Valentine Cherednikov, independent researcher, CSc in Philosophy
On the Day and Night’s Regimen in the Laws by Plato and in the François Rabelais’ Book of the Gargantua’s Acts
The distribution of activities in time is a preparation for being subordinate (the Seventh Book of Laws is devoted to this) and a ruler (as in the First Book of The Life of Gargantua and of Pantagruel novel). As a source of differentiation in the daily routine that separates the bodily, intellectual, and moral (spiritual) elements of upbringing for life in the state (and for death), the ancient Egyptian idea of the ninefold human nature has been considered.
day regimen, Renaissance, education, time, Ancient Egypt