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which these others are deficient, having received an excellent education; to
this many Athenians can testify. And you are my friend. Shall I tell you why I
think so? I know that you, Callicles, and Tisander of Aphidnae, and Andron
the son of Androtion, and Nausicydes of the deme of Cholarges, studied
together: there were four of you, and I once heard you advising with one
another as to the extent to which the pursuit of philosophy should be carried,
and, as I know, you came to the conclusion that the study should not be
pushed too much into detail. You were cautioning one another not to be
overwise; you were afraid that too much wisdom might unconsciously to
yourselves be the ruin of you. And now when I hear you giving the same
advice to me which you then gave to your most intimate friends, I have a
sufficient evidence of your real good- will to me. And of the frankness of
your nature and freedom from modesty I am assured by yourself, and the
assurance is confirmed by your last speech. Well then, the inference in the
present case clearly is, that if you agree with me in an argument about any
point, that point will have been sufficiently tested by us, and will not require
to be submitted to any further test. For you could not have agreed with me,
either from lack of knowledge or from superfluity of modesty, nor yet from a
desire to deceive me, for you are my friend, as you tell me yourself. And
therefore when you and I are agreed, the result will be the attainment of
perfect truth. Now there is no nobler enquiry, Callicles, than that which you
censure me for making,—What ought the character of a man to be, and what
his pursuits, and how far is he to go, both in maturer years and in youth? For
be assured that if I err in my own conduct I do not err intentionally, but from
ignorance. Do not then desist from advising me, now that you have begun,
until I have learned clearly what this is which I am to practise, and how I may
acquire it. And if you find me assenting to your words, and hereafter not
doing that to which I assented, call me ‘dolt,’ and deem me unworthy of
receiving further instruction. Once more, then, tell me what you and Pindar
mean by natural justice: Do you not mean that the superior should take the
property of the inferior by force; that the better should rule the worse, the
noble have more than the mean? Am I not right in my recollection?
CALLICLES: Yes; that is what I was saying, and so I still aver.
SOCRATES: And do you mean by the better the same as the superior? for I
could not make out what you were saying at the time—whether you meant by
the superior the stronger, and that the weaker must obey the stronger, as you
seemed to imply when you said that great cities attack small ones in
accordance with natural right, because they are superior and stronger, as
though the superior and stronger and better were the same; or whether the
better may be also the inferior and weaker, and the superior the worse, or
whether better is to be defined in the same way as superior:—this is the point
203
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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