Page - 757 - in The Complete Plato
Image of the Page - 757 -
Text of the Page - 757 -
come into closer contact with realities, and have learnt by sad experience to
see and feel the truth of things, are not the greater part of them compelled to
change many opinions which they formerly entertained, so that the great
appears small to them, and the easy difficult, and all their dreamy speculations
are overturned by the facts of life?
THEAETETUS: That is my view, as far as I can judge, although, at my
age, I may be one of those who see things at a distance only.
STRANGER: And the wish of all of us, who are your friends, is and
always will be to bring you as near to the truth as we can without the sad
reality. And now I should like you to tell me, whether the Sophist is not
visibly a magician and imitator of true being; or are we still disposed to think
that he may have a true knowledge of the various matters about which he
disputes?
THEAETETUS: But how can he, Stranger? Is there any doubt, after what
has been said, that he is to be located in one of the divisions of children’s
play?
STRANGER: Then we must place him in the class of magicians and
mimics.
THEAETETUS: Certainly we must.
STRANGER: And now our business is not to let the animal out, for we
have got him in a sort of dialectical net, and there is one thing which he
decidedly will not escape.
THEAETETUS: What is that?
STRANGER: The inference that he is a juggler.
THEAETETUS: Precisely my own opinion of him.
STRANGER: Then, clearly, we ought as soon as possible to divide the
image- making art, and go down into the net, and, if the Sophist does not run
away from us, to seize him according to orders and deliver him over to
reason, who is the lord of the hunt, and proclaim the capture of him; and if he
creeps into the recesses of the imitative art, and secretes himself in one of
them, to divide again and follow him up until in some sub-section of imitation
he is caught. For our method of tackling each and all is one which neither he
nor any other creature will ever escape in triumph.
THEAETETUS: Well said; and let us do as you propose.
STRANGER: Well, then, pursuing the same analytic method as before, I
think that I can discern two divisions of the imitative art, but I am not as yet
able to see in which of them the desired form is to be found.
757
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