[215]. Pp. 19 ff.
[216]. P. 41 and notes.
[217]. Laws 918B.
[218]. 918D.
[219]. 918E.
[220]. P. 41 and notes.
[221]. Laws 918A, 920C. He seems to feel that trade as regularly pursued is a form of cheatery, in which one gains what the other loses. Cf. Ruskin, Unto This Last, I, 22 (Vol. XVII, 40 f.); IV, 66 ff. (Vol. XVII, 90 ff.); Mun. Pul., IV 95 ff. (Vol. XVII, 217 ff.), where he refers to Rep. 426E, on the difficulty of curing this disease of traders; cf. Vol. XVII, Intro., p. xlvi, citing Xen. Mem., iii. 7. 5, 6, on those who are “always thinking how they may buy cheapest and sell dearest.”
[222]. Rep. 371C.
[223]. 416A-417A.
[224]. Cf. 415E, χρηματιστικάς in contrast to στρατιωτικάς.