Plato - Gorgias.txt

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                                     380 BC

                                    GORGIAS

                                    by Plato

                         translated by Benjamin Jowett

GORGIAS



  PERSONS OF THE DIALOGUE: CALLICLES; SOCRATES; CHAEREPHON; GORGIAS;

POLUS

  Scene: The house of Callicles.



  Callicles. The wise man, as the proverb says, is late for a fray,

but not for a feast.

  Socrates. And are we late for a feast?

  Cal. Yes, and a delightful feast; for Gorgias has just been

exhibiting to us many fine things.

  Soc. It is not my fault, Callicles; our friend Chaerephon is to

blame; for he would keep us loitering in the Agora.

  Chaerephon. Never mind, Socrates; the misfortune of which I have

been the cause I will also repair; for Gorgias is a friend of mine,

and I will make him give the exhibition again either now, or, if you

prefer, at some other time.

  Cal. What is the matter, Chaerephon-does Socrates want to hear

Gorgias?

  Chaer. Yes, that was our intention in coming.

  Cal. Come into my house, then; for Gorgias is staying with me, and

he shall exhibit to you.

  Soc. Very good, Callicles; but will he answer our questions? for I

want to hear from him what is the nature of his art, and what it is

which he professes and teaches; he may, as you [Chaerephon] suggest,

defer the exhibition to some other time.

  Cal. There is nothing like asking him, Socrates; and indeed to

answer questions is a part of his exhibition, for he was saying only

just now, that any one in my house might put any question to him,

and that he would answer.

  Soc. How fortunate! will you ask him, Chaerephon-?

  Chaer. What shall I ask him?

  Soc. Ask him who he is.

  Chaer. What do you mean?

  Soc. I mean such a question as would elicit from him, if he had been

a maker of shoes, the answer that he is a cobbler. Do you understand?

  Chaer. I understand, and will ask him: Tell me, Gorgias, is our

friend Callicles right in saying that you undertake to answer any

questions which you are asked?

  Gorgias. Quite right, Chaerephon: I was saying as much only just

now; and I may add, that many years have elapsed since any one has

asked me a new one.

  Chaer. Then you must be very ready, Gorgias.

  Gor. Of that, Chaerephon, you can make trial.

  Polus. Yes, indeed, and if you like, Chaerephon, you may make

trial of me too, for I think that Gorgias, who has been talking a long

time, is tired.

  Chaer. And do you, Polus, think that you can answer better than

Gorgias?

  Pol. What does that matter if I answer well enough for you?

  Chaer. Not at all:-and you shall answer if you like.

  Pol. Ask:-

  Chaer. My question is this: If Gorgias had the skill of his

brother Herodicus, what ought we to call him? Ought he not to have the

name which is given to his brother?

  Pol. Certainly.

  Chaer. Then we should be right in calling him a physician?

  Pol. Yes.

  Chaer. And if he had the skill of Aristophon the son of Aglaophon,

or of his brother Polygnotus, what ought we to call him?

  Pol. Clearly, a painter.

  Chaer. But now what shall we call him-what is the art in which he is

skilled.

  Pol. O Chaerephon, there are many arts among mankind which are

experimental, and have their origin in experience, for experience

makes the days of men to proceed according to art, and inexperience

according to chance, and different persons in different ways are

proficient in different arts, and the best persons in the best arts.

And our friend Gorgias is one of the best, and the art in which he

is a proficient is the noblest.

  Soc. Polus has been taught how to make a capital speech, Gorgias;

but he is not fulfilling the promise which he made to Chaerephon.

  Gor. What do you mean, Socrates?

  Soc. I mean that he has not exactly answered the question which he

was asked.

  Gor. Then why not ask him yourself?

  Soc. But I would much rather ask you, if you are disposed to answer:

for I see, from the few words which Polus has uttered, that he has

attended more to the art which is called rhetoric than to dialectic.

  Pol. What makes you say so, Socrates?

  Soc. Because, Polus, when Chaerephon asked you what was the art

which Gorgias knows, you praised it as if you were answering some

one who found fault with it, but you never said what the art was.

  Pol. Why, did I not say that it was the noblest of arts?

  Soc. Yes, indeed, but that was no answer to the question: nobody

asked what was the quality, but what was the nature, of the art, and

by what name we were to describe Gorgias. And I would still beg you

briefly and clearly, as you answered Chaerephon when he asked you at

first, to say what this art is, and what we ought to call Gorgias:

Or rather, Gorgias, let me turn to you, and ask the same question what

are we to call you, and what is the art which you profess?

  Gor. Rhetoric, Socrates, is my art.

  Soc. Then I am to call you a rhetorician?

  Gor. Yes, Socrates, and a good one too, if you would call me that

which, in Homeric language, "I boast myself to be."

  Soc. I should wish to do so.

  Gor. Then pray do.

  Soc. And are we to say that you are able to make other men

rhetoricians?

  Gor. Yes, that is exactly what I profess to make them, not only at

Athens, but in all places.

  Soc. And will you continue to ask and answer questions, Gorgias,

as we are at present doing and reserve for another occasion the longer

mode of speech which Polus was attempting? Will you keep your promise,

and answer shortly the questions which are asked of you?

  Gor. Some answers, Socrates, are of necessity longer; but I will

do my best to make them as short as possible; for a part of my

profession is that I can be as short as any one.

  Soc. That is what is wanted, Gorgias; exhibit the shorter method

now, and the longer one at some other time.

  Gor. Well, I will; and you will certainly say, that you never

heard a man use fewer words.

  Soc. Very good then; as you profess to be a rhetorician, and a maker

of rhetoricians, let me ask you, with what is rhetoric concerned: I

might ask with what is weaving concerned, and you would reply (would

you not?), with the making of garments?

  Gor. Yes.

  Soc. And music is concerned with the composition of melodies?

  Gor. It is.

  Soc. By Here, Gorgias, I admire the surpassing brevity of your

answers.

  Gor. Yes, Socrates, I do think myself good at that.

  Soc. I am glad to hear it; answer me in like manner about

rhetoric: with what is rhetoric concerned?

  Gor. With discourse.

  Soc. What sort of discourse, Gorgias?-such discourse as would

teach the sick under what treatment they might get well?

  Gor. No.

  Soc. Then rhetoric does not treat of all kinds of discourse?

  Gor. Certainly not.

  Soc. And yet rhetoric makes men able to speak?

  Gor. Yes.

  Soc. And to understand that about which they speak?

  Gor. Of course.

  Soc. But does not the art of medicine, which we were just now

mentioning, also make men able to understand and speak about the sick?

  Gor. Certainly.

  Soc. Then medicine also treats of discourse?

  Gor. Yes.

  Soc. Of discourse concerning diseases?

  Gor. Just so.

  Soc. And does not gymnastic also treat of discourse concerning the

good or evil condition of the body?

  Gor. Very true.

  Soc. And the same, Gorgias, is true of the other arts:-all of them

treat of discourse concerning the subjects with which they severally

have to do.

  Gor. Clearly.

  Soc. Then why, if you call rhetoric the art which treats of

discourse, and all the other arts treat of discourse, do you not

call them arts of rhetoric?

  Gor. Because, Socrates, the knowledge of the other arts has only

to do with some sort of external action, as of the hand; but there

is no such action of the hand in rhetoric which works and takes effect

only through the medium of discourse. And therefore I am justified

in saying that rhetoric treats of discourse.

  Soc. I am not sure whether I entirely understand you, but I dare say

I shall soon know better; please to answer me a question:-you would

allow that there are arts?

  Gor. Yes.

  Soc. As to the arts generally, they are for the most part

concerned with doing, and require little or no speaking; in

painting, and statuary, and many other arts, the work may proceed in

silence; and of such arts I suppose you would say that they do not

come within the province of rhetoric.

  Gor. You perfectly conceive my meaning, Socrates.

  Soc. But there are other arts which work wholly through the medium

of language, and require either no action or very little, as, for

example, the arts of arithmetic, of calculation, of geometry, and of

playing draughts; in some of these speech is pretty nearly

co-extensive with action, but in most of them the verbal element is

greater-they depend wholly on words for their efficacy and power:

and I take your meaning to be that rhetoric is an art of this latter

sort?

  Gor. Exactly.

  Soc. And yet I do not believe that you really mean to call any of

these arts rhetoric; although the precise expression which you used

was, that rhetoric is an art which works and takes effect only through

the medium of discourse; and an adversary who wished to be captious

might say, "And so, Gorgias, you call arithmetic rhetoric." But I do

not think that you really call arithmetic rhetoric any more than

geometry would be so called by you.

  Gor. You are quite right, Socrates, in your apprehension of my

meaning.

  Soc. Well, then, let me now have the r...
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