23.
Whoever says this must perforce admit that sacrilege, though it be an evil because it works much evil, is yet partly good because it accomplishes a certain amount of good.
What can be more monstrous than this?
We have, to be sure, actually convinced the world that sacrilege, theft, and adultery are to be regarded as among the goods.
How many men there are who do not blush at theft, how many who boast of having committed adultery!
For petty sacrilege is punished, but sacrilege on a grand scale is honoured by a triumphal procession.
Book: Moral Letters Vol II
Subtitle: Seneca's timeless letters of advice and wisdom.
Author: Seneca
Chapter: Some arguments in favour of the simple life
Location: Chapter 87, Section 23
Content:
23.
Whoever says this must perforce admit that sacrilege, though it be an evil because it works much evil, is yet partly good because it accomplishes a certain amount of good.
What can be more monstrous than this?
We have, to be sure, actually convinced the world that sacrilege, theft, and adultery are to be regarded as among the goods.
How many men there are who do not blush at theft, how many who boast of having committed adultery!
For petty sacrilege is punished, but sacrilege on a grand scale is honoured by a triumphal procession.