Ledifni said:
FreezBee, I'm still entirely confused by your pattern of posting here. I can answer each of your objections in detail but I'm afraid we're getting nowhere, because I have no clue what you're getting at. It feels as if you're just looking for things to object to, and this is escalating so fast that I'm about to get swamped just from trying to address every little tiny detail you can find to object to. Can you please edit your post and include some statement of what you're getting at, so I know from what angle to address your post? Thanks.
Ok, I admit that I like to contradict people just to find out what they really mean, even if they mean anything at all!
I did take a peek in Plato's
Republic this morning - I assume that you have read it yourself. Do you remember the discussion between Thrasymachos and Socrates?
Thrasymachos claims that righteousness is to benefit the strongest, and his argument runs something like this: righteousness is to obey the laws (translate that to: "rules"), the laws are made by the leaders, and the leaders are the strongest, and the strongest benefit themselves.
Now, Socrates compares the leaders to a physician. What is the role of a physician? To keep his patients healthy, that is, as a
physician, he works to the
benefit of the patient, not to pursuit his own happiness. The "patient" of the leaders of society
is the society, so the leaders are supposed to keep society healthy.
Now, let's return to our discussion. You claim that in the city decribed in the
Republic the inhabitants are not allowed to benefit themselves, they have to benefit the city. Have I understood you correctly here? Assuming I have, I ask:
who is the city. What I mean is: you cannot bebefit the city without benefitting the inhabitants of that city - remove the inhabitants, will you then have a benefitted city left? You have already answered that question with a "no", so what I am confused about is, what do you mean by a city/society being benefitted without its members/inhabitants being benefitted?
As for rules, the problem is, that not everybody recognizes the same rules, there are no common rules - rules are always somebody's rules. Even with laws, there may be different interpretations of laws. Also, some people are more eager to drag others to court than others, some people take easier offense than others, and so on. Mere rules do not change a mob into a society, it only gives some rules for who has the right to mob who.
You seem to believe that the rules should protect the weak against the strong, but who defines, who is week? You cannot talk about humans outside a society - humans are assighed their properties (in any meaning of that word) by the society. Have you ever tried to change society? Even moving within sub-societies of a society can change a lot. One place you may be a competent, well-functioning member, but across the street you won't stand a chance.
Now, is this better?
cheers
- FreezBee