In every art and science which is
not conversant in parts but in some one genus in which
it is complete, it is the business of that art alone
to determine what is fitted to its particular genus;
as what particular exercise is fitted to a certain
particular body, and suits it best: for that
body which is formed by nature the most perfect and
superior to others necessarily requires the best exercise-and
also of what one kind that must be which will suit
the generality; and this is the business of the gymnastic
arts: and although any one should not desire
to acquire an exact knowledge and skill in these exercises,
yet it is not, on that account, the less necessary
that he who professes to be a master and instruct
the youth in them should be perfect therein:
and we see that this is what equally befalls the healing,
shipbuilding, cloth-making, and indeed all other arts;
so that it evidently belongs to the same art to find
out what kind of government is best, and would of
all others be most correspondent to our wish, while
it received no molestation from without: and what
particular species of it is adapted to particular
persons; for there are many who probably are incapable
of enjoying the best form: so that the legislator,
and he who is truly a politician, ought to be acquainted
not only with that which is most perfect imaginable,
but also that which is the best suited to any given
circumstances. There is, moreover, a third sort,
an imaginary one, and he ought, if such a one should
be presented to his consideration, to be able to discern
what sort of one it would be at the beginning; and,
when once established, what would be the proper means
to preserve it a long time. I mean, for instance,
if a state should happen not to have the best form
of government, or be deficient in what was necessary,
or not receive every advantage possible, but something
less. And, besides all this, it is necessary
to know what sort of government is best fitting for
all cities: for most of those writers who have
treated this subject, however speciously they may
handle other parts of it, have failed in describing
the practical parts: for it is not enough to be
able to perceive what is best without it is what can
be put in practice. It should also be simple,
and easy for all to attain to. But some seek
only the most subtile forms of government. Others
again, choosing [1289a] rather to treat of what is
common, censure those under which they live, and extol
the excellence of a particular state, as the Lacedaemonian,
or some other: but every legislator ought to establish
such a form of government as from the present state
and disposition of the people who are to receive it
they will most readily submit to and persuade the
community to partake of: for it is not a business
of less trouble to correct the mistakes of an established
government than to form a new one; as it is as difficult
to recover what we have forgot as to learn anything
afresh. He, therefore, who aspires to the character
of a legislator, ought, besides all we have already
said, to be able to correct the mistakes of a government
already established, as we have before mentioned.
But this is impossible to be done by him who does
not know how many different forms of government there
are: some persons think that there is only one
species both of democracy and oligarchy; but this
is not true: so that every one should be acquainted
with the difference of these governments, how great
they are, and whence they arise; and should have equal
knowledge to perceive what laws are best, and what
are most suitable to each particular government:
for all laws are, and ought to be, framed agreeable
to the state that is to be governed by them, and not
the state to the laws: for government is a certain
ordering in a state which particularly respects the
magistrates in what manner they shall be regulated,
and where the supreme power shall be placed; and what
shall be the final object which each community shall
have in view; but the laws are something different
from what regulates and expresses the form of the
constitution-it is their office to direct the conduct
of the magistrate in the execution of his office and
the punishment of offenders. From whence it is
evident, that the founders of laws should attend both
to the number and the different sorts of government;
for it is impossible that the same laws should be
calculated for all sorts of oligarchies and all sorts
of democracies, for of both these governments there
are many species, not one only.