Euthydemus

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Book by Plato - Euthydemus, page 6

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this young man to become wise, are you in jest or in real earnest?

I was led by this to imagine that they fancied us to have been

jesting when we asked them to converse with the youth, and that this

made them jest and play, and being under this impression, I was the

more decided in saying that we were in profound earnest.

Dionysodorus said:

Reflect, Socrates; you may have to deny your words.

I have reflected, I said; and I shall never deny my words.

Well, said he, and so you say that you wish Cleinias to become wise?

Undoubtedly.

And he is not wise as yet?

At least his modesty will not allow him to say that he is.

You wish him, he said, to become wise and not, to be ignorant?

That we do.

You wish him to be what he is not, and no longer to be what he is?

I was thrown into consternation at this.

Taking advantage of my consternation he added: You wish him no

longer to be what he is, which can only mean that you wish him to

perish. Pretty lovers and friends they must be who want their

favourite not to be, or to perish!

When Ctesippus heard this he got very angry (as a lover well

might) and said: Stranger of Thurii-if politeness would allow me I

should say, A plague upon you! What can make you tell such a lie about

me and the others, which I hardly like to repeat, as that I wish

Cleinias to perish?

Euthydemus replied: And do you think, Ctesippus, that it is possible

to tell a lie?

Yes, said Ctesippus; I should be mad to say anything else.

And in telling a lie, do you tell the thing of which you speak or

not?

You tell the thing of which you speak.

And he who tells, tells that thing which he tells, and no other?

Yes, said Ctesippus.

And that is a distinct thing apart from other things?

Certainly.

And he who says that thing says that which is?

Yes.

And he who says that which is, says the truth. And therefore

Dionysodorus, if he says that which is, says the truth of you and no

lie.

Yes, Euthydemus, said Ctesippus; but in saying this, he says what is

not.

Euthydemus answered: And that which is not is not?

True.

And that which is not is nowhere?

Nowhere.

And can any one do anything about that which has no existence, or do

to Cleinias that which is not and is nowhere?

I think not, said Ctesippus.

Well, but do rhetoricians, when they speak in the assembly, do

nothing?

Nay, he said, they do something.

And doing is making?

Yes.

And speaking is doing and making?

He agreed.

Then no one says that which is not, for in saying what is not he

would be doing something; and you have already acknowledged that no

one can do what is not. And therefore, upon your own showing, no one

says what is false; but if Dionysodorus says anything, he says what is

true and what is.

Yes, Euthydemus, said Ctesippus; but he speaks of things in a

certain way and manner, and not as they really are.

Why, Ctesippus, said Dionysodorus, do you mean to say that any one

speaks of things as they are?

Yes, he said-all gentlemen and truth-speaking persons.

And are not good things good, and evil things evil?

He assented.

And you say that gentlemen speak of things as they are?

Yes.

Then the good speak evil of evil things, if they speak of them as

they are?

Yes, indeed, he said; and they speak evil of evil men. And if I

may give you a piece of advice, you had better take care that they

do not speak evil of you, since I can tell you that the good speak

evil of the evil.

And do they speak great things of the great, rejoined Euthydemus,

and warm things of the warm?

To be sure they do, said Ctesippus; and they speak coldly of the

insipid and cold dialectician.

You are abusive, Ctesippus, said Dionysodorus, you are abusive!

Indeed, I am not, Dionysodorus, he replied; for I love you and am

giving you friendly advice, and, if I could, would persuade you not

like a boor to say in my presence that I desire my beloved, whom I

value above all men, to perish.

I saw that they were getting exasperated with one another, so I made

a joke with him and said: O Ctesippus, I think that we must allow

the strangers to use language in their own way, and not quarrel with

them about words, but be thankful for what they give us. If they

know how to destroy men in such a way as to make good and sensible men

out of bad and foolish ones-whether this is a discovery of their

own, or whether they have learned from some one else this new sort

of death and destruction which enables them to get rid of a bad man

and turn him into a good one-if they know this (and they do know

this-at any rate they said just now that this was the secret of

their newly-discovered art)-let them, in their phraseology, destroy

the youth and make him wise, and all of us with him. But if you

young men do not like to trust yourselves with them, then fiat

experimentum in corpore senis; I will be the Carian on whom they shall

operate. And here I offer my old person to Dionysodorus; he may put me

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