the first two types into two. So they call monarchy by two names, on the
grounds that it exhibits two forms, the one ‘tyrannical’, the other ‘kingly’
monarchy.
Yong Socrates: Of course.
Visitor: And any city which has come to be controlled by a few
people they call by the names of ‘aristocracy’ and ‘oligarchy’.
Young Socrates: Most certainly.
Visitor: With democracy, on the other hand, whether in fact it’s by
force or with their consent that the mass rules over those who possess the wealth,
and whether by accurately preserving the laws or no, in all these cases no one
is in the habit of changing its name.
Young Socrates: True.
From Statesman on Just Government:
Visitor: . . . so long as they act to preserve it [the Constitution]
on the basis of expert knowledge and what is just, making it better than it was
so far as they can, this is the
constitution which alone we must say is correct . . . p. 337
From Statesman on types of government and the “divisions” of democracy:
Visitor: Out of monarchy let’s make kingly and tyrannical rule; out
of the sort that doesn’t involve many, we said there was the auspiciously named
aristocracy [rule of quality], and oligarchy, while out of the sort that does
involve many, there was democracy, which we then called single and put it down
as such, but now in turn we must put this too down as double.
Young Socrates: How, then? And
divided by what criterion?
Visitor: By one that is not different from the other cases even if its name, ‘democracy’, is now double;
but certainly ruling according to laws and contrary to laws belongs both to
this and to the others.
Young Socrates: Yes, it does. p. 347
From Statesman on When a King Is Best (Constitutional Monarchy):
Visitor: Well then, when monarchy is yoked in good written rules,
which we call laws, it is best of all six; but if it is without laws, it is
difficult and heaviest to live with. p. 347
From Statesman on Comparing Just and Unjust Democracy to the Other Forms:
Visitor: For this reason, if all the types of constitution are law-abiding,
it turns out to be the worst of them, but if all are contrary to law, the best;
and if all are uncontrolled living in a democracy takes the prize, but if they
are ordered, life in it is least livable, and in first place and best by far
will be life in the first, (monarchy) . . .
p. 348
From Statesman on Traits of Good Kings:
Visitor: Among these, I think, are generalship, the art of the
judge, and the part of rhetoric which in partnership with kingship persuades
people of what is just and so helps in steering through the business of
cities. p. 349
From Statesman on Power of Rhetoric:
Visitor: Well then: to which sort of expert knowledge shall we
assign what is capable of persuading mass and crowd, through the telling of
stories, and not through teaching?
Young Socrates: This too is clear, I think: it must be given to rhetoric.
Visitor: And the matter of whether to do through persuasion whatever
it may be in relation to some people or other, or else by the use of some sort
of force, or indeed to do nothing at all: to what sort of expert knowledge
shall we attach this?
Young Socrates: To the one that controls the art of persuasion and
speaking.
Visitor: This would be none other, I think, than the capacity of the
statesman. p. 349
From Statesman on the Dangers of Pacifism:
Visitor: . . . For those who are especially orderly are always ready
to live the quiet life, carrying on their private business on their own by
themselves. They both associate with everyone
in their own city on this basis, and similarly with cities outside their own,
being ready to preserve peace of some sort in any way they can. As a result of this passion of theirs, which
is less timely than it should be, when they do what they want nobody notices
that they are being unwarlike and making the young men the same, and that they
are perpetually at the mercy of those who attack them. The consequence is that within a few years
they themselves, their children, and the whole city together often become
slaves instead of free men before they have noticed it. p. 353
From Statesman on the Dangers of Militarism:
Visitor: But what about those who incline more towards courage? Isn’t it the case that they are always
drawing their cities into some war or other because of their desire for a life
of this sort, which is more vigorous than it should be, and that they make
enemies of people who are both numerous and powerful, and so either completely
destroy their own fatherlands, or else make them slaves and subject of their
enemies? p. 354
From Statesman on Education’s Importance in Maintaining Freedom through ‘Weaving’
together Pacifism and the Militarism:
Visitor: Then as for the others, whose nature are capable of
becoming composed and stable in the direction of nobility, if they acquire
education, and, with the help of expertise, of admitting commingling with each
other—of these, it tries to bind together and intertwine the ones who strain
more toward courage, its view being that their firm disposition is as it were
like the warp, and the ones who incline toward the moderate, who produce an
ample, soft, and—to continue the image—wooflike thread, two natures with
opposite tendencies; and it does so in something like the following way.
Young Socrates: What way is that?
Visitor: I call divine, when it comes to be in souls, that opinion
about what is fine, just and good, and the opposites of these, which is really
true and is guaranteed; it belongs to the class of the more than human p. 355
*This ‘Young Socrates’ is not ‘our
Socrates’ as a young man, but a young man who also has the name of Socrates.
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