[58] Plat. Timæus, pp. 67-70 (pp. 93-99).
[59] Plat. Timæus pp. 70-72 (pp. 99-102).
[60] Plat. De Republica, II., pp. 368, 369 (p. 78.)
[61] Following the outline here given by Plato, Hegel, in an earlier attempt to treat the philosophy of Justice (Werke, Vol. I. pp. 380, 381), included in one these two classes, and later named them the general class (Werke, Vol. VIII. p. 267); the “other” class (as Hegel expresses it, in the first of the passages referred to above), which by Plato is not included in this, Hegel divided, however, in both his narratives, into the second class (that of city handicraftsmen), and the third (that of tillers of the soil).—[Editor’s note.]
[62] Plat. de Republica, II. pp. 369-376 (pp. 79-93); III. p. 414 (pp. 158, 159).
[63] Plat. De Republica, V. p. 463, (p. 241,); p. 460 (p. 236).
[64] Plat. De Republica, IX. pp. 427, 428 (pp. 179-181).
[65] Ibid. IV. pp. 428, 429 (pp. 181, 182).
[66] Ibid. pp. 429, 430 (pp. 182-185).
[67] Plat. De Republica, IV. pp. 430-432 (pp. 185-188).