Meaning of the poem "The Book of Songs"
Explanation:
The Book of Songs is a Classical Chinese poem. The repetition helps us to know the clear situation of the poet and also we can able to understand the emotions of the poet. These lines from the poem tell about a man in the middle of the river on his boat.
His boat was made up of Cypress wood and it was unsteady in the middle of the river. He was praising his boat as a comrade, a soldier and more like a friend and he says that his boat was his love until death. But he had fluctuating intentions on his boat because it is now unstable in the middle of the river.
Answer:
Glaucon seemed to think the answer was no. But Paul Feldman sides with Socrates and Adam Smith—for he knows the answer, at least 87 percent of the time, is yes.
Explanation:
Compared with Feldman's argument, the tale of "The Ring of Gyges" is best described as a counterclaim to the idea that most people are moral. The tale is about the corruption of a man, Gyges, that found a ring that made him invisible. One he had that power he saw no reason to follow society's morals and did whatever he wanted to. One could argue that the reason that many people have to "behave" or to act according to the law and morals of a society is the look of others. The judgment that one would encounter should he not follow a certain rule, even if they are "little" things.