Let us first determine what are the
proper limits of an oligarchy and a democracy, and
what is just in each of these states; for all men
have some natural inclination to justice; but they
proceed therein only to a certain degree; nor can
they universally point out what is absolutely just;
as, for instance, what is equal appears just, and is
so; but not to all; only among those who are equals:
and what is unequal appears just, and is so; but not
to all, only amongst those who are unequals; which
circumstance some people neglect, and therefore judge
ill; the reason for which is, they judge for themselves,
and every one almost is the worst judge in his own
cause. Since then justice has reference to persons,
the same distinctions must be made with respect to
persons which are made with respect to things, in
the manner that I have already described in my Ethics.
As to the equality of the things,
these they agree in; but their dispute is concerning
the equality of the persons, and chiefly for the reason
above assigned; because they judge ill in their own
cause; and also because each party thinks, that if
they admit what is right in some particulars, they
have done justice on the whole: thus, for instance,
if some persons are unequal in riches, they suppose
them unequal in the whole; or, on the contrary, if
they are equal in liberty, they suppose them equal
in the whole: but what is absolutely just they
omit; for if civil society was founded for the sake
of preserving and increasing property, every one’s
right in the city would be equal to his fortune; and
then the reasoning of those who insist upon an oligarchy
would be valid; for it would not be right that he
who contributed one mina should have an equal share
in the hundred along with him who brought in all the
rest, either of the original money or what was afterwards
acquired.
Nor was civil society founded merely
to preserve the lives of its members; but that they
might live well: for otherwise a state might
be composed of slaves, or the animal creation:
but this is not so; for these have no share in the
happiness of it; nor do they live after their own
choice; nor is it an alliance mutually to defend each
other from injuries, or for a commercial intercourse:
for then the Tyrrhenians and Carthaginians, and all
other nations between whom treaties of commerce subsist,
would be citizens of one city; for they have articles
to regulate their exports and imports, and engagements
for mutual protection, and alliances for mutual defence;
but [1280b] yet they have not all the same magistrates
established among them, but they are different among
the different people; nor does the one take any care,
that the morals of the other should be as they ought,
or that none of those who have entered into the common
agreements should be unjust, or in any degree vicious,
only that they do not injure any member of the confederacy.
But whosoever endeavours to establish wholesome laws
in a state, attends to the virtues and the vices of
each individual who composes it; from whence it is
evident, that the first care of him who would found
a city, truly deserving that name, and not nominally
so, must be to have his citizens virtuous; for otherwise
it is merely an alliance for self-defence; differing
from those of the same cast which are made between
different people only in place: for law is an
agreement and a pledge, as the sophist Lycophron says,
between the citizens of their intending to do justice
to each other, though not sufficient to make all the
citizens just and good: and that this is fiact
is evident, for could any one bring different places
together, as, for instance, enclose Megara and Corinth
in a wall, yet they would not be one city, not even
if the inhabitants intermarried with each other, though
this inter-community contributes much to make a place
one city. Besides, could we suppose a set of
people to live separate from each other, but within
such a distance as would admit of an intercourse,
and that there were laws subsisting between each party,
to prevent their injuring one another in their mutual
dealings, supposing one a carpenter, another a husbandman,
shoemaker, and the like, and that their numbers were
ten thousand, still all that they would have together
in common would be a tariff for trade, or an alliance
for mutual defence, but not the same city. And
why? not because their mutual intercourse is not near
enough, for even if persons so situated should come
to one place, and every one should live in his own
house as in his native city, and there should be alliances
subsisting between each party to mutually assist and
prevent any injury being done to the other, still they
would not be admitted to be a city by those who think
correctly, if they preserved the same customs when
they were together as when they were separate.
It is evident, then, that a city is
not a community of place; nor established for the
sake of mutual safety or traffic with each other;
but that these things are the necessary consequences
of a city, although they may all exist where there
is no city: but a city is a society of people
joining together with their families and their children
to live agreeably for the sake of having their lives
as happy and as independent as possible: and
for this purpose it is necessary that they should
live in one place and intermarry with each other:
hence in ail cities there are family-meetings, clubs,
sacrifices, and public entertainments to promote friendship;
for a love of sociability is friendship itself; so
that the end then for which a city is established
is, that the inhabitants of it may live happy, and
these things are conducive to that end: for it
is a community of families and villages for the sake
of a perfect independent life; that is, as we have
already said, for the sake of living well and happily.
It is not therefore founded for the purpose of men’s
merely [1281a] living together, but for their living
as men ought; for which reason those who contribute
most to this end deserve to have greater power in the
city than those who are their equals in family and
freedom, but their inferiors in civil virtue, or those
who excel them in wealth but are below them in worth.
It is evident from what has been said, that in all
disputes upon government each party says something
that is just.