July 6, 2008
Hayatın Dışından Diyaloglar (3)
Jean Jacques Rousseau: The man who would preserve his life at the expense of the lives of others ought in turn to expose his own for their protection when it is necessary. The citizen is not a judge of the peril to which the law may expose him; and when the prince says to him, "It is expedient for the State that thou shouldst die," he ought to die, because it is only that condition that he has enjoyed his security up to that moment, and because his life is not to be considered simply as the boon of nature, but as a conditional gift from the State.
Mr. Sular: I truly admire the way you construct your sentences and arguments, but here, you sound like you're completely out of your mind.
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