Therefore, Athens' crime can never be judged and they will never live long enough to be punished. While waiting for death, it gives people time to live with crime. There was no precious morality of Athens at that time. People have not completed morally approved laws. That means that no one admits it there, or they can profit from it, so it is normal for some people not to do anything. For them, morality is considered simply a waste of time because they are going to be destroyed.
The plague of Athens has been devastated for four years, leading to the failure of Athens. The cause of the plague of Athens is still under debate. The most common infections classified as plague include influenza, epidemic typhus, typhoid fever, plague, small pox and measles. Thucydides provided the only available explanation of the plague of Athens. Given the nuances of translation, plague, smallpox, measles are the most likely causes of plague. In my opinion, measles are the most likely cause of the plague of Athens.
In the past 60 years, the plague that hit Athens has been confirmed as one of more than a dozen infectious diseases. Among J. F. D. "Plague of Athens", Shrewsbury considered that the disease was "new" for Athens. Thucydides suggested that Greek physicians are not aware of the disease that struck the population. Thucydides explained these symptoms to allow future people to recognize the recurrence of the disease. Shrewsbury has provided a list of CE opinion since the 1940's to identify this disease. As the criminal, typhoid fever, typhoid fever, small pox, plague and combinations of the foregoing have been proposed.
Using epidemiological methods and mathematical models to compare infectious diseases in Athens with other previously mentioned ancient infectious diseases, David M. Morens and Robert J. Littman reported a possible propagation pattern of "Athens epidemiological phenomena" There are three types of infections, including general reasons (from food and water supply), people to people, and reservoirs Popular fountains from animals, insects or the environment). To spread this disease rapidly and extensively, and to cause extensive destruction of human lives, the epidemic may be a respiratory system, so using a pool of animals or insects as a possible cause There. In this case, the epidemic in Athens most closely resembles Typhoid or Smallpox events, but both correspond best to the explanation of Thucydides records.