About This Book
A philosophical dialogue presents a detailed program of legislation for organizing a polis, treating urban planning, public architecture, and civic institutions alongside moral and educational regulation. Topics include placement of temples, markets and courts, debate over fortifications versus an integrated defensive city-ring, rules for communal meals and marriage arrangements, and responsibilities of magistrates for sanitation and enforcement. The discussion considers how law shapes private habits, the limits of individual freedom within ordered society, and the lawgiver’s duty to design institutions that cultivate virtue and public welfare, while repeatedly addressing practical difficulties of implementing ambitious reforms.
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