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Euthydemus

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Dialogue by Plato.English and Greek Texts.

97 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 385

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555 people want to read

About the author

Plato

5,204 books8,602 followers
Plato (Greek: Πλάτων), born Aristocles (c. 427 – 348 BC), was an ancient Greek philosopher of the Classical period who is considered a foundational thinker in Western philosophy and an innovator of the written dialogue and dialectic forms. He raised problems for what became all the major areas of both theoretical philosophy and practical philosophy, and was the founder of the Platonic Academy, a philosophical school in Athens where Plato taught the doctrines that would later become known as Platonism.
Plato's most famous contribution is the theory of forms (or ideas), which has been interpreted as advancing a solution to what is now known as the problem of universals. He was decisively influenced by the pre-Socratic thinkers Pythagoras, Heraclitus, and Parmenides, although much of what is known about them is derived from Plato himself.
Along with his teacher Socrates, and Aristotle, his student, Plato is a central figure in the history of philosophy. Plato's entire body of work is believed to have survived intact for over 2,400 years—unlike that of nearly all of his contemporaries. Although their popularity has fluctuated, they have consistently been read and studied through the ages. Through Neoplatonism, he also greatly influenced both Christian and Islamic philosophy. In modern times, Alfred North Whitehead famously said: "the safest general characterization of the European philosophical tradition is that it consists of a series of footnotes to Plato."

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 104 reviews
Profile Image for Manny.
Author 48 books16.1k followers
June 7, 2014
I fear other readers may also find this extended satire on Sophism longer than strictly necessary. In order to help busy people make better use of their time, I offer this new translation, where I have taken the liberty of abridging and modernizing the dialogue in a few places.

EUTHYDEMUS: My brother and I are the greatest philosophers in the world. Ask us anything.

CLEINAS: Like what?

EUTHYDEMUS: Okay, here's your starter for ten. Is a thing the same as itself, or is it a different thing?

CLEINAS: Huh?

SOCRATES: [whispers] You're supposed to say it's the same as itself.

CLEINAS: Ah... it's the same as itself.

EUTHYDEMUS: I shall demonstrate to you that you are wrong. Consider a door. Do you maintain that it is always a door?

CLEINAS: I do, of course.

EUTHYDEMUS: But what about when it is ajar?

[General applause for EUTHYDEMUS's brilliant philosophical insight]

EUTHYDEMUS: I'll let my brother do the next one.

DIONYSODORUS: Why do elephants paint their toenails red?

CLEINAS: I do not know.

DIONYSODORUS: It is so that they can hide in cherry trees.

CLEINAS: But, I have never seen an elephant in a cherry tree?

DIONYSODORUS: Proves it works then!

[More applause]

CRITO: Are these clowns real philosophers?

SOCRATES: Hey, you're smarter than you look.
Profile Image for Roy Lotz.
Author 2 books9,056 followers
November 5, 2018
I certainly do not think that I am a stone, I said, though I am afraid that you may prove me to be one.

Euthydemus is Plato’s most explicitly comical work. As in earlier Socratic dialogues, its focus is the conflict between genuine Socratic philosophy and the empty Sophistical practice. Here, however, the focus is not on the question of virtue or knowledge, but on logic itself. Socrates recounts a meeting with two sophists, Euthydemus and his brother Dionysodorus, who are experts in the art of fighting with words. These two can prove any thesis, however apparently absurd, such as that every person is omniscient or that lying is impossible. They do this mainly through punning: by playing on the multiple meanings of words, they entrap their interlocutor into admitting manifestly false conclusions.

Plato’s response to this practice is not, as in Aristotle, a treatise on logical fallacies, but an extended satire on this empty wordplay. Yet the modern reader will likely not be amused for very long, since the arguments parodied by Plato are so silly as to be beyond credulity. Clearly no real person could fall for this nonsense. But as the translator of my edition, Benjamin Jowett, argues, this sort of sophism would not have been so transparent to Plato’s contemporaries, living in a time before dictionaries, grammar books, or formalized logic. Indeed, the fallacies to which minds were prey in those days would be shocking now. So Plato, and his disciple Aristotle, can be thanked for doing us a service in decisively seeing through this facile form of argumentation. It is a testament to Plato’s success, then, that this dialogue now seems so pointless.
356 reviews57 followers
September 7, 2016
A lighthearted, heavy-handed satire of Sophists; the twist is that these guys are the most powerful lawyers and merchants in Greece.

Although comedic, the topics of this dialogue correspond to conversations that I see every day in which nonsense-terms are introduced, not defined, and then used in broken arguments, or worse yet perfectly valid arguments after which the arguer walks away victorious, congratulating himself for being so clever. The issues here are the soundness of propositions and the rules assented to in a conversation—you can't force someone to find something sound, you can only present evidence and allow that person to interpret it themselves nor can you force someone to be cooperative; there's no way to induce someone to have a good will, you have to make it worth their while, and if they are already the wealthiest man in Greece who has little interest in talking to you then there's little that you can do.

There is another point of interest here with regard to language games: these Sophists are playing a language game with the purpose of convincing the crowd that they are clever philosophers. They succeed at doing this, and you can argue that the crowd is just a bunch of ignorant Greek farmers but who cares, their language game is successful, so can you really say that they aren't philosophers, even successful philosophers, or at the very least skilled technicians and operators in a very real sense?

Even Socrates is unsure at the end: "Do not trouble about those who practice philosophy, whether they are good or bad; but examine the thing itself well and carefully. And if philosophy appears a bad thing to you, turn every man from it, not only your sons; but if it appears to you such as I think it to be, take courage, pursue it, and practice it, as the saying is, 'both you and your house.' "
Profile Image for MJD.
111 reviews29 followers
January 11, 2019
One of the more entertaining, and outright comical, works of Plato.
Profile Image for Jacob Aitken.
1,687 reviews420 followers
February 17, 2021
The book's difficulty resides in the fact that the Sophists with whom Socrates wars are awful people and rather painful to read. I also saw that I was a Sophist of sorts around 2007, and I didn't enjoy that autobiographical realization.

The dialogue concerns a misuse of reason. The Sophists turn everything one says into the opposite. Socrates identifies their problem: "They cannot be made to understand the nature of intermediates [306]. For all persons or things, which are intermediate between two other things...participate in both of them."

This is a great statement that should have been introduced 20 pages earlier.
Profile Image for David Sarkies.
1,931 reviews383 followers
March 7, 2020
The Ancient Art of Arguing
7 March 2020

This is a rather odd dialogue, namely because Plato is recording a conversation that Socrates was having with a friend about a conversation that he had with a couple of other people previously. In a way, I am sort of scratching my head and asking why? Why distance the conversation the way that he has done by putting it into a conversation that Socrates was having with Crito? There are probably some reasons though, namely because the topic of the conversation was about debate, and Socrates was demonstrating to Crito some of the fallacies that the Sophists use when attempting to argue.

Ironically, this was the topic of one of my subjects at University this week (though, of course, it only took up half the lecture, namely because I am studying computer science), and that is the fallacy, or otherwise known as the faulty argument. I’m not necessarily going to say that it is a falsehood, because what might be said may not necessarily be a lie, but rather what it is is the attempt to win an argument, or a debate, by avoiding using evidence to actually prove what you have said is true.

For instance, we have what is termed the ad hominem fallacy, namely that we don’t attack somebody’s argument, but rather we attack their character. I’m sure that we have plenty of examples of this argument, and honestly, it is used by politicians all the time. However, sometimes I do feel that character is actually important in some contexts, especially when you are, say, running for office. On the other hand, it is a pretty lazy way of putting across an alternate point of view – attacking the messenger as opposed to the message – just ask Greta Thumburg.

There are quite a lot of them actually, though when this dialogue was written they didn’t necessarily have a detailed description of each of them. In fact, the word fallacy didn’t even exist. So, in a way, what is happening here is that Socrates, or rather Plato, is attempting to set the foundations of what one could consider being the logical way of argument, and pointing out to his students, using the example of the two Sophists in his dialogue, things one should use to make an argument. Then again, back in those days, the Sophists were quite similar to the lawyers of our days, it is just that they didn’t speak, they just wrote the speeches (in the Athenian legal system, you had to represent yourself, but there was no rule preventing you from getting somebody else to write your speech for you).

The problem is that these arguments work, which is why people continue to use them. In fact, it is much harder to convince people by appealing to evidence as opposed to simply using a fallacious argument. For instance, take the situation in Australia this week – people rushed out and pretty much cleared out every supermarket of toilet people. In fact, people were going out with huge packets in their trollies. The thing was that there is no shortage of toilet paper in Australia – it is made here, and there is pretty much enough to last us for years. This fact was being presented constantly, but the thing was that even after four days the supermarket shelves were still empty – people just didn’t want to listen to the evidence.

Empty Shelves

(And here is the article, just in case you hadn’t heard of the toilet paper panic).

Take for instance the following argument:


Stalin was a communist.
Stalin committed mass genocide.
Therefore all communists will commit mass genocide.


Let us do something slightly different and change the word communist with the worth atheist:


Stalin was an atheist.
Stalin committed mass genocide.
Therefore all atheists will commit mass genocide.


Now, a good friend of mine showed me the perfect way to defeat that argument:

Stalin breathed oxygen ...


Well, if they accept the above two arguments, one wanders whether they will accept the third one and stop breathing oxygen?

Yeah, this is the biggest problem with arguing, and it doesn’t matter what you do, what memes you post, or what evidence you present, people are still going to resort to fallacious arguments because, as I said, they work. Not only that, but they are quick, easy, and you don’t always come away looking like a fool. Okay, in the eyes of some people you do, but in the eyes of others, well, you don’t. In fact, many of these people don’t care about the people who actually think they are fools, as long as they are able to appeal to the people who count, who tend to be the masses. How do you think Donald Trump because president?

In the end, I think the following picture pretty much demonstrates the power of the fallacious argument:

I can’t believe I still have to protest this shit
1,529 reviews21 followers
January 5, 2021
Detta är en bok som balanserar mellan filosofi och humor, och därigenom bidrar till att nedgöra sofisternas idéer om att språk och substans är samma sak. Den gör detta genom att dra nytta av en serie ordlekar och hur dessa gör argument omöjliga att lita till. Rådet i boken är enkelt: om någonting säger emot ditt bondförnuft, utgå från att personen har använt ord för att lura dig. Kopplingarna till nutiden ger sig själva.

Trots detta skulle jag säga att boken inte egentligen är värd speciellt mycket uppmärksamhet. Den innehåller inte någonting nytt som är överlägset säg Talebs böcker, och säger inte det som sägs på ett sätt som är starkare än moderna (lättillgängligare) formuleringar av samma påstående. Jag rekommenderar den därför inte.
Profile Image for Keith.
853 reviews39 followers
June 20, 2015
It’s been a long time since I’ve read any of Plato’s dialogues, so I was looking forward to reading this slender book. But I was disappointed. The dialogue focused on niggling issues, callow word play, puns and words taken out of context. A character at the end of the book described it perfectly as “chattering and making a worthless fuss about matters of no consequence.” Amen!

So what was the point? To show how awful nihilistic logic and wordplay are? It is necessary to spend an entire dialogue doing that? It’s like writing a novel about writing a bad novel and writing it poorly.

The translation by Rosamond Kent Sprague was nice and captured Socrates’ impish personality. However, rather than format it like a play, it was formatted like a novel but without using quote marks, which make reading it more difficult than it had to be.

I’m assuming Plato’s other dialogues are better. I can’t recommend this one.
Profile Image for Billie.
Author 15 books26 followers
July 15, 2019
This was a really pleasant surprise. Not that I have low expectations but this particular dialogue stood out to me. That may be because the form and format of Socrates' discussion with his interlocutors is somewhat off-brand in this one. Anyway, the Euthydemus is a fun dialogue in which Socrates effectively exposes the uselessness of those who "win" by using word games and language quirks rather than engaging with meaning.
Profile Image for Hussain Ali.
Author 2 books162 followers
October 28, 2015
لب لباب المحاورة في نهايتها. عندما قال سقراط

"كن معقولا يا كريتون، ولا تهتم سواء أكان أولئك الذين يتعقبون الفلسفة أخيارا أو أشرارا، بل فكر في الفلسفة عينها. اختبرها جيدا وبحق. وإذا كانت سيئة حاول أن تبعد كل الرجال عنها، وليس ولديك فقط. لكن إذا كانت كما أعهد منها، فاتبعها عندئذ واخدمها أنت وأهل بيتك، كما يقول القول المأثور، وكن سعيدا."
Profile Image for Miguel Angel Lozano.
107 reviews24 followers
January 18, 2021
Eutidemo y Dionisodoro son dos sofistas extranjeros que se proclaman como los más sabios y se atreven a decir que lo saben todo, literalmente el gran todo. Sócrates, como de costumbre, es escéptico y decide probar su conocimiento; pronto, se da cuenta de las técnicas que sus adversarios usan y les demuestra como están embaucando la conversación. Una refutación, me imagino que, es a lo que nunca se habían enfrentado los dos hermanos que, hay que reconocer, hasta el momento han sido los rivales más fuertes de Sócrates; pero que, al final, fallaron en demostrar que sabían más allá de un razonamiento puro. Cabe hacer énfasis en que Sócrates no pretende saber lo que no sabe, y al refutar, no lo hace con la intención de impartir su doctrina, porque no tiene una que sea verdadera absolutamente, sino que al hacerlo, pretende hacer que su interlocutor vea que él tampoco sabe.

Otro punto importante es que, los hermanos me parecieron muy poco honorables al no aceptar que se les había descubierto su técnica, sino que siguieron necios empujando por donde mismo, ¡ay, cuantos he conocido que se comportan así, que, se apegan tanto a sus hipótesis, como si de ellas dependiera también su amor propio! Qué después, muy molestos proceden a insultarlo directamente a uno. ¿Pero que no es mejor, una vez detectada la falla, abandonar lo falso, y aunque se estanque uno en la ignorancia, llega a ser mejor que quedarse en el error? Supongo que será una tendencia general de conducta, no digo que yo no, al ser más joven también llegue a comportarme así, ¡ni tampoco estoy tan seguro que una postura de ignorancia total sea lo mejor para un homo sapiens! Solo habría que haber visto a Pirrón el escéptico, que prácticamente vivió dudándolo todo, incluso su propia existencia, ¡hay un riesgo en tanto pensar, al final, uno puede parecer a los ojos de muchos un verdadero demente, mientras que ha llegado a conclusiones racionales! ¡Como Diógenes que terminó viviendo desnudo en la ciudad, sin poseer nada, ladrando como un perro, orinando a las personas y defecando por gusto en lugares públicos! Ya no sé que me deparará el continuar estas lecturas, si me ven mendigando en unos años, al menos se sabrá porque fue.

Profile Image for Oliver.
119 reviews12 followers
March 3, 2025
If the sophist of the Protagoras is a reasoned and respectable wielder of elegant rhetoric, a subtle if imperfect interrogator of thought, then the sophist of the Euthydemus is… well… comically incompetent, and mercilessly treated as such.

Plato tends to have a rather complicated and ambivalent relationship with the sophists, but this is unambiguously his gloves-off hit-piece — and it’s an absolute riot.

The dialogue is an bonafide satire, presenting the titular character and his sophist colleague as cunning abusers of words, flogging imprecise relativism in the guise of actionable virtue, teasing the curious — who, when push comes to shove, they appear to hold in contempt — and betraying their (purported) principles.

The way they treat Socrates (they expressly ridicule his age a number of times), you can almost picture them sneering from amongst the accusers at his trial. They’re likened to magicians, mendacious enchanters of the masses, demagogues in potentia; and yet, here they’re revealed to be little more than clumsy manipulators getting their kicks out of trapping unsuspecting interlocutors in their semantic schemes.

Whilst it’s hardly amongst Plato’s most profound or edifying works, it’s absolutely one of his most rip-roaring. I won’t spoil them here, but a fair few exchanges genuinely had me chuckling under my breath (a rare achievement for ancient philosophy, in my experience).

To any modern reader, the sophists are so blatantly, well, engaging in sophistry (there’s no such thing as falsehood! One either knows nothing or everything!), that we hardly require much additional critical exegesis of their arguments from Socrates.

That being said, his hilariously ironic snark oversatures their snappy back-and-forths, making for a seriously enjoyable (and memorable) read. A snarling, sarcastic tension pervades the entire discourse, imbuing it with a dynamic drama and driving the momentum into maddening absurdity. Go into it expecting a good time, not a revelation.


P.S. If someone wants to throw this on at their local theatre, I’ll bring the popcorn.
Profile Image for Chris Bowley.
134 reviews42 followers
August 20, 2023
Euthydemus contains lots of wisdom, though ultimate comes across as a comparison between the methods of the true philosopher according to Plato (those seeking wisdom i.e Socrates) and sophists (those seeking to win debates with words). Euthydemus is enjoyable on multiple fronts: the philosophical questions provoke thought; the manner of speaking (Socrates in particular) and the absurd nature of some of the arguments are often hilarious; there’s linguistic gold in how ambiguities in Ancient Greek can be used to form sophisms; as with other dialogues or plays, it is filled with cultural references of the time that help a learner understand fifth-century Athens.
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Some notes:

-Actual teaching, emparting knowledge VS proving somebody wrong for the sake of it, achieved by dual/multiple meanings of many words.
-Arguments can have invalidities but should never be null (meaningless).
-If ignorance guides traditional goods (e.g. wealth), they can become great evils.
-Some weak arguments from Plato/Soc: wisdom is luck/don't need luck if you have wisdom.
-Knowledge on how to use something very important. If we don't know how to use eternal life, it isn't good having it.
-Genuine puzzlement vs confusion caused by sophist.
-Ad hominem attacks OK in dialectic.
-Theory of recollection: immortal soul has knowledge of everything, we remember parts of it.
-Funny bits: logically arguing each other's fathers are pigs and dogs.
-People (of the time) see philosophers as sophists. No distinction between philosophy and sophistry to most citizens. Leads to death of Socrates.
-Good practioners in any subject are truly rare.
61 reviews
September 24, 2025
Euthydemos ist ein Gespräch zwischen Sokrates und zwei Sophisten, die mit Sprache spielen und dadurch vieles infrage stellen. Das Werk soll satirisch die Bedeutung echter Philosophie im Gegensatz zu leerem Gerede verdeutlichen. Die beiden Nicht-Philosophen streiten im Gespräch und widerlegen alles Gesagte, unabhängig davon, ob es richtig oder falsch ist. Sie konzentrieren sich darauf, mithilfe sprachlicher Kunstgriffe eine vermeintliche Wahrheit zu konstruieren, sind jedoch an der tatsächlichen Wahrheit kaum interessiert.

Insgesamt fand ich das Buch etwas zu lang und zu detailliert. Besonders einige kurze Kapitel, in denen es um feine Unterschiede der altgriechischen Grammatik geht, um daraus eine vermeintliche Wahrheit abzuleiten, haben mir nicht gefallen, vor allem wegen ihrer heutigen Irrelevanz.

Gut gefallen haben mir hingegen einige der kurzen Erklärungen von Sokrates über die Bedeutung von Weisheit („Denn nie wird einer aus Weisheit etwas verfehlen, sondern immer richtig handeln und es erlangen. Denn sonst wäre es ja keine Weisheit mehr.“) sowie seine demütige Gesprächsführung und sein charmantes Schmeicheln.
Profile Image for Rachel.
18 reviews
October 28, 2024
I don’t have the self-assurance to give anything by Plato anything less than 5 stars, but this was genuinely a fun read. The things that make modern attention grabbing arguments frustrating turn out to be the same things that made ancient attention grabbing arguments frustrating. Reading Socrates perfectly expose and cripple the nonsense was both funny and inspiring. This guy might be onto something…
Profile Image for Nicole Cage.
43 reviews
May 16, 2024
“Are you saying you know everything” “yes.”

lol

but really tho, yay Clinias! Yay dialectic! It is in aporia that we find the way, that the search for the good and the good are not so distinct as they may seem! Cheers to the examined life!!
Profile Image for Hilton Aires.
Author 2 books15 followers
January 23, 2018
Diálogo com uma relação estreita com outro diálogo, "Protágoras". As falácias sofistas, quando não embelezadas com diversas camadas de retórica, resultam ridículas e por demais esdrúxulas.
Profile Image for Anastasija.
284 reviews27 followers
June 17, 2024
Euthydemus is a philosophical dialogue that satirizes the Sophists, but it is not a straightforward philosophical work. It's a complex and entertaining work that challenges readers to think critically and question the claims of others. Also, a very good translation.
Profile Image for Valle Inklán.
20 reviews1 follower
July 23, 2024
básicamente dos extranjeros se ponen a trolear a Sócrates en el gimnasio, es gracioso pero parece más una obra de teatro corta que filosofía
Profile Image for Dean the Phantasy Guru.
35 reviews5 followers
December 25, 2015
This dialogue perfectly exemplifies irrational philosophy that pervaded Athens in ancient Greece; perpetuated not by Plato and Socrates, but from street-performers who delight in arguing every statement put forward, regardless of its logical integrity. "Since you claim to know one thing, then it follows that you know everything," they claim. "My father is everyone's father, and my mother is everyone's mother, including dogs and sea-nymphs." They go on to "prove" such glaringly ludicrous generalizations through double-meanings and puns. And the crowd loves it! Their utter lack of critical thinking makes them vulnerable to such verbal ploys. Wordplay wins the day while sense and logic are shown to be too out of place to contend with such blind stupidity. All in all, this is a dialogue that does not inform in any way aside from providing a glimpse into ancient life and the troubles that once confronted the wise men of the day. From a philosophical stand-point, this dialogue is the definition of a complete waste of time.
Profile Image for Genesis.
139 reviews2 followers
April 21, 2025
A pair of Hellenic charlatans, who were banned from the Italian forums, attempt to troll Socrates. Little did they know, they were facing the king, the Master Baiter, who was just pretending to be outsmarted. He was participating IRONICALLY, so it's fine.

It's important to know that when the word "virtue" is used, the more fitting translation is "excellence". With this in mind, it makes more sense why Euthydemus and his brother moved the conversation the way they did. They were demonstrating "the excellence of defeating others with words".
Profile Image for Sidharth Vardhan.
Author 23 books771 followers
August 9, 2016
So, Having read it, I'm pretty sure that the phrase 'Are you kidding me!' has ancient Greek origins. It is more of a parody on sophists than philosophy. If anything its funny at times, but it is simply not worth the hour you may spend reading it - not specially if you do not wish to read your ancestors calling names on each other.
Profile Image for Subashini.
Author 6 books175 followers
February 22, 2023
Plato does Aristophanes, with mixed results. Some madcap, zany philosophising by the two antilogician bros and Socrates having a LarryDavidConfused.gif vibe throughout the whole thing. All in all, this is a great representation of Twitter, so props to Plato for being an oracle who saw the future, on top of everything else.
Profile Image for Ytse.
40 reviews
January 8, 2020
"Euthydemus" which is not only hilarious, but also the clearest example of Socratic irony.
Profile Image for Illiterate.
2,779 reviews56 followers
February 5, 2021
On logic/wisdom vs rhetoric. Socrates highlights logical fallacies and mocks those who make them.
Profile Image for Keith.
938 reviews12 followers
June 9, 2023
…they have at last carried out the pancratiastic art to the very end…such is their skill in the war of words, that they can refute any proposition whether true or false.


On a superficial level, Euthydemus is a comedic dialogue where the author Plato mocks bad philosophers of his era, called sophists, for speaking nonsense. The character Socrates appears to be mocking two young men named Euthydemus and Dionysodorus who have the pretension of being great teachers. The quote that begins this review shows that the two couldn’t care less about the truth, and Plato asserts in other dialogues that finding the truth is the most important part of philosophy. Socrates never explicitly states that he is mocking the sophists, the readers can see for themselves that the brothers argue their way to absolutely stupid conclusions, such as that all human fathers are dogs:
Let me ask you one little question more, said Dionysodorus, quickly interposing, in order that Ctesippus might not get in his word: You beat this dog?
Ctesippus said, laughing, Indeed I do; and I only wish that I could beat you instead of him.
Then you beat your father, he said.

The introduction by translator Benjamin Jowett (1892) argues that there is a deeper meaning to Euthydemus, that it “may fairly claim to be the oldest treatise on logic” (p. 675). The dialogue was written in the early days of philosophy before the rules of logical argument had been ironed out. The sophists here are clearly exaggerated in their foolishness, but in their day many people took their ideas seriously. Jowett argues that they are using eristic argumentation, a practice that essentially “reduces philosophical inquiry to a rhetorical exercise”* rather than an honest search for truth. The brothers claim that they can disprove anything, whether true or false. Eristic arguments are themselves designed to defy refutation or falsification, meaning that they can “prove” just about anything. For example, Euthydemus tries to “prove” that falsehood is impossible, so nobody can lie:
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.

Jowett hopefully writes that: “To us, the fallacies which arise in the pre-Socratic philosophy are trivial and obsolete because were are no longer liable to fall into the errors which are expressed in them…The intellectual world has become better assured to us, and we are less likely to be imposed upon by illusions of words” (p. 675). By 1892 in academic circles, logical argumentation and fact-based inquiries were better understood. Sadly, that is not the case in the early 21st century. With the rise of the Internet, social media, and increasing political polarization, fallacious belief systems are becoming all too common. I know people who are convinced by eristical arguments and bizarre excuses for “evidence” that the Earth is flat and Reptillian aliens control the world government. These come across as silly and innocuous to most of us, but other more harmful fallacious beliefs are becoming increasingly mainstream, such as that the 2020 United States Presidential election was rigged and that all white people are inherently and irredeemably racist. For most believers, neither of these ideas can be refuted through argument or evidence to the contrary. Logic is far from commonplace and Euthydemus’s message still resonates.

Title: Euthydemus
Author: Plato
Year: circa 384 BCE
Translator: Benjamin Jowett
Translation year: 1892
Genre: Fiction/Nonfiction - Philosophy, Socratic dialogue
Date(s) read: 1/5/23 - 1/8/23
Reading journal entry #12 in 2023

The text:
http://classics.mit.edu/Plato/euthyde...

Sources:
*Britannica, T. Editors of Encyclopaedia. (2016, February 22). Eristic. Encyclopedia Britannica. https://www.britannica.com/topic/eristic
https://www.britannica.com/topic/eristic

Clerkin, Connor. (2015, December 29). Philosophy by the Book: Episode 14: Plato's Euthydemus. Philosophy By the Book. https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast...

Plato. (2015). Euthydemus. In Delphi Classics (Ed.), & B. Jowett (Trans.), Delphi Complete Works of Plato (pp. 675–745). Delphi Classics. https://www.delphiclassics.com/shop/p...

McWhorter, J. (2020, July 15). The Dehumanizing Condescension of White Fragility. The Atlantic. https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/arc...

Whitaker, K. (2020, November 23). Plato's Euthydemus -- Brief Introduction[Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h4fnG...

Plato's dialogues:
Early:
Apology,
Charmides,
Crito,
Euthyphro,
Gorgias
Hippias Minor,
Hippias Major,
Ion,
Laches,
Lysis,
Protagoras,
Menexenus
Alcibiades I

Middle:
Cratylus,
Euthydemus,
Meno,
Parmenides,
Phaedo,
Phaedrus,
Clitophon,
Republic,
Symposium,
Theaetetus

Late:
Critias,
Sophist,
Statesman,
Timaeus,
Philebus,
Laws
Profile Image for Sandi.
238 reviews5 followers
May 27, 2018
A bit of an awkward dialogue, but with some highlights and a great ending.

Presented as Socrates recounting a conversation between himself and two sophists (and a few others), the dialogue is meant to show how bad sophistry can get. Euthydemus and Dionysodorus use equivocation, generalizations, and other shitty logical moves, while posing as great teachers. To give a famous example in paraphrase, Euthydemus makes the argument: You have a dog, the dog is a father, and the dog is yours. Therefore, the dog is your father. (Postscript: Oh, I hear you beat your dog? So, you beat your father! Shame!)

To drive the point home that this logic is terrible, they are forced to give terrible advice in war/fighting despite the fact that they themselves are famed war heroes, they make arguments that make them look ridiculous like that it would be a good thing to swallow gold, and, despite purporting to be wise, they make proofs that show everyone is wise and there is no such thing as falsehoods. This all demonstrates that their logic betrays them personally and professionally.

It goes on for quite a bit in this manner, with Socrates playing mostly a background role as they make fools of themselves. At a few points, the dialogue falls flat for me because Socrates isn't exactly guiltless in making fallacious logical moves, either, but it certainly attempts to put in contrast the ridiculousness as well as the empty motives of the sophists to Socratic argumentation, which is presented as directing the youth towards a love of wisdom.

The end, though, in my opinion is the best part. After so many instances of fallacious over-generalizations, Crito asks Socrates, What was the point of this story? Is philosophy, then, really awful because of people like this?

Socrates replies by deliberately avoiding the error of the sophists: "Dear Crito, do you not know that in every profession the inferior sort are numerous and good for nothing, and the good are few and beyond all price." I love that reply. He's saying that there are a lot of foolish people in every field, but that you should judge the object of study itself from the foolish people who study it.

As an academic, this message speaks to me because there are sometimes moments when I read bad but highly-praised scholarly work and despair a little bit, but we shouldn't let the errors of others rob us of enjoying and striving for excellence in our field of study. After all, philosophy is the love of wisdom, not the love of those who claim to be wise.
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