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Plato : HIPPIAS (minor)Persons of the dialogue: Eudicus -
Socrates - Hippias = Note by Elpenor |
19 Pages
Page 7
Socr.: Then the same person is able to speak both falsely and truly about calculation? And that person is he who is good at calculation—the arithmetician?
Hipp.: Yes.
Socr.: Who, then, Hippias, is discovered to be false at calculation? Is he not the good man? For the good man is the able man, and he is the true man.
Hipp.: That is evident.
Socr.: Do you not see, then, that the same man is false and also true about the same matters? And the true man is not a whit better than the false; for indeed he is the same with him and not the very opposite, as you were just now imagining.
Hipp.: Not in that instance, clearly.
Socr.: Shall we examine other instances?
Hipp.: Certainly, if you are disposed.
Socr.: Are you not also skilled in geometry?
Hipp.: I am.
Socr.: Well, and does not the same hold in that science also? Is not the same person best able to speak falsely or to speak truly about diagrams; and he is—the geometrician?
Hipp.: Yes.
Socr.: He and no one else is good at it?
Hipp.: Yes, he and no one else.
Socr.: Then the good and wise geometer has this double power in the highest degree; and if there be a man who is false about diagrams the good man will be he, for he is able to be false; whereas the bad is unable, and for this reason is not false, as has been admitted.
Hipp.: True.
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