Philosophic Classics From Plato to Derrida
LEVIATHAN(II, 17) 449 And be there never so great a multitude; yet if their actions be directed according to their particular ju ...
CRITO 43 50 b c d e 51 b c I believe in it still. But if you differ in any way, explain to me how. If you still hold to our form ...
450 THOMASHOBBES have no other direction, than their particular judgments and appetites; nor speech, whereby one of them can sig ...
LEVIATHAN(II, 18) 451 enemies abroad. And in him consists the essence of the commonwealth; which, to define it, “is one person, ...
44 PLATO d e 52 b c d e tell you to do, or you must persuade them that their commands are unjust. But it is impi- ous to use vio ...
452 THOMASHOBBES so evident a lie, even in the pretenders’ own consciences, that it is not only an act of an unjust, but also of ...
CRITO 45 53 b c d went away from Athens less than the lame and the blind and the crippled. Clearly you, far more than other Athe ...
LEVIATHAN(II, 18) 453 accuse any man but himself; no nor himself of injury; because to do injury to one’s self, is impossible. I ...
46 PLATO c d e they will be delighted to hear of the ludicrous way in which you escaped from prison, dressed up in peasant’s clo ...
454 THOMASHOBBES conservation, the right of protecting himself by his private strength, which is the condition of war, and contr ...
PHAEDO 47 72 d e 73 Plato,Phaedo, translated by F.J. Church (Pearson/Library of the Liberal Arts, 1951). PHAEDO (selections) Cha ...
LEVIATHAN(II, 18) 455 have so instructed men in this point of sovereign right, that there be few now in England that do not see, ...
48 PLATO d 74 b c And are we agreed that when knowledge comes in the following way, it is recol- lection? When a man has seen or ...
456 THOMASHOBBES CHAPTER21. OF THELIBERTY OFSUBJECTS LIBERTY, or FREEDOM, signifies, properly, the absence of opposition; by opp ...
PHAEDO 49 d e 73 b Yet it was from these equal things, he said, which are different from abstract equality, that you have concei ...
LEVIATHAN(II, 21) 457 artificial chains, called “civil laws,” which they themselves, by mutual covenants, have fastened at one e ...
50 PLATO e 76 b c d beauty, and absolute justice, and absolute holiness; in short, I repeat, to everything which we mark with th ...
458 THOMASHOBBES There is written on the turrets of the city of Lucca in great characters at this day, the word LIBERTAS; yet no ...
PHAEDO 51 e 77 b c d Then, Simmias, he said, is not this the truth? If, as we are forever repeating, beauty, and good, and the o ...
LEVIATHAN(II, 21) 459 soldier in his place: for in this case he deserts not the service of the commonwealth. And there is allowa ...
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