Philosophic Classics From Plato to Derrida
The two first make anxiety. For, being assured that there be causes of all things that have arrived hitherto or shall arrive her ...
APOLOGY 33 e 5 b c d I have relatives, too, for, in the words of Homer, I am ‘not born of an oak or a rock’* but of flesh and bl ...
440 THOMASHOBBES wisdom, which almost all men think they have in a greater degree than the vulgar, that is, than all men but the ...
34 PLATO b c d b e 38 neglected the things which most men value, such as wealth, and family interests, and military commands, an ...
LEVIATHAN(I, 13) 441 actual fighting but in the known disposition thereto during all the time there is no assur- ance to the con ...
APOLOGY 35 b c d e accustomed to think that I deserve anything evil. If I had been rich, I would have pro- posed as large a fine ...
442 THOMASHOBBES and for so long as he can keep it. And thus much for the ill condition which man by mere nature is actually pla ...
36 PLATO c d e 40 b c many other things which I maintain are unworthy of me, but which you have been accustomed to from other me ...
LEVIATHAN(I, 14) 443 dispose himself to peace. This is that law of the Gospel: “whatsoever you require that others should do to ...
APOLOGY 37 d e 41 b c d e would certainly have opposed me if I had not been going to meet with something good. And if we reflect ...
444 THOMASHOBBES CHAPTER15. OTHERLAW S O FNATURE From that law of Nature by which we are obliged to transfer to another such rig ...
38 PLATO 43 b c d 44 CRITO Characters Socrates Crito Scene—The Prison of Socrates SOCRATES: Why have you come at this hour, Crit ...
LEVIATHAN(I, 15) 445 like to a piece of law in Coke’s Commentaries on Littleton, where he says, if the right heir of the crown b ...
CRITO 39 b c d e 45 CRITO: And what was this dream? SOCRATES: A fair and beautiful woman, clad in white, seemed to come to me, a ...
446 THOMASHOBBES know those that knew them, that knew others, that knew it supernaturally; breach of faith cannot be called a pr ...
40 PLATO b c d e 47 b life, as far as you are concerned, when you might bring them up and educate them. Most likely their fate w ...
LEVIATHAN(I, 15) 447 which is by covenant, where the performance on one part merits the performance of the other part, and falls ...
CRITO 41 c d e 48 CRITO: He pays attention only to the opinion of the one man. SOCRATES: Then he ought to fear the blame and wel ...
448 THOMASHOBBES and profit to come, is a triumph or glorying in the hurt of another tending to no end; for the end is always so ...
42 PLATO e 49 b c d e that it is just, we will try; if not, we will give up the idea. I am afraid that considerations of expense ...
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