Page - 1296 - in The Complete Plato
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Yes, he said, the difference is only apparent.
Now let me ask you another question: Which is the art of painting designed
to be—an imitation of things as they are, or as they appear—of appearance or
of reality?
Of appearance.
Then the imitator, I said, is a long way off the truth, and can do all things
because he lightly touches on a small part of them, and that part an image. For
example: A painter will paint a cobbler, carpenter, or any other artist, though
he knows nothing of their arts; and, if he is a good artist, he may deceive
children or simple persons, when he shows them his picture of a carpenter
from a distance, and they will fancy that they are looking at a real carpenter.
Certainly.
And whenever anyone informs us that he has found a man who knows all
the arts, and all things else that anybody knows, and every single thing with a
higher degree of accuracy than any other man—whoever tells us this, I think
that we can only imagine him to be a simple creature who is likely to have
been deceived by some wizard or actor whom he met, and whom he thought
all-knowing, because he himself was unable to analyze the nature of
knowledge and ignorance and imitation.
Most true.
And so, when we hear persons saying that the tragedians, and Homer, who
is at their head, know all the arts and all things human, virtue as well as vice,
and divine things too, for that the good poet cannot compose well unless he
knows his subject, and that he who has not this knowledge can never be a
poet, we ought to consider whether here also there may not be a similar
illusion. Perhaps they may have come across imitators and been deceived by
them; they may not have remembered when they saw their works that these
were but imitations thrice removed from the truth, and could easily be made
without any knowledge of the truth, because they are appearances only and
not realities? Or, after all, they may be in the right, and poets do really know
the things about which they seem to the many to speak so well?
The question, he said, should by all means be considered.
Now do you suppose that if a person were able to make the original as well
as the image, he would seriously devote himself to the image-making branch?
Would he allow imitation to be the ruling principle of his life, as if he had
nothing higher in him?
I should say not.
1296
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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