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Plato : LAWS
Persons of the dialogue: An Athenian stranger - Cleinias, a Cretan
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This Part: 80 Pages
Part 1 Page 70
Ath. Thus, after digressing from the original subject of laws into music and drinking - bouts, the argument has, providentially, come back to the same point, and presents to us another handle. For we have reached the settlement of Lacedaemon; which, as you truly say, is in laws and in institutions the sister of Crete. And we are all the better for the digression, because we have gone through various governments and settlements, and have been present at the foundation of a first, second, and third state, succeeding one another in infinite time. And now there appears on the horizon a fourth state or nation which was once in process of settlement and has continued settled to this day. If, out of all this, we are able to discern what is well or ill settled, and what laws are the salvation and what are the destruction of cities, and what changes would make a state happy, O Megillus and Cleinias, we may now begin again, unless we have some fault to find with the previous discussion.
Meg. If some God, Stranger, would promise us that our new enquiry about legislation would be as good and full as the present, I would go a great way to hear such another, and would think that a day as long as this - and we are now approaching the longest day of the year - was too short for the discussion.
Ath. Then I suppose that we must consider this subject?
Meg. Certainly.
Laws part 2 of 3, 4, 5. You are at part 1
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