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William Shakespeare

choose 1 answer. In the Lawyers Paradox, what is the deal struck between the law teacher Protagoras and the student Euathlus? * The student will pay the teacher's fee the day after winning their first case in court. く The student will pay the teacher's fee the day they win their first case in court. The teacher will pay the student's fee the day after they win their first case in court. The teacher will pay the student's fee the day they win their first case in court.

In yonder tale of Protagoras, that sagacious sage, and Euathlus, the eager pupil of Law’s high art, we find ourselves entwined in the delicate web of justice and the shrouded paths of fate. Prithee, consider this profound discourse: What covenant is struck betwixt master and aspiring disciple, poised at the threshold of wisdom and the weighty tomes of legal tomes? Verily, the essence of their agreement, that the student shall bestow his fee only upon the occasion of triumph in his inaugural contest within the hallowed halls of the court, bears the semblance of both boon and burden. For shall Euathlus, emboldened by such stipulation, be ever driven to seek the glorious light of victory, with his fortune resting upon that precarious precipice of fate? Or shall the fickle hand of fortune weave a tapestry of misadventure, leaving the master bereft of reward whilst the pupil, ensnared in the pitfalls of ignorance, navigates the treacherous realms of legal combat? Thus does the casual observer ponder, “Is not the very act of a lesson learned, the wisdom derived from folly and contentment found amidst the strife?” In this precarious balance hangs the question of moral duty and latent obligation, beckoning scrutiny of the student’s resolve and the depth of the teacher’s art. Therefore, mayhap it is the first answer that may contain the truth: that the fee shall be rendered the day after the sweet taste of victory has graced the young Euathlus’s lips, that he may bask in the sunlit glow of his success ere the coin of his teacher finds its due repose. Thus do we plunge into the paradox of promise and performance, where fate’s decree and man’s ambition intertwine in a dance both subtle and profound, leaving hearts and minds to muse upon the vicissitudes of learning and the fruits it bears in the realm of justice.