[
1261a]
[1]
But is it better for a city that
is to be well ordered to have community in everything which can possibly be made
common property, or is it better to have some things in common and others not?
For example, it is possible for the citizens to have children, wives and
possessions in common with each other, as in Plato's
Republic, in
which Socrates says that there must be
community of children, women and possessions. Well then, which is preferable,
the system that now obtains, or one conforming with the regulation described in
the
Republic1?
Now for all the citizens to have their wives in common involves a variety of
difficulties; in particular,
2 (1) the object which
Socrates advances as the reason why this
enactment should be made clearly does not follow from his arguments; also
(2) as a means to the end which he asserts should be the
fundamental object of the city, the scheme as actually set forth in the dialogue
is not practicable; yet (3) how it is to be further worked out
has been nowhere definitely stated. I refer to the ideal of the fullest possible
unity of the entire state, which
Socrates takes as his fundamental principle.
Yet it is clear that
if the process of unification advances beyond a certain point, the city will not
be a city at all for a state essentially consists of a multitude of persons, and
if its unification is carried beyond a certain point, city will be reduced to
family and family to individual,
[20]
for
we should pronounce the family to be a more complete unity than the city, and
the single person than the family; so that even if any lawgiver were able to
unify the state, he must not do so, for he will destroy it in the process. And
not only does a city consist of a multitude of human beings, it consists of
human beings differing in kind. A collection of persons all alike does not
constitute a state. For a city is not the same thing as a league; a league is of
value by its quantity, even though it is art the same in kind (since
the essential object of the league is military strength), just as a
weight would be worth more if it weighed more, whereas
3 components which are to make up a
unity must differ in kind (and it is by this characteristic that a city will also surpass a
tribe of which the population is not scattered among villages but organized like
the Arcadians). Hence reciprocal equality
4 is the preservative of states, as has been said
before in the
Ethics. For even among the free and equal this
principle must necessarily obtain, since all cannot govern at once: they must
hold office for a year at a time or by some other arrangement or period; and in
this manner it does actually come about that all govern, just as all shoemakers
would be also carpenters if the shoemakers and the carpenters kept on changing
trades instead of the same persons being shoemakers and carpenters always.
But since such permanence of
function is better for the political community also, it is clear that it is
better for the same persons to govern always, if possible; and among peoples
where it is impossible because all the citizens are equal in their nature,