Page - 167 - in The Complete Plato
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SOCRATES: Come, then, and let us see what we really mean about
rhetoric; for I do not know what my own meaning is as yet. When the
assembly meets to elect a physician or a shipwright or any other craftsman,
will the rhetorician be taken into counsel? Surely not. For at every election he
ought to be chosen who is most skilled; and, again, when walls have to be
built or harbours or docks to be constructed, not the rhetorician but the master
workman will advise; or when generals have to be chosen and an order of
battle arranged, or a position taken, then the military will advise and not the
rhetoricians: what do you say, Gorgias? Since you profess to be a rhetorician
and a maker of rhetoricians, I cannot do better than learn the nature of your
art from you. And here let me assure you that I have your interest in view as
well as my own. For likely enough some one or other of the young men
present might desire to become your pupil, and in fact I see some, and a good
many too, who have this wish, but they would be too modest to question you.
And therefore when you are interrogated by me, I would have you imagine
that you are interrogated by them. ‘What is the use of coming to you,
Gorgias?’ they will say—‘about what will you teach us to advise the state?—
about the just and unjust only, or about those other things also which Socrates
has just mentioned?’ How will you answer them?
GORGIAS: I like your way of leading us on, Socrates, and I will endeavour
to reveal to you the whole nature of rhetoric. You must have heard, I think,
that the docks and the walls of the Athenians and the plan of the harbour were
devised in accordance with the counsels, partly of Themistocles, and partly of
Pericles, and not at the suggestion of the builders.
SOCRATES: Such is the tradition, Gorgias, about Themistocles; and I
myself heard the speech of Pericles when he advised us about the middle
wall.
GORGIAS: And you will observe, Socrates, that when a decision has to be
given in such matters the rhetoricians are the advisers; they are the men who
win their point.
SOCRATES: I had that in my admiring mind, Gorgias, when I asked what
is the nature of rhetoric, which always appears to me, when I look at the
matter in this way, to be a marvel of greatness.
GORGIAS: A marvel, indeed, Socrates, if you only knew how rhetoric
comprehends and holds under her sway all the inferior arts. Let me offer you
a striking example of this. On several occasions I have been with my brother
Herodicus or some other physician to see one of his patients, who would not
allow the physician to give him medicine, or apply the knife or hot iron to
him; and I have persuaded him to do for me what he would not do for the
physician just by the use of rhetoric. And I say that if a rhetorician and a
167
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book The Complete Plato"
The Complete Plato
- Title
- The Complete Plato
- Author
- Plato
- Date
- ~347 B.C.
- Language
- English
- License
- PD
- Size
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Pages
- 1612
- Keywords
- Philosophy, Antique, Philosophie, Antike, Dialogues, Metaphysik, Metaphysics, Ideologie, Ideology, Englisch
- Categories
- Geisteswissenschaften
- International