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    Introduction and Analysis - Page 2

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    suspicion is increased by the fact that these
    differences are accompanied by resemblances as striking to passages in
    other Platonic writings. They are sensible of a want of point in the
    dialogue and a general inferiority in the ideas, plan, manners, and style.
    They miss the poetical flow, the dramatic verisimilitude, the life and
    variety of the characters, the dialectic subtlety, the Attic purity, the
    luminous order, the exquisite urbanity; instead of which they find
    tautology, obscurity, self-sufficiency, sermonizing, rhetorical
    declamation, pedantry, egotism, uncouth forms of sentences, and
    peculiarities in the use of words and idioms. They are unable to discover
    any unity in the patched, irregular structure. The speculative element
    both in government and education is superseded by a narrow economical or
    religious vein. The grace and cheerfulness of Athenian life have
    disappeared; and a spirit of moroseness and religious intolerance has
    taken their place. The charm of youth is no longer there; the mannerism of
    age makes itself unpleasantly felt. The connection is often imperfect; and
    there is a want of arrangement, exhibited especially in the enumeration of
    the laws towards the end of the work. The Laws are full of flaws and
    repetitions. The Greek is in places very ungrammatical and intractable. A
    cynical levity is displayed in some passages, and a tone of disappointment
    and lamentation over human things in others. The critics seem also to
    observe in them bad imitations of thoughts which are better expressed in
    Plato's other writings. Lastly, they wonder how the mind which conceived
    the Republic could have left the Critias, Hermocrates, and Philosophus
    incomplete or unwritten, and have devoted the last years of life to the
    Laws.

    The questions which have been thus indirectly suggested may be considered
    by us under five or six heads: I, the characters; II, the plan; III, the
    style; IV, the imitations of other writings of Plato; V; the more general
    relation of the Laws to the Republic and the other dialogues; and VI, to
    the existing Athenian and Spartan states.

    I. Already in the Philebus the distinctive character of Socrates has
    disappeared; and in the Timaeus, Sophist, and Statesman his function of

    chief speaker is handed over to the Pythagorean philosopher Timaeus, and
    to the Eleatic Stranger, at whose feet he sits, and is silent. More and
    more Plato seems to have felt in his later writings that the character and
    method of Socrates were no longer suited to be the vehicle of his own
    philosophy. He is no longer interrogative but dogmatic; not 'a hesitating
    enquirer,' but one who speaks with the authority of a legislator. Even in
    the Republic we have seen that the argument which is carried on by
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