Plato and the Other Companions of Sokrates, 3rd ed. Volume 4
iv. 257;
see _Ends_.
Temperance, [Greek: sôphrosu/nê], ii. 153 _n._; as treated by Plato and Aristotle, 170; is self-knowledge, 155; and with justice the condition of happiness and freedom, 12; the condition of virtue and happiness, 358; and intelligence identical, having same contrary, 279; a kind of sedateness, objections, 154; a variety of feeling of shame, refuted, _ib._; doing one's own business, refuted, 155; as cognition of cognition and of non-cognition, of no avail for our end, happiness, 159, 160; not the science of good and evil, and of little service, 161; undiscovered, but a good, 162; _Charmidês_, difficulties unnoticed in _Politikus_,