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Utopia
作者Author  /  Sir Thomas  More  湯瑪斯.摩爾爵士

Study Guide

 
 A Brief Description of Utopia

Utopia's Summary

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A Brief Description of Utopia
  Sir Thomas More coined the word Utopia in 1516. Written as an act of the Humanist movement, More's Utopia is the story of an imaginary island society. Utopia means nowhere in Greek. More's story of Utopia is told by Raphael Hythloday. Hythloday in Greek means "talker of nonsense."

Utopia is an island of fifty-four cities, with the chief city in the center. All cities are twenty-four miles apart. The layout of all the cities as well as language, customs, and laws are all the same. The countryside is covered with well-managed farm land, with all citizens spending at least two years on a farm.

Besides agriculture, everyone has at least one occupational specialty. It is customary to follow the trade of your father, however you may be adopted into a house of a different trade. You are welcome to learn more than one trade, and practice the trade of your choice, unless the state deems your other trade to be in need.

A six hour work day assures there is enough work for everyone. Leisure is highly valued with time devoted to education and recreation. Working hard on literature in your leisure time can get you promoted to the class of scholars. Priests and government officials are chosen from the scholar class. Utopians consider the cultivation of the mind the greatest happiness of life.

On the economic side there is a marketplace where no money is exchanged. There is no private property, nothing is private. No locks are permitted on homes, all things are shared.

The sizes of the cities are regulated. People are moved between cities as needed to maintain equality.

The family unit is based on a system where the eldest capable father runs a large family group. Meals are served at large community dining halls where women do the cooking, with slaves doing the dirty work.

There is a high emphasis placed on health, with well managed hospitals a priority. A terminally ill patient is advised to resign from life. Voluntary death, approved by the priests and the senate is considered honorable. Unapproved suicide is disgraceful and not worthy of burial.

In choosing mates a supervised showing in the nude allows prospective mates to be assured of no hidden defects. A woman marries at around age 18, a man at 22 or older. Lust and adultery are severely punished.

Inhabitants of foreign cities who are condemned to death are permitted to live in utopia as a slave. Likewise, very poor persons from other countries may volutarily serve as Utopian slaves. Utopians who commit crimes are individually reviewed for punishment in a case by case basis. Most serious crimes are punishable by slavery. The attempted crime is punishable as the crime itself. A novel concept, no lawyers are permitted. Utopians believe a lawyer simply mixes up a persons story, and a person cab best defend himself. Utopians are critical of laws, believing it is better to not write a law at all, than to write a law no one understands.

Utopians make no treaties, for the greatest bond is kindness. While they detest war, but will fight for their own defense. Utopians will also wage war on behalf of the oppressed. Any wealth received as a result of war is sold off. Wealth is scorned. Gold is used to make chains and restraints for slaves. However the wealth won in war is often used to buy mercenaries, and even as a tool in war. Wealth is used to breed discontent among enemies. Rewards are offered for the capture or killing of an enemy leader. In battle the leaders are targeted to end the war as quickly as possible.

Utopians are free to worship as they please, however, complete religious freedom is only extended to those who believe in a single superior divinity. Services are very ritual in huge dark buildings with candles and devotional prayer. Those who refuse to believe in an afterlife are not considered citizens.

More is given credit for the modern idea of the ideal society. While More's book did set up a model for society, like most great classics, it was also an attempt to speak out against the government of his time.

(Source: Definitions of Socities)

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Utopia's Summary
  Thomas More toured Antwerp on a diplomatic mission for his king, Henry VIII. There, More's friend, Peter Giles, introduced the young ambassador to Raphael Hythloday, an educated sailor who had seen much of the world while voyaging with Amerigo Vespucci. The three of them convened in a garden so that More could question this learned and experienced man. More and Giles both wondered why a man of such wisdom and stature as Raphael had not entered into a king's service. Raphael scoffed at the idea: "The councilors of kings are so wise that they need no advice from others (or at least so it seems to themselves)." Moreover, Raphael opined that most councilors merely bowed to the king's inclinations and were more concerned with maintaining favor than with offering impartial and wise advice.

Raphael also believed that the average king possessed different goals than he himself had; that "most princes apply themselves to warlike pursuits," whereas he had no interest or skill in the acquisition of riches or territory. Raphael asked Giles and More to imagine him before a king, cautioning him that "wars would throw whole nations into chaos, would exhaust the King's treasury and destroy his own people, [and] that a prince should take more care of his people's happiness than of his own." How receptive would the king be to that kind of advice?

More asked Raphael if he had ever been to England; the traveler replied that he had, and then proceeded to relate a story about a discussion he had entered into there with a British lawyer. The lawyer commented that he approved of hanging thieves for their crimes. But Raphael struck up an argument against this form of "justice." The high incidence of theft in England, he claimed, was attributable to the increased sheepherding by wealthy landowners. This new industry had forced the poorer farmers off their land while at the same time boosting the price of goods and feed; and these combined factors had caused a rise in unemployment. Without work or land, many people had turned to a life of crime or to begging. This "policy [of hanging thieves] may have the appearance of justice, but it is really neither just nor expedient." In his view, English society was "first making [people] thieves and then punishing them for it."

Another of Raphael's complaints was that many English noblemen, along with their entourages of lazy friends, "live idly like drones and subsist on the labor of their tenants." Such "wanton luxury" only exacerbated the poverty of the common people.

While More and Giles could understand the justice in Raphael's social criticisms, they were still unable to understand why he would not help rescue society by offering his higher wisdom in the political arena. Raphael replied:

As long as there is private property and while money is the standard of all things, I do not think that a nation can be governed either justly or happily .... Unless private property is entirely done away with, there can be no fair distribution of goods, nor can the world be happily governed.

Neither More nor Giles believed that this prerequisite to peace would ever be possible to attain. Raphael was not surprised by their scoffs, but averred that had they traveled with him on the island haven of Utopia, there they would have seen a truly orderly, peaceful society. The two Englishmen then prevailed on Raphael to acquaint them, after their meal, with all the customs and institutions of the Utopians.

Dinner completed, Raphael began his descriptive tour:

First of all, Utopian society was uniform, with all cities sharing the "same language, customs, institutions and laws." Its economy was guided by one fundamental rule: "All the Utopians, men and women alike, work at agriculture." Additionally, everyone worked at a trade of his own choosing, provided the trade proved useful to society. Although every citizen was required to work, each labored only six hours out of twenty-four. While to many such liberal conditions might seem untenable, Raphael pointed out that "the actual number of workers who supply the needs of mankind is much smaller than imagined," considering the many noblemen, beggars and others in contemporary society who produced nothing. For Utopians, the chief aim was to allow everyone enough free time to develop his or her mind.

Food on the island was distributed equally, with the sick tended to first. The rest of the population ate together in vast communal halls. If the people harvested or produced any surplus goods, these were shared with neighboring nations who might be suffering from plague or famine, or else used in trade. The Utopians imported nothing themselves, but traded only for the wherewithal to hire mercenaries in times of war. Rather than store their precious metals in vaults, Utopians used gold and silver to make chamber pots and stools, and "for the chains and fetters of their bondsmen." In this way the citizenry held gold and silver "up to scorn in every way." Idling was despised and never tolerated. No gambling was allowed and there existed no brothels or taverns in which Utopians might while away their time. When Utopia's inhabitants were not working, they were expected to pursue worthwhile activities such as reading and learning, or, if they preferred, to practice their trades. Anyone who proved especially adept at learning was allowed to forego physical labor in order to pursue scholarly work.

Utopia's laws encompassed "no fixed... penalties, but the senate [persons elected by the citizenry] fixed the punishment according to the wickedness of the crime." Serious crimes were punished by bondage. If a bondsperson refused to work, he was put to death- if, on the other hand, the slave proved hardworking and repentant, he was freed. The islanders believed that bondage, as a form of punishment, was "more beneficial to the commonwealth," and that the sight of bondage "longer deters other men from similar crimes."

Nothing in Utopia was "so inglorious as the glory won in war." The community would "go to war cautiously and reluctantly," entering into combat for two reasons only: either "to protect their own territory or that of their friends ... or to free some wretched people from tyrannous oppression." For the most part, when war was deemed necessary they hired mercenaries to do the fighting. If the mercenaries were defeated, then Utopians (men and women alike) would take up arms. In victory, they were "more ready to take prisoners than to make a great slaughter."

In all, Raphael was convinced that Utopian society was far superior to any other he had observed. He added particulars concerning Utopian marriage customs (prospective spouses were advised to see each other naked before they were wed, so that each would possess a full knowledge of what he or she was getting), fashion (all dressed in simple attire "fit both for winter and summer, to correspond to their gender and marital status), religious observances, foreign relations, health practices, and rules of the marketplace - each aspect of the island society having as its aim to make life better for everyone. In Raphael's opinion, Utopia was the only commonwealth which could accurately be called a "commonwealth",- all citizens there were treated equally and given equal opportunities and possessions: "When no one owns anything, all are rich."

Thus, Raphael ended his tale of Utopia, and even the practical, conventional Thomas More had to admit that "many things in the Utopian Commonwealth [he] wished ... to see followed among [his] citizens."

(Source: Awerty Notes)

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External Links
 

'Utopian Pluralism': A Systematic Approach to the Analysis of Pluralism in the Debate about Thomas More's Utopia

Catholic Enyclopedia: Utopia

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