PHYSICS
ARISTOTLE
WRITTEN 350 BC
TRANSLATED BY BENJAMIN JOWET
IN EIGHT WEB-PAGE PARTS - WEB-PAGE
TWO
|
BOOK II
Part 1
OUR PURPOSE is to consider what form of political
community is best of all for those who are
most able to realize their ideal of life.
We must therefore examine not only this but
other constitutions, both such as actually
exist in well-governed states, and any theoretical
forms which are held in esteem; that what
is good and useful may be brought to light.
And let no one suppose that in seeking for
something beyond them we are anxious to make
a sophistical display at any cost; we only
undertake this inquiry because all the constitutions
with which we are acquainted are faulty.
We will begin with the natural beginning
of the subject. Three alternatives are conceivable:
The members of a state must either have (1)
all things or (2) nothing in common, or (3)
some things in common and some not. That
they should have nothing in common is clearly
impossible, for the constitution is a community,
and must at any rate have a common place
- one city will be in one place, and the
citizens are those who share in that one
city. But should a well ordered state have
all things, as far as may be, in common,
or some only and not others? For the citizens
might conceivably have wives and children
and property in common, as Socrates proposes
in the Republic of Plato. Which is better,
our present condition, or the proposed new
order of society. II
There are many difficulties in the community
of women. And the principle on which Socrates
rests the necessity of such an institution
evidently is not established by his arguments.
Further, as a means to the end which he ascribes
to the state, the scheme, taken literally
is impracticable, and how we are to interpret
it is nowhere precisely stated. I am speaking
of the premise from which the argument of
Socrates proceeds, 'that the greater the
unity of the state the better.' Is it not
obvious that a state may at length attain
such a degree of unity as to be no longer
a state? since the nature of a state is to
be a plurality, and in tending to greater
unity, from being a state, it becomes a family,
and from being a family, an individual; for
the family may be said to be more than the
state, and the individual than the family.
So that we ought not to attain this greatest
unity even if we could, for it would be the
destruction of the state. Again, a state
is not made up only of so many men, but of
different kinds of men; for similars do not
constitute a state. It is not like a military
alliance The usefulness of the latter depends
upon its quantity even where there is no
difference in quality (for mutual protection
is the end aimed at), just as a greater weight
of anything is more useful than a less (in
like manner, a state differs from a nation,
when the nation has not its population organized
in villages, but lives an Arcadian sort of
life); but the elements out of which a unity
is to be formed differ in kind. Wherefore
the principle of compensation, as I have
already remarked in the Ethics, is the salvation
of states. Even among freemen and equals
this is a principle which must be maintained,
for they cannot an rule together, but must
change at the end of a year or some other
period of time or in some order of succession.
The result is that upon this plan they all
govern; just as if shoemakers and carpenters
were to exchange their occupations, and the
same persons did not always continue shoemakers
and carpenters. And since it is better that
this should be so in politics as well, it
is clear that while there should be continuance
of the same persons in power where this is
possible, yet where this is not possible
by reason of the natural equality of the
citizens, and at the same time it is just
that an should share in the government (whether
to govern be a good thing or a bad), an approximation
to this is that equals should in turn retire
from office and should, apart from official
position, be treated alike. Thus the one
party rule and the others are ruled in turn,
as if they were no longer the same persons.
In like manner when they hold office there
is a variety in the offices held. Hence it
is evident that a city is not by nature one
in that sense which some persons affirm;
and that what is said to be the greatest
good of cities is in reality their destruction;
but surely the good of things must be that
which preserves them. Again, in another point
of view, this extreme unification of the
state is clearly not good; for a family is
more self-sufficing than an individual, and
a city than a family, and a city only comes
into being when the community is large enough
to be self-sufficing. If then self-sufficiency
is to be desired, the lesser degree of unity
is more desirable than the greater. III
But, even supposing that it were best for
the community to have the greatest degree
of unity, this unity is by no means proved
to follow from the fact 'of all men saying
"mine" and "not mine"
at the same instant of time,' which, according
to Socrates, is the sign of perfect unity
in a state. For the word 'all' is ambiguous.
If the meaning be that every individual says
'mine' and 'not mine' at the same time, then
perhaps the result at which Socrates aims
may be in some degree accomplished; each
man will call the same person his own son
and the same person his wife, and so of his
property and of all that falls to his lot.
This, however, is not the way in which people
would speak who had their had their wives
and children in common; they would say 'all'
but not 'each.' In like manner their property
would be described as belonging to them,
not severally but collectively. There is
an obvious fallacy in the term 'all': like
some other words, 'both,' 'odd,' 'even,'
it is ambiguous, and even in abstract argument
becomes a source of logical puzzles. That
all persons call the same thing mine in the
sense in which each does so may be a fine
thing, but it is impracticable; or if the
words are taken in the other sense, such
a unity in no way conduces to harmony. And
there is another objection to the proposal.
For that which is common to the greatest
number has the least care bestowed upon it.
Every one thinks chiefly of his own, hardly
at all of the common interest; and only when
he is himself concerned as an individual.
For besides other considerations, everybody
is more inclined to neglect the duty which
he expects another to fulfill; as in families
many attendants are often less useful than
a few. Each citizen will have a thousand
sons who will not be his sons individually
but anybody will be equally the son of anybody,
and will therefore be neglected by all alike.
Further, upon this principle, every one will
use the word 'mine' of one who is prospering
or the reverse, however small a fraction
he may himself be of the whole number; the
same boy will be 'so and so's son,' the son
of each of the thousand, or whatever be the
number of the citizens; and even about this
he will not be positive; for it is impossible
to know who chanced to have a child, or whether,
if one came into existence, it has survived.
But which is better - for each to say 'mine'
in this way, making a man the same relation
to two thousand or ten thousand citizens,
or to use the word 'mine' in the ordinary
and more restricted sense? For usually the
same person is called by one man his own
son whom another calls his own brother or
cousin or kinsman - blood relation or connection
by marriage either of himself or of some
relation of his, and yet another his clansman
or tribesman; and how much better is it to
be the real cousin of somebody than to be
a son after Plato's fashion! Nor is there
any way of preventing brothers and children
and fathers and mothers from sometimes recognizing
one another; for children are born like their
parents, and they will necessarily be finding
indications of their relationship to one
another. Geographers declare such to be the
fact; they say that in part of Upper Libya,
where the women are common, nevertheless
the children who are born are assigned to
their respective fathers on the ground of
their likeness. And some women, like the
females of other animals - for example, mares
and cows - have a strong tendency to produce
offspring resembling their parents, as was
the case with the Pharsalian mare called
Honest. IV
Other evils, against which it is not easy
for the authors of such a community to guard,
will be assaults and homicides, voluntary
as well as involuntary, quarrels and slanders,
all which are most unholy acts when committed
against fathers and mothers and near relations,
but not equally unholy when there is no relationship.
Moreover, they are much more likely to occur
if the relationship is unknown, and, when
they have occurred, the customary expiations
of them cannot be made. Again, how strange
it is that Socrates, after having made the
children common, should hinder lovers from
carnal intercourse only, but should permit
love and familiarities between father and
son or between brother and brother, than
which nothing can be more unseemly, since
even without them love of this sort is improper.
How strange, too, to forbid intercourse for
no other reason than the violence of the
pleasure, as though the relationship of father
and son or of brothers with one another made
no difference. This community of wives and
children seems better suited to the husbandmen
than to the guardians, for if they have wives
and children in common, they will be bound
to one another by weaker ties, as a subject
class should be, and they will remain obedient
and not rebel. In a word, the result of such
a law would be just the opposite of which
good laws ought to have, and the intention
of Socrates in making these regulations about
women and children would defeat itself. For
friendship we believe to be the greatest
good of states and the preservative of them
against revolutions; neither is there anything
which Socrates so greatly lauds as the unity
of the state which he and all the world declare
to be created by friendship. But the unity
which he commends would be like that of the
lovers in the Symposium, who, as Aristophanes
says, desire to grow together in the excess
of their affection, and from being two to
become one, in which case one or both would
certainly perish. Whereas in a state having
women and children common, love will be watery;
and the father will certainly not say 'my
son,' or the son 'my father.' As a little
sweet wine mingled with a great deal of water
is imperceptible in the mixture, so, in this
sort of community, the idea of relationship
which is based upon these names will be lost;
there is no reason why the so-called father
should care about the son, or the son about
the father, or brothers about one another.
Of the two qualities which chiefly inspire
regard and affection - that a thing is your
own and that it is your only one-neither
can exist in such a state as this. Again,
the transfer of children as soon as they
are born from the rank of husbandmen or of
artisans to that of guardians, and from the
rank of guardians into a lower rank, will
be very difficult to arrange; the givers
or transferrers cannot but know whom they
are giving and transferring, and to whom.
And the previously mentioned evils, such
as assaults, unlawful loves, homicides, will
happen more often amongst those who are transferred
to the lower classes, or who have a place
assigned to them among the guardians; for
they will no longer call the members of the
class they have left brothers, and children,
and fathers, and mothers, and will not, therefore,
be afraid of committing any crimes by reason
of consanguinity. Touching the community
of wives and children, let this be our conclusion.
V
Next let us consider what should be our arrangements
about property: should the citizens of the
perfect state have their possessions in common
or not? This question may be discussed separately
from the enactments about women and children.
Even supposing that the women and children
belong to individuals, according to the custom
which is at present universal, may there
not be an advantage in having and using possessions
in common? Three cases are possible: (1)
the soil may be appropriated, but the produce
may be thrown for consumption into the common
stock; and this is the practice of some nations.
Or (2), the soil may be common, and may be
cultivated in common, but the produce divided
among individuals for their private use;
this is a form of common property which is
said to exist among certain barbarians. Or
(3), the soil and the produce may be alike
common. When the husbandmen are not the owners,
the case will be different and easier to
deal with; but when they till the ground
for themselves the question of ownership
will give a world of trouble. If they do
not share equally enjoyments and toils, those
who labor much and get little will necessarily
complain of those who labor little and receive
or consume much. But indeed there is always
a difficulty in men living together and having
all human relations in common, but especially
in their having common property. The partnerships
of fellow-travelers are an example to the
point; for they generally fall out over everyday
matters and quarrel about any trifle which
turns up. So with servants: we are most able
to take offense at those with whom we most
we most frequently come into contact in daily
life. These are only some of the disadvantages
which attend the community of property; the
present arrangement, if improved as it might
be by good customs and laws, would be far
better, and would have the advantages of
both systems. Property should be in a certain
sense common, but, as a general rule, private;
for, when everyone has a distinct interest,
men will not complain of one another, and
they will make more progress, because every
one will be attending to his own business.
And yet by reason of goodness, and in respect
of use, 'Friends,' as the proverb says, 'will
have all things common.' Even now there are
traces of such a principle, showing that
it is not impracticable, but, in well-ordered
states, exists already to a certain extent
and may be carried further. For, although
every man has his own property, some things
he will place at the disposal of his friends,
while of others he shares the use with them.
The Lacedaemonians, for example, use one
another's slaves, and horses, and dogs, as
if they were their own; and when they lack
provisions on a journey, they appropriate
what they find in the fields throughout the
country. It is clearly better that property
should be private, but the use of it common;
and the special business of the legislator
is to create in men this benevolent disposition.
Again, how immeasurably greater is the pleasure,
when a man feels a thing to be his own; for
surely the love of self is a feeling implanted
by nature and not given in vain, although
selfishness is rightly censured; this, however,
is not the mere love of self, but the love
of self in excess, like the miser's love
of money; for all, or almost all, men love
money and other such objects in a measure.
And further, there is the greatest pleasure
in doing a kindness or service to friends
or guests or companions, which can only be
rendered when a man has private property.
These advantages are lost by excessive unification
of the state. The exhibition of two virtues,
besides, is visibly annihilated in such a
state: first, temperance towards women (for
it is an honorable action to abstain from
another's wife for temperance' sake); secondly,
liberality in the matter of property. No
one, when men have all things in common,
will any longer set an example of liberality
or do any liberal action; for liberality
consists in the use which is made of property.
Such legislation may have a specious appearance
of benevolence; men readily listen to it,
and are easily induced to believe that in
some wonderful manner everybody will become
everybody's friend, especially when some
one is heard denouncing the evils now existing
in states, suits about contracts, convictions
for perjury, flatteries of rich men and the
like, which are said to arise out of the
possession of private property. These evils,
however, are due to a very different cause
- the wickedness of human nature. Indeed,
we see that there is much more quarrelling
among those who have all things in common,
though there are not many of them when compared
with the vast numbers who have private property.
Again, we ought to reckon, not only the evils
from which the citizens will be saved, but
also the advantages which they will lose.
The life which they are to lead appears to
be quite impracticable. The error of Socrates
must be attributed to the false notion of
unity from which he starts. Unity there should
be, both of the family and of the state,
but in some respects only. For there is a
point at which a state may attain such a
degree of unity as to be no longer a state,
or at which, without actually ceasing to
exist, it will become an inferior state,
like harmony passing into unison, or rhythm
which has been reduced to a single foot.
The state, as I was saying, is a plurality
which should be united and made into a community
by education; and it is strange that the
author of a system of education which he
thinks will make the state virtuous, should
expect to improve his citizens by regulations
of this sort, and not by philosophy or by
customs and laws, like those which prevail
at Sparta and Crete respecting common meals,
whereby the legislator has made property
common. Let us remember that we should not
disregard the experience of ages; in the
multitude of years these things, if they
were good, would certainly not have been
unknown; for almost everything has been found
out, although sometimes they are not put
together; in other cases men do not use the
knowledge which they have. Great light would
be thrown on this subject if we could see
such a form of government in the actual process
of construction; for the legislator could
not form a state at all without distributing
and dividing its constituents into associations
for common meals, and into phratries and
tribes. But all this legislation ends only
in forbidding agriculture to the guardians,
a prohibition which the Lacedaemonians try
to enforce already. But, indeed, Socrates
has not said, nor is it easy to decide, what
in such a community will be the general form
of the state. The citizens who are not guardians
are the majority, and about them nothing
has been determined: are the husbandmen,
too, to have their property in common? Or
is each individual to have his own? And are
the wives and children to be individual or
common. If, like the guardians, they are
to have all things in common, what do they
differ from them, or what will they gain
by submitting to their government? Or, upon
what principle would they submit, unless
indeed the governing class adopt the ingenious
policy of the Cretans, who give their slaves
the same institutions as their own, but forbid
them gymnastic exercises and the possession
of arms. If, on the other hand, the inferior
classes are to be like other cities in respect
of marriage and property, what will be the
form of the community? Must it not contain
two states in one, each hostile to the other
He makes the guardians into a mere occupying
garrison, while the husbandmen and artisans
and the rest are the real citizens. But if
so the suits and quarrels, and all the evils
which Socrates affirms to exist in other
states, will exist equally among them. He
says indeed that, having so good an education,
the citizens will not need many laws, for
example laws about the city or about the
markets; but then he confines his education
to the guardians. Again, he makes the husbandmen
owners of the property upon condition of
their paying a tribute. But in that case
they are likely to be much more unmanageable
and conceited than the Helots, or Penestae,
or slaves in general. And whether community
of wives and property be necessary for the
lower equally with the higher class or not,
and the questions akin to this, what will
be the education, form of government, laws
of the lower class, Socrates has nowhere
determined: neither is it easy to discover
this, nor is their character of small importance
if the common life of the guardians is to
be maintained. Again, if Socrates makes the
women common, and retains private property,
the men will see to the fields, but who will
see to the house? And who will do so if the
agricultural class have both their property
and their wives in common? Once more: it
is absurd to argue, from the analogy of the
animals, that men and women should follow
the same pursuits, for animals have not to
manage a household. The government, too,
as constituted by Socrates, contains elements
of danger; for he makes the same persons
always rule. And if this is often a cause
of disturbance among the meaner sort, how
much more among high-spirited warriors? But
that the persons whom he makes rulers must
be the same is evident; for the gold which
the God mingles in the souls of men is not
at one time given to one, at another time
to another, but always to the same: as he
says, 'God mingles gold in some, and silver
in others, from their very birth; but brass
and iron in those who are meant to be artisans
and husbandmen.' Again, he deprives the guardians
even of happiness, and says that the legislator
ought to make the whole state happy. But
the whole cannot be happy unless most, or
all, or some of its parts enjoy happiness.
In this respect happiness is not like the
even principle in numbers, which may exist
only in the whole, but in neither of the
parts; not so happiness. And if the guardians
are not happy, who are? Surely not the artisans,
or the common people. The Republic of which
Socrates discourses has all these difficulties,
and others quite as great. VI
The same, or nearly the same, objections
apply to Plato's later work, the Laws, and
therefore we had better examine briefly the
constitution which is therein described.
In the Republic, Socrates has definitely
settled in all a few questions only; such
as the community of women and children, the
community of property, and the constitution
of the state. The population is divided into
two classes - one of husbandmen, and the
other of warriors; from this latter is taken
a third class of counselors and rulers of
the state. But Socrates has not determined
whether the husbandmen and artisans are to
have a share in the government, and whether
they, too, are to carry arms and share in
military service, or not. He certainly thinks
that the women ought to share in the education
of the guardians, and to fight by their side.
The remainder of the work is filled up with
digressions foreign to the main subject,
and with discussions about the education
of the guardians. In the Laws there is hardly
anything but laws; not much is said about
the constitution. This, which he had intended
to make more of the ordinary type, he gradually
brings round to the other or ideal form.
For with the exception of the community of
women and property, he supposes everything
to be the same in both states; there is to
be the same education; the citizens of both
are to live free from servile occupations,
and there are to be common meals in both.
The only difference is that in the Laws,
the common meals are extended to women, and
the warriors number 5000, but in the Republic
only 1000. The discourses of Socrates are
never commonplace; they always exhibit grace
and originality and thought; but perfection
in everything can hardly be expected. We
must not overlook the fact that the number
of 5000 citizens, just now mentioned, will
require a territory as large as Babylon,
or some other huge site, if so many persons
are to be supported in idleness, together
with their women and attendants, who will
be a multitude many times as great. In framing
an ideal we may assume what we wish, but
should avoid impossibilities. It is said
that the legislator ought to have his eye
directed to two points - the people and the
country. But neighboring countries also must
not be forgotten by him, firstly because
the state for which he legislates is to have
a political and not an isolated life. For
a state must have such a military force as
will be serviceable against her neighbors,
and not merely useful at home. Even if the
life of action is not admitted to be the
best, either for individuals or states, still
a city should be formidable to enemies, whether
invading or retreating. There is another
point: Should not the amount of property
be defined in some way which differs from
this by being clearer? For Socrates says
that a man should have so much property as
will enable him to live temperately, which
is only a way of saying 'to live well'; this
is too general a conception. Further, a man
may live temperately and yet miserably. A
better definition would be that a man must
have so much property as will enable him
to live not only temperately but liberally;
if the two are parted, liberally will combine
with luxury; temperance will be associated
with toil. For liberality and temperance
are the only eligible qualities which have
to do with the use of property. A man cannot
use property with mildness or courage, but
temperately and liberally he may; and therefore
the practice of these virtues is inseparable
from property. There is an inconsistency,
too, in too, in equalizing the property and
not regulating the number of the citizens;
the population is to remain unlimited, and
he thinks that it will be sufficiently equalized
by a certain number of marriages being unfruitful,
however many are born to others, because
he finds this to be the case in existing
states. But greater care will be required
than now; for among ourselves, whatever may
be the number of citizens, the property is
always distributed among them, and therefore
no one is in want; but, if the property were
incapable of division as in the Laws, the
supernumeraries, whether few or many, would
get nothing. One would have thought that
it was even more necessary to limit population
than property; and that the limit should
be fixed by calculating the chances of mortality
in the children, and of sterility in married
persons. The neglect of this subject, which
in existing states is so common, is a never-failing
cause of poverty among the citizens; and
poverty is the parent of revolution and crime.
Pheidon the Corinthian, who was one of the
most ardent legislators, thought that the
families and the number of citizens ought
to remain the same, although originally all
the lots may have been of different sizes:
but in the Laws the opposite principle is
maintained. What in our opinion is the right
arrangement will have to be explained hereafter.
There is another omission in the Laws: Socrates
does not tell us how the rulers differ from
their subjects; he only says that they should
be related as the warp and the woof, which
are made out of different wools. He allows
that a man's whole property may be increased
fivefold, but why should not his land also
increase to a certain extent? Again, will
the good management of a household be promoted
by his arrangement of homesteads? For he
assigns to each individual two homesteads
in separate places, and it is difficult to
live in two houses. The whole system of government
tends to be neither democracy nor oligarchy,
but something in a mean between them, which
is usually called a polity, and is composed
of the heavy-armed soldiers. Now, if he intended
to frame a constitution which would suit
the greatest number of states, he was very
likely right, but not if he meant to say
that this constitutional form came nearest
to his first or ideal state; for many would
prefer the Lacedaemonian, or, possibly, some
other more aristocratic government. Some,
indeed, say that the best constitution is
a combination of all existing forms, and
they praise the Lacedaemonian because it
is made up of oligarchy, monarchy, and democracy,
the king forming the monarchy, and the council
of elders the oligarchy while the democratic
element is represented by the Ephors; for
the Ephors are selected from the people.
Others, however, declare the Ephoralty to
be a tyranny, and find the element of democracy
in the common meals and in the habits of
daily life. In the Laws it is maintained
that the best constitution is made up of
democracy and tyranny, which are either not
constitutions at all, or are the worst of
all. But they are nearer the truth who combine
many forms; for the constitution is better
which is made up of more numerous elements.
The constitution proposed in the Laws has
no element of monarchy at all; it is nothing
but oligarchy and democracy, leaning rather
to oligarchy. This is seen in the mode of
appointing magistrates; for although the
appointment of them by lot from among those
who have been already selected combines both
elements, the way in which the rich are compelled
by law to attend the assembly and vote for
magistrates or discharge other political
duties, while the rest may do as they like,
and the endeavor to have the greater number
of the magistrates appointed out of the richer
classes and the highest officers selected
from those who have the greatest incomes,
both these are oligarchical features. The
oligarchical principle prevails also in the
choice of the council, for all are compelled
to choose, but the compulsion extends only
to the choice out of the first class, and
of an equal number out of the second class
and out of the third class, but not in this
latter case to all the voters but to those
of the first three classes; and the selection
of candidates out of the fourth class is
only compulsory on the first and second.
Then, from the persons so chosen, he says
that there ought to be an equal number of
each class selected. Thus a preponderance
will be given to the better sort of people,
who have the larger incomes, because many
of the lower classes, not being compelled
will not vote. These considerations, and
others which will be adduced when the time
comes for examining similar polities, tend
to show that states like Plato's should not
be composed of democracy and monarchy. There
is also a danger in electing the magistrates
out of a body who are themselves elected;
for, if but a small number choose to combine,
the elections will always go as they desire.
Such is the constitution which is described
in the Laws. VII
Other constitutions have been proposed; some
by private persons, others by philosophers
and statesmen, which all come nearer to established
or existing ones than either of Plato's.
No one else has introduced such novelties
as the community of women and children, or
public tables for women: other legislators
begin with what is necessary. In the opinion
of some, the regulation of property is the
chief point of all, that being the question
upon which all revolutions turn. This danger
was recognized by Phaleas of Chalcedon, who
was the first to affirm that the citizens
of a state ought to have equal possessions.
He thought that in a new colony the equalization
might be accomplished without difficulty,
not so easily when a state was already established;
and that then the shortest way of compassing
the desired end would be for the rich to
give and not to receive marriage portions,
and for the poor not to give but to receive
them. Plato in the Laws was of opinion that,
to a certain extent, accumulation should
be allowed, forbidding, as I have already
observed, any citizen to possess more than
five times the minimum qualification But
those who make such laws should remember
what they are apt to forget - that the legislator
who fixes the amount of property should also
fix the number of children; for, if the children
are too many for the property, the law must
be broken. And, besides the violation of
the law, it is a bad thing that many from
being rich should become poor; for men of
ruined fortunes are sure to stir up revolutions.
That the equalization of property exercises
an influence on political society was clearly
understood even by some of the old legislators.
Laws were made by Solon and others prohibiting
an individual from possessing as much land
as he pleased; and there are other laws in
states which forbid the sale of property:
among the Locrians, for example, there is
a law that a man is not to sell his property
unless he can prove unmistakably that some
misfortune has befallen him. Again, there
have been laws which enjoin the preservation
of the original lots. Such a law existed
in the island of Leucas, and the abrogation
of it made the constitution too democratic,
for the rulers no longer had the prescribed
qualification. Again, where there is equality
of property, the amount may be either too
large or too small, and the possessor may
be living either in luxury or penury. Clearly,
then, the legislator ought not only to aim
at the equalization of properties, but at
moderation in their amount. Further, if he
prescribe this moderate amount equally to
all, he will be no nearer the mark; for it
is not the possessions but the desires of
mankind which require to be equalized, and
this is impossible, unless a sufficient education
is provided by the laws. But Phaleas will
probably reply that this is precisely what
he means; and that, in his opinion, there
ought to be in states, not only equal property,
but equal education. Still he should tell
precisely what he means; and that, in his
opinion, there ought to be in be in having
one and the same for all, if it is of a sort
that predisposes men to avarice, or ambition,
or both. Moreover, civil troubles arise,
not only out of the inequality of property,
but out of the inequality of honor, though
in opposite ways. For the common people quarrel
about the inequality of property, the higher
class about the equality of honor; as the
poet says, The bad and good alike in honor
share. There are crimes of which the motive
is want; and for these Phaleas expects to
find a cure in the equalization of property,
which will take away from a man the temptation
to be a highwayman, because he is hungry
or cold. But want is not the sole incentive
to crime; men also wish to enjoy themselves
and not to be in a state of desire - they
wish to cure some desire, going beyond the
necessities of life, which preys upon them;
nay, this is not the only reason - they may
desire superfluities in order to enjoy pleasures
unaccompanied with pain, and therefore they
commit crimes. Now what is the cure of these
three disorders? Of the first, moderate possessions
and occupation; of the second, habits of
temperance; as to the third, if any desire
pleasures which depend on themselves, they
will find the satisfaction of their desires
nowhere but in philosophy; for all other
pleasures we are dependent on others. The
fact is that the greatest crimes are caused
by excess and not by necessity. Men do not
become tyrants in order that they may not
suffer cold; and hence great is the honor
bestowed, not on him who kills a thief, but
on him who kills a tyrant. Thus we see that
the institutions of Phaleas avail only against
petty crimes. There is another objection
to them. They are chiefly designed to promote
the internal welfare of the state. But the
legislator should consider also its relation
to neighboring nations, and to all who are
outside of it. The government must be organized
with a view to military strength; and of
this he has said not a word. And so with
respect to property: there should not only
be enough to supply the internal wants of
the state, but also to meet dangers coming
from without. The property of the state should
not be so large that more powerful neighbors
may be tempted by it, while the owners are
unable to repel the invaders; nor yet so
small that the state is unable to maintain
a war even against states of equal power,
and of the same character. Phaleas has not
laid down any rule; but we should bear in
mind that abundance of wealth is an advantage.
The best limit will probably be, that a more
powerful neighbor must have no inducement
to go to war with you by reason of the excess
of your wealth, but only such as he would
have had if you had possessed less. There
is a story that Eubulus, when Autophradates
was going to besiege Atarneus, told him to
consider how long the operation would take,
and then reckon up the cost which would be
incurred in the time. 'For,' said he, 'I
am willing for a smaller sum than that to
leave Atarneus at once.' These words of Eubulus
made an impression on Autophradates, and
he desisted from the siege. The equalization
of property is one of the things that tend
to prevent the citizens from quarrelling.
Not that the gain in this direction is very
great. For the nobles will be dissatisfied
because they think themselves worthy of more
than an equal share of honors; and this is
often found to be a cause of sedition and
revolution. And the avarice of mankind is
insatiable; at one time two obols was pay
enough; but now, when this sum has become
customary, men always want more and more
without end; for it is of the nature of desire
not to be satisfied, and most men live only
for the gratification of it. The beginning
of reform is not so much to equalize property
as to train the nobler sort of natures not
to desire more, and to prevent the lower
from getting more; that is to say, they must
be kept down, but not ill-treated. Besides,
the equalization proposed by Phaleas is imperfect;
for he only equalizes land, whereas a man
may be rich also in slaves, and cattle, and
money, and in the abundance of what are called
his movables. Now either all these things
must be equalized, or some limit must be
imposed on them, or they must an be let alone.
It would appear that Phaleas is legislating
for a small city only, if, as he supposes,
all the artisans are to be public slaves
and not to form a supplementary part of the
body of citizens. But if there is a law that
artisans are to be public slaves, it should
only apply to those engaged on public works,
as at Epidamnus, or at Athens on the plan
which Diophantus once introduced. From these
observations any one may judge how far Phaleas
was wrong or right in his ideas. VIII
Hippodamus, the son of Euryphon, a native
of Miletus, the same who invented the art
of planning cities, and who also laid out
the Piraeus - a strange man, whose fondness
for distinction led him into a general eccentricity
of life, which made some think him affected
(for he would wear flowing hair and expensive
ornaments; but these were worn on a cheap
but warm garment both in winter and summer);
he, besides aspiring to be an adept in the
knowledge of nature, was the first person
not a statesman who made inquiries about
the best form of government. The city of
Hippodamus was composed of 10,000 citizens
divided into three parts - one of artisans,
one of husbandmen, and a third of armed defenders
of the state. He also divided the land into
three parts, one sacred, one public, the
third private: the first was set apart to
maintain the customary worship of the Gods,
the second was to support the warriors, the
third was the property of the husbandmen.
He also divided laws into three classes,
and no more, for he maintained that there
are three subjects of lawsuits - insult,
injury, and homicide. He likewise instituted
a single final court of appeal, to which
all causes seeming to have been improperly
decided might be referred; this court he
formed of elders chosen for the purpose.
He was further of opinion that the decisions
of the courts ought not to be given by the
use of a voting pebble, but that every one
should have a tablet on which he might not
only write a simple condemnation, or leave
the tablet blank for a simple acquittal;
but, if he partly acquitted and partly condemned,
he was to distinguish accordingly. To the
existing law he objected that it obliged
the judges to be guilty of perjury, whichever
way they voted. He also enacted that those
who discovered anything for the good of the
state should be honored; and he provided
that the children of citizens who died in
battle should be maintained at the public
expense, as if such an enactment had never
been heard of before, yet it actually exists
at Athens and in other places. As to the
magistrates, he would have them all elected
by the people, that is, by the three classes
already mentioned, and those who were elected
were to watch over the interests of the public,
of strangers, and of orphans. These are the
most striking points in the constitution
of Hippodamus. There is not much else. The
first of these proposals to which objection
may be taken is the threefold division of
the citizens. The artisans, and the husbandmen,
and the warriors, all have a share in the
government. But the husbandmen have no arms,
and the artisans neither arms nor land, and
therefore they become all but slaves of the
warrior class. That they should share in
all the offices is an impossibility; for
generals and guardians of the citizens, and
nearly all the principal magistrates, must
be taken from the class of those who carry
arms. Yet, if the two other classes have
no share in the government, how can they
be loyal citizens? It may be said that those
who have arms must necessarily be masters
of both the other classes, but this is not
so easily accomplished unless they are numerous;
and if they are, why should the other classes
share in the government at all, or have power
to appoint magistrates? Further, what use
are farmers to the city? Artisans there must
be, for these are wanted in every city, and
they can live by their craft, as elsewhere;
and the husbandmen too, if they really provided
the warriors with food, might fairly have
a share in the government. But in the republic
of Hippodamus they are supposed to have land
of their own, which they cultivate for their
private benefit. Again, as to this common
land out of which the soldiers are maintained,
if they are themselves to be the cultivators
of it, the warrior class will be identical
with the husbandmen, although the legislator
intended to make a distinction between them.
If, again, there are to be other cultivators
distinct both from the husbandmen, who have
land of their own, and from the warriors,
they will make a fourth class, which has
no place in the state and no share in anything.
Or, if the same persons are to cultivate
their own lands, and those of the public
as well, they will have difficulty in supplying
the quantity of produce which will maintain
two households: and why, in this case, should
there be any division, for they might find
food themselves and give to the warriors
from the same land and the same lots? There
is surely a great confusion in all this.
Neither is the law to commended which says
that the judges, when a simple issue is laid
before them, should distinguish in their
judgement; for the judge is thus converted
into an arbitrator. Now, in an arbitration,
although the arbitrators are many, they confer
with one another about the decision, and
therefore they can distinguish; but in courts
of law this is impossible, and, indeed, most
legislators take pains to prevent the judges
from holding any communication with one another.
Again, will there not be confusion if the
judge thinks that damages should be given,
but not so much as the suitor demands? He
asks, say, for twenty minae, and the judge
allows him ten minae (or in general the suitor
asks for more and the judge allows less),
while another judge allows five, another
four minae. In this way they will go on splitting
up the damages, and some will grant the whole
and others nothing: how is the final reckoning
to be taken? Again, no one contends that
he who votes for a simple acquittal or condemnation
perjures himself, if the indictment has been
laid in an unqualified form; and this is
just, for the judge who acquits does not
decide that the defendant owes nothing, but
that he does not owe the twenty minae. He
only is guilty of perjury who thinks that
the defendant ought not to pay twenty minae,
and yet condemns him. To honor those who
discover anything which is useful to the
state is a proposal which has a specious
sound, but cannot safely be enacted by law,
for it may encourage informers, and perhaps
even lead to political commotions. This question
involves another. It has been doubted whether
it is or is not expedient to make any changes
in the laws of a country, even if another
law be better. Now, if an changes are inexpedient,
we can hardly assent to the proposal of Hippodamus;
for, under pretense of doing a public service,
a man may introduce measures which are really
destructive to the laws or to the constitution.
But, since we have touched upon this subject,
perhaps we had better go a little into detail,
for, as I was saying, there is a difference
of opinion, and it may sometimes seem desirable
to make changes. Such changes in the other
arts and sciences have certainly been beneficial;
medicine, for example, and gymnastic, and
every other art and craft have departed from
traditional usage. And, if politics be an
art, change must be necessary in this as
in any other art. That improvement has occurred
is shown by the fact that old customs are
exceedingly simple and barbarous. For the
ancient Hellenes went about armed and bought
their brides of each other. The remains of
ancient laws which have come down to us are
quite absurd; for example, at Cumae there
is a law about murder, to the effect that
if the accuser produce a certain number of
witnesses from among his own kinsmen, the
accused shall be held guilty. Again, men
in general desire the good, and not merely
what their fathers had. But the primeval
inhabitants, whether they were born of the
earth or were the survivors of some destruction,
may be supposed to have been no better than
ordinary or even foolish people among ourselves
(such is certainly the tradition concerning
the earth-born men); and it would be ridiculous
to rest contented with their notions. Even
when laws have been written down, they ought
not always to remain unaltered. As in other
sciences, so in politics, it is impossible
that all things should be precisely set down
in writing; for enactments must be universal,
but actions are concerned with particulars.
Hence we infer that sometimes and in certain
cases laws may be changed; but when we look
at the matter from another point of view,
great caution would seem to be required.
For the habit of lightly changing the laws
is an evil, and, when the advantage is small,
some errors both of lawgivers and rulers
had better be left; the citizen will not
gain so much by making the change as he will
lose by the habit of disobedience. The analogy
of the arts is false; a change in a law is
a very different thing from a change in an
art. For the law has no power to command
obedience except that of habit, which can
only be given by time, so that a readiness
to change from old to new laws enfeebles
the power of the law. Even if we admit that
the laws are to be changed, are they all
to be changed, and in every state? And are
they to be changed by anybody who likes,
or only by certain persons? These are very
important questions; and therefore we had
better reserve the discussion of them to
a more suitable occasion. IX
In the governments of Lacedaemon and Crete,
and indeed in all governments, two points
have to be considered: first, whether any
particular law is good or bad, when compared
with the perfect state; secondly, whether
it is or is not consistent with the idea
and character which the lawgiver has set
before his citizens. That in a well-ordered
state the citizens should have leisure and
not have to provide for their daily wants
is generally acknowledged, but there is a
difficulty in seeing how this leisure is
to be attained. The Thessalian Penestae have
often risen against their masters, and the
Helots in like manner against the Lacedaemonians,
for whose misfortunes they are always lying
in wait. Nothing, however, of this kind has
as yet happened to the Cretans; the reason
probably is that the neighboring cities,
even when at war with one another, never
form an alliance with rebellious serfs, rebellions
not being for their interest, since they
themselves have a dependent population. Whereas
all the neighbors of the Lacedaemonians,
whether Argives, Messenians, or Arcadians,
were their enemies. In Thessaly, again, the
original revolt of the slaves occurred because
the Thessalians were still at war with the
neighboring Achaeans, Perrhaebians, and Magnesians.
Besides, if there were no other difficulty,
the treatment or management of slaves is
a troublesome affair; for, if not kept in
hand, they are insolent, and think that they
are as good as their masters, and, if harshly
treated, they hate and conspire against them.
Now it is clear that when these are the results
the citizens of a state have not found out
the secret of managing their subject population.
Again, the license of the Lacedaemonian women
defeats the intention of the Spartan constitution,
and is adverse to the happiness of the state.
For, a husband and wife being each a part
of every family, the state may be considered
as about equally divided into men and women;
and, therefore, in those states in which
the condition of the women is bad, half the
city may be regarded as having no laws. And
this is what has actually happened at Sparta;
the legislator wanted to make the whole state
hardy and temperate, and he has carried out
his intention in the case of the men, but
he has neglected the women, who live in every
sort of intemperance and luxury. The consequence
is that in such a state wealth is too highly
valued, especially if the citizen fall under
the dominion of their wives, after the manner
of most warlike races, except the Celts and
a few others who openly approve of male loves.
The old mythologer would seem to have been
right in uniting Ares and Aphrodite, for
all warlike races are prone to the love either
of men or of women. This was exemplified
among the Spartans in the days of their greatness;
many things were managed by their women.
But what difference does it make whether
women rule, or the rulers are ruled by women?
The result is the same. Even in regard to
courage, which is of no use in daily life,
and is needed only in war, the influence
of the Lacedaemonian women has been most
mischievous. The evil showed itself in the
Theban invasion, when, unlike the women other
cities, they were utterly useless and caused
more confusion than the enemy. This license
of the Lacedaemonian women existed from the
earliest times, and was only what might be
expected. For, during the wars of the Lacedaemonians,
first against the Argives, and afterwards
against the Arcadians and Messenians, the
men were long away from home, and, on the
return of peace, they gave themselves into
the legislator's hand, already prepared by
the discipline of a soldier's life (in which
there are many elements of virtue), to receive
his enactments. But, when Lycurgus, as tradition
says, wanted to bring the women under his
laws, they resisted, and he gave up the attempt.
These then are the causes of what then happened,
and this defect in the constitution is clearly
to be attributed to them. We are not, however,
considering what is or is not to be excused,
but what is right or wrong, and the disorder
of the women, as I have already said, not
only gives an air of indecorum to the constitution
considered in itself, but tends in a measure
to foster avarice. The mention of avarice
naturally suggests a criticism on the inequality
of property. While some of the Spartan citizen
have quite small properties, others have
very large ones; hence the land has passed
into the hands of a few. And this is due
also to faulty laws; for, although the legislator
rightly holds up to shame the sale or purchase
of an inheritance, he allows anybody who
likes to give or bequeath it. Yet both practices
lead to the same result. And nearly two-fifths
of the whole country are held by women; this
is owing to the number of heiresses and to
the large dowries which are customary. It
would surely have been better to have given
no dowries at all, or, if any, but small
or moderate ones. As the law now stands,
a man may bestow his heiress on any one whom
he pleases, and, if he die intestate, the
privilege of giving her away descends to
his heir. Hence, although the country is
able to maintain 1500 cavalry and 30,000
hoplites, the whole number of Spartan citizens
fell below 1000. The result proves the faulty
nature of their laws respecting property;
for the city sank under a single defeat;
the want of men was their ruin. There is
a tradition that, in the days of their ancient
kings, they were in the habit of giving the
rights of citizenship to strangers, and therefore,
in spite of their long wars, no lack of population
was experienced by them; indeed, at one time
Sparta is said to have numbered not less
than 10,000 citizens Whether this statement
is true or not, it would certainly have been
better to have maintained their numbers by
the equalization of property. Again, the
law which relates to the procreation of children
is adverse to the correction of this inequality.
For the legislator, wanting to have as many
Spartans as he could, encouraged the citizens
to have large families; and there is a law
at Sparta that the father of three sons shall
be exempt from military service, and he who
has four from all the burdens of the state.
Yet it is obvious that, if there were many
children, the land being distributed as it
is, many of them must necessarily fall into
poverty. The Lacedaemonian constitution is
defective in another point; I mean the Ephoralty.
This magistracy has authority in the highest
matters, but the Ephors are chosen from the
whole people, and so the office is apt to
fall into the hands of very poor men, who,
being badly off, are open to bribes. There
have been many examples at Sparta of this
evil in former times; and quite recently,
in the matter of the Andrians, certain of
the Ephors who were bribed did their best
to ruin the state. And so great and tyrannical
is their power, that even the kings have
been compelled to court them, so that, in
this way as well together with the royal
office, the whole constitution has deteriorated,
and from being an aristocracy has turned
into a democracy. The Ephoralty certainly
does keep the state together; for the people
are contented when they have a share in the
highest office, and the result, whether due
to the legislator or to chance, has been
advantageous. For if a constitution is to
be permanent, all the parts of the state
must wish that it should exist and the same
arrangements be maintained. This is the case
at Sparta, where the kings desire its permanence
because they have due honor in their own
persons; the nobles because they are represented
in the council of elders
(for the office of elder is a reward of virtue);
and the people, because all are eligible
to the Ephoralty. The election of Ephors
out of the whole people is perfectly right,
but ought not to be carried on in the present
fashion, which is too childish. Again, they
have the decision of great causes, although
they are quite ordinary men, and therefore
they should not determine them merely on
their own judgment, but according to written
rules, and to the laws. Their way of life,
too, is not in accordance with the spirit
of the constitution - they have a deal too
much license; whereas, in the case of the
other citizens, the excess of strictness
is so intolerable that they run away from
the law into the secret indulgence of sensual
pleasures. Again, the council of elders is
not free from defects. It may be said that
the elders are good men and well trained
in manly virtue; and that, therefore, there
is an advantage to the state in having them.
But that judges of important causes should
hold office for life is a disputable thing,
for the mind grows old as well as the body.
And when men have been educated in such a
manner that even the legislator himself cannot
trust them, there is real danger. Many of
the elders are well known to have taken bribes
and to have been guilty of partiality in
public affairs. And therefore they ought
not to be irresponsible; yet at Sparta they
are so. But (it may be replied), 'All magistracies
are accountable to the Ephors.' Yes, but
this prerogative is too great for them, and
we maintain that the control should be exercised
in some other manner. Further, the mode in
which the Spartans elect their elders is
childish; and it is improper that the person
to be elected should canvass for the office;
the worthiest should be appointed, whether
he chooses or not. And here the legislator
clearly indicates the same intention which
appears in other parts of his constitution;
he would have his citizens ambitious, and
he has reckoned upon this quality in the
election of the elders; for no one would
ask to be elected if he were not. Yet ambition
and avarice, almost more than any other passions,
are the motives of crime. Whether kings are
or are not an advantage to states, I will
consider at another time; they should at
any rate be chosen, not as they are now,
but with regard to their personal life and
conduct. The legislator himself obviously
did not suppose that he could make them really
good men; at least he shows a great distrust
of their virtue. For this reason the Spartans
used to join enemies with them in the same
embassy, and the quarrels between the kings
were held to be conservative of the state.
Neither did the first introducer of the common
meals, called 'phiditia,' regulate them well.
The entertainment ought to have been provided
at the public cost, as in Crete; but among
the Lacedaemonians every one is expected
to contribute, and some of them are too poor
to afford the expense; thus the intention
of the legislator is frustrated. The common
meals were meant to be a popular institution,
but the existing manner of regulating them
is the reverse of popular. For the very poor
can scarcely take part in them; and, according
to ancient custom, those who cannot contribute
are not allowed to retain their rights of
citizenship. The law about the Spartan admirals
has often been censured, and with justice;
it is a source of dissension, for the kings
are perpetual generals, and this office of
admiral is but the setting up of another
king. The charge which Plato brings, in the
Laws, against the intention of the legislator,
is likewise justified; the whole constitution
has regard to one part of virtue only - the
virtue of the soldier, which gives victory
in war. So long as they were at war, therefore,
their power was preserved, but when they
had attained empire they fell for of the
arts of peace they knew nothing, and had
never engaged in any employment higher than
war. There is another error, equally great,
into which they have fallen. Although they
truly think that the goods for which men
contend are to be acquired by virtue rather
than by vice, they err in supposing that
these goods are to be preferred to the virtue
which gains them. Once more: the revenues
of the state are ill-managed; there is no
money in the treasury, although they are
obliged to carry on great wars, and they
are unwilling to pay taxes. The greater part
of the land being in the hands of the Spartans,
they do not look closely into one another's
contributions. The result which the legislator
has produced is the reverse of beneficial;
for he has made his city poor, and his citizens
greedy. Enough respecting the Spartan constitution,
of which these are the principal defects.
X
The Cretan constitution nearly resembles
the Spartan, and in some few points is quite
as good; but for the most part less perfect
in form. The older constitutions are generally
less elaborate than the later, and the Lacedaemonian
is said to be, and probably is, in a very
great measure, a copy of the Cretan. According
to tradition, Lycurgus, when he ceased to
be the guardian of King Charillus, went abroad
and spent most of his time in Crete. For
the two countries are nearly connected; the
Lyctians are a colony of the Lacedaemonians,
and the colonists, when they came to Crete,
adopted the constitution which they found
existing among the inhabitants. Even to this
day the Perioeci, or subject population of
Crete, are governed by the original laws
which Minos is supposed to have enacted.
The island seems to be intended by nature
for dominion in Hellas, and to be well situated;
it extends right across the sea, around which
nearly all the Hellenes are settled; and
while one end is not far from the Peloponnese,
the other almost reaches to the region of
Asia about Triopium and Rhodes. Hence Minos
acquired the empire of the sea, subduing
some of the islands and colonizing others;
at last he invaded Sicily, where he died
near Camicus. The Cretan institutions resemble
the Lacedaemonian. The Helots are the husbandmen
of the one, the Perioeci of the other, and
both Cretans and Lacedaemonians have common
meals, which were anciently called by the
Lacedaemonians not 'phiditia' but 'andria';
and the Cretans have the same word, the use
of which proves that the common meals originally
came from Crete. Further, the two constitutions
are similar; for the office of the Ephors
is the same as that of the Cretan Cosmi,
the only difference being that whereas the
Ephors are five, the Cosmi are ten in number.
The elders, too, answer to the elders in
Crete, who are termed by the Cretans the
council. And the kingly office once existed
in Crete, but was abolished, and the Cosmi
have now the duty of leading them in war.
All classes share in the ecclesia, but it
can only ratify the decrees of the elders
and the Cosmi. The common meals of Crete
are certainly better managed than the Lacedaemonian;
for in Lacedaemon every one pays so much
per head, or, if he fails, the law, as I
have already explained, forbids him to exercise
the rights of citizenship. But in Crete they
are of a more popular character. There, of
all the fruits of the earth and cattle raised
on the public lands, and of the tribute which
is paid by the Perioeci, one portion is assigned
to the Gods and to the service of the state,
and another to the common meals, so that
men, women, and children are all supported
out of a common stock. The legislator has
many ingenious ways of securing moderation
in eating, which he conceives to be a gain;
he likewise encourages the separation of
men from women, lest they should have too
many children, and the companionship of men
with one another - whether this is a good
or bad thing I shall have an opportunity
of considering at another time. But that
the Cretan common meals are better ordered
than the Lacedaemonian there can be no doubt.
On the other hand, the Cosmi are even a worse
institution than the Ephors, of which they
have all the evils without the good. Like
the Ephors, they are any chance persons,
but in Crete this is not counterbalanced
by a corresponding political advantage. At
Sparta every one is eligible, and the body
of the people, having a share in the highest
office, want the constitution to be permanent.
But in Crete the Cosmi are elected out of
certain families, and not out of the whole
people, and the elders out of those who have
been Cosmi. The same criticism may be made
about the Cretan, which has been already
made about the Lacedaemonian elders. Their
irresponsibility and life tenure is too great
a privilege, and their arbitrary power of
acting upon their own judgment, and dispensing
with written law, is dangerous. It is no
proof of the goodness of the institution
that the people are not discontented at being
excluded from it. For there is no profit
to be made out of the office as out of the
Ephoralty, since, unlike the Ephors, the
Cosmi, being in an island, are removed from
temptation. The remedy by which they correct
the evil of this institution is an extraordinary
one, suited rather to a close oligarchy than
to a constitutional state. For the Cosmi
are often expelled by a conspiracy of their
own colleagues, or of private individuals;
and they are allowed also to resign before
their term of office has expired. Surely
all matters of this kind are better regulated
by law than by the will of man, which is
a very unsafe rule. Worst of all is the suspension
of the office of Cosmi, a device to which
the nobles often have recourse when they
will not submit to justice. This shows that
the Cretan government, although possessing
some of the characteristics of a constitutional
state, is really a close oligarchy. The nobles
have a habit, too, of setting up a chief;
they get together a party among the common
people and their own friends and then quarrel
and fight with one another. What is this
but the temporary destruction of the state
and dissolution of society? A city is in
a dangerous condition when those who are
willing are also able to attack her. But,
as I have already said, the island of Crete
is saved by her situation; distance has the
same effect as the Lacedaemonian prohibition
of strangers; and the Cretans have no foreign
dominions. This is the reason why the Perioeci
are contented in Crete, whereas the Helots
are perpetually revolting. But when lately
foreign invaders found their way into the
island, the weakness of the Cretan constitution
was revealed. Enough of the government of
Crete. XI
The Carthaginians are also considered to
have an excellent form of government, which
differs from that of any other state in several
respects, though it is in some very like
the Lacedaemonian. Indeed, all three states
- the Lacedaemonian, the Cretan, and the
Carthaginian - nearly resemble one another,
and are very different from any others. Many
of the Carthaginian institutions are excellent
The superiority of their constitution is
proved by the fact that the common people
remain loyal to the constitution the Carthaginians
have never had any rebellion worth speaking
of, and have never been under the rule of
a tyrant. Among the points in which the Carthaginian
constitution resembles the Lacedaemonian
are the following: The common tables of the
clubs answer to the Spartan phiditia, and
their magistracy of the 104 to the Ephors;
but, whereas the Ephors are any chance persons,
the magistrates of the Carthaginians are
elected according to merit - this is an improvement.
They have also their kings and their gerusia,
or council of elders, who correspond to the
kings and elders of Sparta. Their kings,
unlike the Spartan, are not always of the
same family, nor that an ordinary one, but
if there is some distinguished family they
are selected out of it and not appointed
by senority - this is far better. Such officers
have great power, and therefore, if they
are persons of little worth, do a great deal
of harm, and they have already done harm
at Lacedaemon. Most of the defects or deviations
from the perfect state, for which the Carthaginian
constitution would be censured, apply equally
to all the forms of government which we have
mentioned. But of the deflections from aristocracy
and constitutional government, some incline
more to democracy and some to oligarchy.
The kings and elders, if unanimous, may determine
whether they will or will not bring a matter
before the people, but when they are not
unanimous, the people decide on such matters
as well. And whatever the kings and elders
bring before the people is not only heard
but also determined by them, and any one
who likes may oppose it; now this is not
permitted in Sparta and Crete. That the magistrates
of five who have under them many important
matters should be co-opted, that they should
choose the supreme council of 100, and should
hold office longer than other magistrates
(for they are virtually rulers both before
and after they hold office)- these are oligarchical
features; their being without salary and
not elected by lot, and any similar points,
such as the practice of having all suits
tried by the magistrates, and not some by
one class of judges or jurors and some by
another, as at Lacedaemon, are characteristic
of aristocracy. The Carthaginian constitution
deviates from aristocracy and inclines to
oligarchy, chiefly on a point where popular
opinion is on their side. For men in general
think that magistrates should be chosen not
only for their merit, but for their wealth:
a man, they say, who is poor cannot rule
well - he has not the leisure. If, then,
election of magistrates for their wealth
be characteristic of oligarchy, and election
for merit of aristocracy, there will be a
third form under which the constitution of
Carthage is comprehended; for the Carthaginians
choose their magistrates, and particularly
the highest of them - their kings and generals
- with an eye both to merit and to wealth.
But we must acknowledge that, in thus deviating
from aristocracy, the legislator has committed
an error. Nothing is more absolutely necessary
than to provide that the highest class, not
only when in office, but when out of office,
should have leisure and not disgrace themselves
in any way; and to this his attention should
be first directed. Even if you must have
regard to wealth, in order to secure leisure,
yet it is surely a bad thing that the greatest
offices, such as those of kings and generals,
should be bought. The law which allows this
abuse makes wealth of more account than virtue,
and the whole state becomes avaricious. For,
whenever the chiefs of the state deem anything
honorable, the other citizens are sure to
follow their example; and, where virtue has
not the first place, their aristocracy cannot
be firmly established. Those who have been
at the expense of purchasing their places
will be in the habit of repaying themselves;
and it is absurd to suppose that a poor and
honest man will be wanting to make gains,
and that a lower stamp of man who has incurred
a great expense will not. Wherefore they
should rule who are able to rule best. And
even if the legislator does not care to protect
the good from poverty, he should at any rate
secure leisure for them when in office. It
would seem also to be a bad principle that
the same person should hold many offices,
which is a favorite practice among the Carthaginians,
for one business is better done by one man.
The legislator should see to this and should
not appoint the same person to be a flute-player
and a shoemaker. Hence, where the state is
large, it is more in accordance both with
constitutional and with democratic principles
that the offices of state should be distributed
among many persons. For, as I said, this
arrangement is fairer to all, and any action
familiarized by repetition is better and
sooner performed. We have a proof in military
and naval matters; the duties of command
and of obedience in both these services extend
to all. The government of the Carthaginians
is oligarchical, but they successfully escape
the evils of oligarchy by enriching one portion
of the people after another by sending them
to their colonies. This is their panacea
and the means by which they give stability
to the state. Accident favors them, but the
legislator should be able to provide against
revolution without trusting to accidents.
As things are, if any misfortune occurred,
and the bulk of the subjects revolted, there
would be no way of restoring peace by legal
methods. Such is the character of the Lacedaemonian,
Cretan, and Carthaginian constitutions, which
are justly celebrated. XII
Of those who have treated of governments,
some have never taken any part at all in
public affairs, but have passed their lives
in a private station; about most of them,
what was worth telling has been already told.
Others have been lawgivers, either in their
own or in foreign cities, whose affairs they
have administered; and of these some have
only made laws, others have framed constitutions;
for example, Lycurgus and Solon did both.
Of the Lacedaemonian constitution I have
already spoken. As to Solon, he is thought
by some to have been a good legislator, who
put an end to the exclusiveness of the oligarchy,
emancipated the people, established the ancient
Athenian democracy, and harmonized the different
elements of the state. According to their
view, the council of Areopagus was an oligarchical
element, the elected magistracy, aristocratical,
and the courts of law, democratical. The
truth seems to be that the council and the
elected magistracy existed before the time
of Solon, and were retained by him, but that
he formed the courts of law out of an the
citizens, thus creating the democracy, which
is the very reason why he is sometimes blamed.
For in giving the supreme power to the law
courts, which are elected by lot, he is thought
to have destroyed the non- democratic element.
When the law courts grew powerful, to please
the people who were now playing the tyrant
the old constitution was changed into the
existing democracy. Ephialtes and Pericles
curtailed the power of the Areopagus; Pericles
also instituted the payment of the juries,
and thus every demagogue in turn increased
the power of the democracy until it became
what we now see. All this is true; it seems,
however, to be the result of circumstances,
and not to have been intended by Solon. For
the people, having been instrumental in gaining
the empire of the sea in the Persian War,
began to get a notion of itself, and followed
worthless demagogues, whom the better class
opposed. Solon, himself, appears to have
given the Athenians only that power of electing
to offices and calling to account the magistrates
which was absolutely necessary; for without
it they would have been in a state of slavery
and enmity to the government. All the magistrates
he appointed from the notables and the men
of wealth, that is to say, from the pentacosio-medimni,
or from the class called zeugitae, or from
a third class of so-called knights or cavalry.
The fourth class were laborers who had no
share in any magistracy. Mere legislators
were Zaleucus, who gave laws to the Epizephyrian
Locrians, and Charondas, who legislated for
his own city of Catana, and for the other
Chalcidian cities in Italy and Sicily. Some
people attempt to make out that Onomacritus
was the first person who had any special
skill in legislation, and that he, although
a Locrian by birth, was trained in Crete,
where he lived in the exercise of his prophetic
art; that Thales was his companion, and that
Lycurgus and Zaleucus were disciples of Thales,
as Charondas was of Zaleucus. But their account
is quite inconsistent with chronology. There
was also Philolaus, the Corinthian, who gave
laws to the Thebans. This Philolaus was one
of the family of the Bacchiadae, and a lover
of Diocles, the Olympic victor, who left
Corinth in horror of the incestuous passion
which his mother Halcyone had conceived for
him, and retired to Thebes, where the two
friends together ended their days. The inhabitants
still point out their tombs, which are in
full view of one another, but one is visible
from the Corinthian territory, the other
not. Tradition says the two friends arranged
them thus, Diocles out of horror at his misfortunes,
so that the land of Corinth might not be
visible from his tomb; Philolaus that it
might. This is the reason why they settled
at Thebes, and so Philolaus legislated for
the Thebans, and, besides some other enactments,
gave them laws about the procreation of children,
which they call the 'Laws of Adoption.' These
laws were peculiar to him, and were intended
to preserve the number of the lots. In the
legislation of Charondas there is nothing
remarkable, except the suits against false
witnesses. He is the first who instituted
denunciation for perjury. His laws are more
exact and more precisely expressed than even
those of our modern legislators.
(Characteristic of Phaleas is the equalization
of property; of Plato, the community of women,
children, and property, the common meals
of women, and the law about drinking, that
the sober shall be masters of the feast;
also the training of soldiers to acquire
by practice equal skill with both hands,
so that one should be as useful as the other.)
Draco has left laws, but he adapted them
to a constitution which already existed,
and there is no peculiarity in them which
is worth mentioning, except the greatness
and severity of the punishments. Pittacus,
too, was only a lawgiver, and not the author
of a constitution; he has a law which is
peculiar to him, that, if a drunken man do
something wrong, he shall be more heavily
punished than if he were sober; he looked
not to the excuse which might be offered
for the drunkard, but only to expediency,
for drunken more often than sober people
commit acts of violence. Androdamas of Rhegium
gave laws to the Chalcidians of Thrace. Some
of them relate to homicide, and to heiresses;
but there is nothing remarkable in them.
And here let us conclude our inquiry into
the various constitutions which either actually
exist, or have been devised by theorists.
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