Page - 222 - in The Complete Plato
Image of the Page - 222 -
Text of the Page - 222 -
rest of mankind, bent upon giving them pleasure, forgetting the public good in
the thought of their own interest, playing with the people as with children, and
trying to amuse them, but never considering whether they are better or worse
for this?
CALLICLES: I must distinguish. There are some who have a real care of
the public in what they say, while others are such as you describe.
SOCRATES: I am contented with the admission that rhetoric is of two
sorts; one, which is mere flattery and disgraceful declamation; the other,
which is noble and aims at the training and improvement of the souls of the
citizens, and strives to say what is best, whether welcome or unwelcome, to
the audience; but have you ever known such a rhetoric; or if you have, and
can point out any rhetorician who is of this stamp, who is he?
CALLICLES: But, indeed, I am afraid that I cannot tell you of any such
among the orators who are at present living.
SOCRATES: Well, then, can you mention any one of a former generation,
who may be said to have improved the Athenians, who found them worse and
made them better, from the day that he began to make speeches? for, indeed, I
do not know of such a man.
CALLICLES: What! did you never hear that Themistocles was a good
man, and Cimon and Miltiades and Pericles, who is just lately dead, and
whom you heard yourself?
SOCRATES: Yes, Callicles, they were good men, if, as you said at first,
true virtue consists only in the satisfaction of our own desires and those of
others; but if not, and if, as we were afterwards compelled to acknowledge,
the satisfaction of some desires makes us better, and of others, worse, and we
ought to gratify the one and not the other, and there is an art in distinguishing
them,—can you tell me of any of these statesmen who did distinguish them?
CALLICLES: No, indeed, I cannot.
SOCRATES: Yet, surely, Callicles, if you look you will find such a one.
Suppose that we just calmly consider whether any of these was such as I have
described. Will not the good man, who says whatever he says with a view to
the best, speak with a reference to some standard and not at random; just as
all other artists, whether the painter, the builder, the shipwright, or any other
look all of them to their own work, and do not select and apply at random
what they apply, but strive to give a definite form to it? The artist disposes all
things in order, and compels the one part to harmonize and accord with the
other part, until he has constructed a regular and systematic whole; and this is
true of all artists, and in the same way the trainers and physicians, of whom
222
back to the
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