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Social justice, Plato, and The Spirits' Book |
1. As progress
gave rise to the
slow and painful
evolution of
humanity, their
ideal of justice
and their hope
to build a truly
fair society has
also evolved.
However, such
attempts have
come across, at
all times, the
insurmountable
obstacle that is
a result of
humankind’s own
imperfection,
especially with
respect to
their innate
selfishness.
This
characteristic
led Thomas
Hobbes to argue
that moral
values were
nothing more
than
manifestations
of this same
selfishness: "Good
and evil are
just what we
like or that
offends the
survival
instincts and
the interests of
the individual."
"Society submits
itself to the
State, just like
the new
Leviathan and
man is a wolf of
other men."
(On this regard,
Guido de
Ruggiero,
BREVE HISTÓRIA
DA FILOSOFIA (BRIEF
HISTORY OF
PHILOSOPHY),
Coimbra Editora
Ltda., Coimbra,
1965, p. 261).This
implies the
predominance of
the instincts
and the
bestiality still
in force, both
from the
individual and
social point of
view and a
minimal concern
with the
spiritual,
often confused
with the popular
beliefs and
superstitions.
This state of
affairs has
prompted the
emergence of the
exacerbated
materialism of
the late
eighteenth
century, which
now prevails,
sovereign and
paradoxically,
not only in
developed
countries, but
also in those
which begin to
emerge among the
other nations
like Brazil.
Given this, no
political or
philosophical
system has
managed to
equate the
ever-growing
problem of
social injustice.
There is no
doubt that in
this particular
aspect, the
material
progress
achieved by
individual
countries cannot
be accepted and
defined as
synonymous with
a more cohesive,
more just and
more fraternal
society,
especially in
the face of the
painful truth
regarding how
often this
progress is
achieved at the
expense and loss
of thousands of
human beings.
2. This
situation is,
however, the
contingency of
the natural
evolutionary
condition of
Earth as a
planet of trial
and atonement.
Is not
irreversible or
irrevocable, as
it may be
changed for the
better, in the
same proportion
as humankind
change and
promote through
their own
efforts, their
inner
improvement. It
may lead to the
psychic renewal
of humanity,
which will
inevitably have
to review and
rethink their
moral values.
The effort in
this direction,
in which they
will gradually
become aware,
may allow the
replacement of
selfishness as a
lever driving
human behaviour,
through the
feelings of
brotherhood,
solidarity and
compassion,
regardless of
religious
affiliation,
nationality or
social status.
Unmistakably,
Spiritism,
despite its
short existence
of 154 years -
taking as point
of reference
the
publication of
The
SPIRITS' BOOK
- could play a
role of great
importance, for,
as Kardec said,
"it has no
nationality and
does not stem
from any known
religion or sect
that might exist;
nor
is it imposed by
any social class,
since it may
lead all mankind
to brotherhood.
If it did not
maintain itself
in neutral
territory, it
would nurture
dissensions instead of pacifying them
"(THE GOSPEL
ACCORDING TO
Spiritism,
Introduction, Ed
Feb, Rio, 1944,
p.29).
Social issues
have not
received the
care they
deserve
3. Much is
spoken,
nowadays, of the
"New Age" or the
"Age of the
Spirit." The
testimony of
history is
eloquent in
order to
demonstrate that
until 1857, when
the first
edition of
THE SPIRITS'
BOOK came to
light,
very little was
contemplated
about the
spiritual side
of man, and the
binomial
spirit-matter,
within which all
human problems
should be seen,
examined and
equated, was
still taken to
the account of
witchcraft,
demon's work or
the art of the
alchemists.
The chain
reaction caused
by the release
of the first
codification
works
constituted
an eloquent
accounting that
the ideals that
they contained
troubled and
endangered the
status quo
of the ruling
classes, in
terms of
intellectual,
political or
religious point
of view,
because,
conscious or
unconsciously,
these segments
of society felt
it was time for
profound changes
in the old and
rotten Western
civilization.
Moreover,
undisputedly,
such changes did
not interest
them, as indeed
it still does
not.
4. Social issues
- that today are
not restricted
to relationships
among
individuals, nor
from nation to
nation, but that
also claim for a
conscious,
respectful and
loving
relationship of
all humankind
with nature in
order to save,
while there is
still time, "mother
earth" - have
not earned from
humanity the
indispensable
care. Some more
enlightened
Spirits
reincarnated
here, before and
after Jesus have
escaped this
general rule
marked by
laziness and
selfishness.
However,
they were not
understood and
ultimately
rejected by
their
contemporaries,
like what
happened to
Socrates, one of
the major
victims of human
being's
spiritual
poverty. Plato,
one of the
forerunners of
Christianity,
revealed in
Republic,
his concern with
the theme,
making some
assumptions
needed to
understand the
creation of an
ideal society.
His ideas were
far superior to
those proposed
later on, for
example, by
Marxism,
Socialism or
Capitalism, for
they were devoid
of the
materialism with
which the latter
ones
are impregnated.
It began by
questioning what
was called
an ethical
problem:
"How would the
establishment of
justice be
possible?
Justice exists
only in a just
social
organization:
the Just State.
Therefore,
justice would
consist of a
political
problem."
The question
about the
political
problem lingers
"How to attain
the Just State?
The Just State
would be one
ruled by fair
statesmen
or the most
capable ones."
This would
result in a
third problem of
psychological
nature,
since it would
imply the answer
to the
question:
"But who are the
most righteous
and capable
leaders?"
In the solution
to this question
is an eminently
Christian
content and in
great tune with
the teaching
of the Spirits:
"The human
problem is prior
to politics.
States depend on
the men who
compose them.
Improving men is
to improve the
states. Social
reforms do not
improve men.
Conclusion:
First, we need
to study the man
(psychological
problem). Men
fall into three
main classes:
the producers,
in which
predominates a
lustful soul, of
appetites,
impulses and
instincts; the
military,
dominated by the
irascible soul,
of courage,
enthusiasm and
excitement; the
guardians, wise
or
philosopher-kings
who assert
themselves by
reason,
meditation, and
detachment of
material goods
and by the
desire of
knowledge. The
role of men in
the first type
is the
production; the
second type has
the function of
protection and
the third is of
governing.
Conclusion:
justice can only
be
achieved if the
State is ruled
by
philosopher-kings
or wise men."
(Ney Lobo,
ESTUDOS DE
FILOSOFIA SOCIAL
ESPÍRITA (SOCIAL
STUDIES ON
SPIRITIST
PHILOSOPHY),
Ed Feb, Rio, 1991, ps. 25 and 26.)
Plato and
Socrates are
considered
forerunners of
Spiritism
Education - one
of the main
goals of
Spiritism -
would be the
basic tool for
the formation of
the just
statesman or the
philosopher-king:
"After 20 years
of education,
from birth and
by the State,
all are
undergone tests.
Those who fail
move to
production. The
approved ones
continue in
education. After
a second stage
of 10 years, the
ones who failed
go to protection
as military and
the approved
ones move on.
After a third
stage of
five years in which they learn the
Doctrine of
Ideas, they will
pass to the 4th
stage of 15
years of
practice in
touch with the
real world and
at the end of
which, already
with 50 years of
age, they are
considered
suitable to
rule. “(Ney
Lobo, op. Cit,
p. 26.)
5. While one
cannot deny the
idealistic or
utopian
character of the
Platonic State,
it contains
truths that
later were
confirmed by the
Spirits, in Part
III of
THE SPIRITS' BOOK.
It was not therefore without reason
that Kardec
assigns to Plato,
along with
Socrates, the
condition of
forerunners of
Spiritism. Both
considered
reincarnation as
a natural fact,
preached a
distinction
between the
intelligent
principle (soul
or spirit) and
the material
principle, the
supremacy of
that on this and
man's
responsibility
for their own
errors.
Besides, they
recognized that
justice, that
reveals the most
authentic
charity, was the
primary factor
for a truly
fraternal living
among the
members of
society,
preceding the
very
teachings of
Jesus: "You
should never do
injustice to
others in return
to injustice,
nor harm others
in return for
whatever harm
done to you.
Few, however,
are those who
admit this
principle, and
those who
quarrel in this
respect will do
nothing,
undoubtedly, but
feel mutual
contempt.
“(O
p. cit., "Summary of the doctrine of
Socrates and
Plato," no.
XII.
These principles
coincide with
some of the
so-called Basic
Principles of
Spiritism, which
are developed
throughout the
Codification and
are synthesized,
as is the case
in a
Constitution,
in
THE SPIRITS'
BOOK.
The Platonic
philosophical
construction -
in which
includes its
ideal State -
had as its
foundation, with
the necessary
modifications,
the same
principles or
assumptions that
later, the
Superior Spirits
dictated to
mankind, as
general
guidelines for
their spiritual
progress, and
consequently,
for their moral
advancement,
within all
Spirit's natural
pathway, ranging
from simplicity
and ignorance to
perfection.
In
Republic,
Plato says that
the foundation
of a fraternal
society is the
establishment of
justice. Not the
justice of
appearances, of
solemn and
formal rituals,
but that which
is above human
conventionalism,
as Jesus warns
in the Sermon on
the Mount: "For
I tell you,
unless your
righteousness
exceeds that of
the Scribes and
Pharisees, you
will never enter
the Kingdom of
Heaven"
(Matthew 5: 20).
The sense of
justice is
implicit in
nature
It is a task
that, from a
legal
standpoint,
continues to
find obstacles
that are
difficult to
surmount,
because men
today still do
not understand
the concepts
of Justice and
Law, which, as
it has always
been at all
stages of
history, keeps
on being
developed at the
whim of
individual
interests or
particular
groups. The
issue arises,
however, outside
the scope of
these
considerations,
since it is
specific subject
area of
Philosophy of
Law,
and it would be
completely
pointless to
enter the
winding maze of
the existing
doctrinal
discussions
about it. What
matters in this
case is a
reminder about
Plato's position
in the face of
the subject, in
view of the
similarity
of his thought
with that of the
Spirits.
Justice, in its
meaning, as to
what is observed
among the true
Christians,
can only be
understood
within a
universalist
view
and that is
indispensable to
the individual
and social life.
Giorgio Del
Vecchio
(JUSTICE,
Portuguese
translation by
Antônio Pinto de
Carvalho, Ed
Saraiva. São
Paulo, 1960, p.
18) refers to
the subject by
saying: "Plato
intends to
elevate justice
to the category
of regulative
principle of the
individual and
social life as a
whole,
(sic)
he neglects or
rejects all
conceptions
designed to give
it specific
function or
particular
sphere of
application".
Still according
to the same
author (op.
cit., P. 18),
he
"restores the
essence of
justice in the
"performance of
its own duty."
Now, the duty as
something that
should be done
or avoided for
the benefit of
others and the
community is
printed on the
conscience of
man and
identifies with
the natural
feeling of
justice that we
all possess.
The question 873
of
THE SPIRITS'
BOOK
explains that
this sense of
justice "is so
natural that
your feeling
spontaneously
revolts at
the
idea
of an injustice. Moral progress
undoubtedly
develops this
sentiment, but
it does not
create it. God
has placed it in
the heart of man.
For this reason
you often find,
among simple and
primitive people,
notions of
justice more
exact than those
of others who
are possessed of
a larger amount
of knowledge."
7. In addressing
the just
society, which
he calls the
Just City,
Plato, while
acknowledging
the difficulty
to reach an
exact definition
of justice, he
believes that,
like virtue, it
is common to man
and the city:
"In the city, it
is somehow
printed in
larger type and
therefore easier
to decipher.
That is why it
is necessary to
study it first;
then to apply
the results to
the human soul
and, where
necessary,
supplement them
or modify them"
(according
to Robert
Bacou, REPUBLIC,
Introduction,
Difusão Europeia
do Livro, São
Paulo, 1973,
Volume I, p.
21).
In Chapter VIII
of Part III of
The Spirits'
Book,
under the title
"The Law of
Progress", the
Spirits, despite
the diversity of
language, refers
to the
individual and
collective
responsibility
and the
consequences of
complying or not
with its rules
can have on men
and peoples.
The question
875, on the
other hand,
shows the
importance of
justice as a
necessary
attribute to a
truly just
society, as is
expected it to
be in the new
era that is
approaching:
"Justice
consists in
respect for the
rights of others."
In the world we
live in the
legal is not always just
The idea of
justice
prevalent in
older cultures,
understood as a
form of "doing
good to friends,
and evil to
enemies"
(Giorgio Del
Vecchio, op. Cit,
p. 18) was not
only rejected by
Jesus (Matthew,
5:43 to 46), but
it deserved the
censure of Plato,
who did not
agree with it
explicitly.
Respect the
right of others
is a duty to all,
and may have no
importance for
the full
realization of
this duty,
the condition of
friend or enemy
of the right
holder. That
Jesus outlawed
in the most
perfect
ethical-legal
pronouncement
that has been
heard of on
Earth, the
Sermon on the
Mount; Plato
condemned it
about three
hundred and
fifty years
before the
Master; the
Spirits taught
it, especially
when caring for
the perfection
of God's Justice
and His
law,
"the only rule
that insures the
happiness of man.
It shows him
what he should
or should not
do, and he only
suffers because
he disobeys it.
“(Op. cit.,
Q.614.)
8. Indisputable
is the fragility
of man-made law,
despite
its theoretical
status as an
instrument for
the realization
of justice.
Being man-made,
it is subject to
the
vicissitudes,
mistakes,
failures and
omissions that
every human
achievement
contains
M. Hence the
reason he goes,
many times,
diametrically
opposite to the
way
he
should go and
leads to results
of obvious and
undeniable
injustice.
Legal
does not always
mean just,
since the law
only defines
itself as just
when it is
equivalent to
the natural law,
in accordance
with the
approach taken
by the Spirits
in the
aforementioned
question
614.It
transcends all
the speculation
and creation of
a political,
social or legal
nature; it is
inscribed
in the
conscience of
every man, and
yet all may know
it, all may not
understand it:
"Those who
understand it
best are they
who seek after
goodness. All,
however, will
one day
understand it,
for the destiny
of progress must
be accomplished"
(op. cit.,
questions 621
and 619,
respectively).
The men who
decide to
investigate it
and apply it,
both as regards
the private life
of each one and
concerning one's
experience in
the community
they belong to,
are those who
would fall
between the Just
State and the
more capable
reported by
Plato.
They would be in
charge of ruling
the State, since
they fall among
the
philosopher-kings
or wise men,
position
achieved through
the only way
truly capable of
raising and
promoting the
moral elevation
of man: the way
of education.
These men would
have reached the
level where the
good man is,
which means the
real progress
and elevation of
his Spirit in
the
spirit-hierarchy.
According to
question 918,
"The elevation
of the Spirit is
proved by the
conformity of
all the acts of
his corporeal
life with the
Law of God, and
by his
comprehension of
spiritual life."
In comments to
this answer, the
Codifier
highlighted:
"The truly
virtuous man is
he who practices
the law of
justice, love
and charity, in
its greatest
purity. If he
interrogates his
conscience
concerning the
acts
accomplished by
him. He will ask
himself whether
he has done
nothing wrong,
whether he has
done all the
good in his
power, whether
no one has cause
to complain of
him, and whether
he has done to
others all that
he would wish
others to do to
him."
Plato envisioned
the society of
the third
millennium
9. When
considering the
necessity of
social life, the
Spirits asserted
in the
fundamental
assumptions of
human evolution
the destination
of man for
living in
society (question
766), the
violation of
this natural law
means the
absolute
isolation stands
as an obstacle
to progress (question
767), and the
absolute
necessity of
contact with
other men as the
only way for him
to develop his
faculties (question
768).
Utopia aside,
the new society
of the third
millennium was
envisioned
by the Greek
philosopher in
the following
terms: "The city
has the perfect
four
quintessential
virtues:
wisdom, courage,
temperance and
justice. The
wisdom or good
advice for the
preservation of
the city lies in
the magistrates;
the courage,
discipline and
right opinion
about what is to
be feared or not,
belongs to the
warriors;
temperance,
harmony and
volunteer
symphony between
the superior and
inferior parts
of the soul can
only be in the
collective soul
or in the city,
a mutual and
total agreement
between the
rulers and the
ruled. The rest
is justice.
Therefore,
the essential
principle of the
Republic -
each one should
remain in his
place and fulfil
the mission for
which he was
born. This is
the principle
that governs all
other virtues,
that keeps the
ruler in his
outpost, the
soldier in the
fight, the
cobbler in awl -
as a mercenary,
auxiliary or
guard, if each
one takes his
place and his
duty, justice
will be
accomplished in
the city."
(Robert Baccou,
op. Cit.
Introduction.)
The evolution of
the planet that
will transform
it into world of
regeneration,
with the
predominance of
good over evil,
excludes the
necessity of
warriors in the
ordinary and
primitive
meaning of the
word, even
because the war
will vanish from
the face of the
Earth, "when men
comprehend
justice and
practice the Law
of God. All men
will then be
brothers
"(op.
cit., question
743).But Plato
himself foresaw
this situation,
classifying them
as those with
courage, right
opinion and
discipline in
the face of the
most difficult
situations and
which require
from man those
three qualities.
Earth
will still live with these situations,
although in much
smaller scale
than what is
observed today,
during the
period in which,
increasingly,
its change and
its elevation in
the hierarchy of
worlds will be
carried out.
In fact, all
that the great
thinker of
antiquity taught
and proposed was
duly taken up by
common sense and
genius of Kardec,
supported by
Spirits from the
perspective of
the Gospel and
summarized by
the Codifier,
when he says
that the mission
of Spiritism is
to unite all men
around the
banner of
brotherhood!
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