From these practices it is perfectly evident that it is not for nourishment or need or necessity, but out of satiety and insolence and luxury that they have turned this lawless custom into a pleasure. Then, just as with women who are insatiable in seeking pleasure, their lust tries everything, goes astray, and explores the gamut of profligacy until at last it ends in unspeakable practices; so intemperance in eating passes beyond the necessary ends of nature and resorts to cruelty and lawlessness to give variety to appetite. For it is in their own company that organs of sense are infected and won over and become licentious when they do not keep to natural standards. Just so the art of hearing has fallen sick, corrupting musical taste. From this our luxury and debauchery conceives a desire for shameful caresses and effeminate titillations. These taught the sight not to take pleasure in warlike exercises See Plato, Laws , 816 b. or gesticulations or refined dances or statues and paintings, but to regard the slaughter and death of men, their wounds and combats, as the most precious sort of spectacle. Referring to the gladiatorial combats which came to be substituted for the more refined exhibitions of an earlier age. Plutarch urges the expulsion of such practices from the State in Mor. 822 c; for further examples of this kind of opposition to Roman policy see H. Fuchs, Der geistige Widerstand gegen Rom , p. 49, n. 60. Just so intemperate intercourse follows a lawless meal, inharmonious music follows a shameful debauch, barbarous spectacles follow shameless songs and sounds, insensitivity and cruelty toward human kind follow savage exhibitions in the theatre. It was for this reason that the godlike Lycurgus Life of Lycurgus , xiii. 5-6 (47 b-c); Mor. 189 e, 227 c, 285 c; Comment. on Hesiod , 42 (Bernardakis, vii, p. 72). gave directions in certain rhetrae Or unwritten laws ; the mss. here say in the three rhetrae . that the doors and roofs of houses should be fashioned by saw and axe alone and no other tool should be used-not of course because he had a quarrel with gimlets and adzes and other instruments for delicate work. It was because he knew that through such rough-hewn work you will not be introducing a gilded couch, nor will you be so rash as to bring silver tables and purple rugs and precious stones into a simple house. The corollary of such a house and couch and table and cup is a dinner which is unpretentious and a lunch which is truly democratic; but all manner of luxury and extravagance follow the lead of an evil way of life As new-weaned foal beside his mother runs. Semonides, frag. 5; see Mor. 446 e and the note. For what sort of dinner is not costly for which a living creature loses its life? Do we hold a life cheap? I do not yet go so far as to say that it may well be the life That is, the reincarnated life. of your mother or father or some friend or child, as Empedocles As in frag. B 137 (Diels-Kranz, Frag. der Vorsok. i, p. 275). declared. Yet it does, at least, possess some perception, hearing, seeing, imagination, intelligence, which last every creature receives from Nature to enable it to acquire what is proper for it and to evade what is not. Do but consider which are the philosophers who serve the better to humanize us: those Cf. von Arnim, S.V.F. iii, p. 186. who bid us eat our children and friends and fathers and wives after their death, That is, they tell us to eat meat without compunction, because human beings are only mortal, and their souls are not reincarnated in animals. or Pythagoras Cf. 993 a supra . The argument is somewhat weakened by the fact (certainly well known to Plutarch, e.g. Mor. 286 d-e) that Pythagoras placed an even more stringent taboo on beans than he did on meat. and Empedocles who try to accustom us to act justly toward other creatures also? You ridicule a man who abstains from eating mutton. But are we, they Pythagoras and Empedocles. will say, to refrain from laughter when we see you slicing off portions from a dead father or mother and sending them to absent friends and inviting those who are at hand, heaping their plates with flesh? But as it is, perhaps we commit a sin when we touch these books of theirs without cleansing our hands and faces, our feet and ears - unless, by Heaven, it is a purification of those members to speak on such a subject as this, washing, as Plato Phaedrus , 243 d; Cf. Mor. 627 f, 706 e, 711 d. says, the brine from one’s ears with the fresh water of discourse. If one should compare these two sets of books and doctrines, That is, of the two schools of philosophy mentioned above in 997 e. the former may serve as philosophy for the Scyths and Sogdians and the Black Cloaks, whose story as told by Herodotus Plutarch seems to have confused the Black Cloaks (Herodotus, iv. 20, but cf. iv. 107) with the Issedones (iv. 26); and perhaps the Sogdians (iii. 93) with the Padaei (iii. 99); cf. also i. 216 and iii. 38. gains no credit But this clause looks like a semi-learned addition. ; but the precepts of Pythagoras Cf. 964 e-f supra . and Empedocles were the laws for the ancient Greeks, along with their diet of wheat There seems to be a lacuna here followed by an interpolation from chapter 6 or 7. [Because there is no question of justice between us and the irrational animals.]