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Plato : SOPHIST
Persons of the dialogue: Theodorus - Theaetetus - Socrates - an Eleatic stranger = Note by Elpenor |
77 Pages
Page 26
Str. Under all things, I include you and me, and also animals and trees.
Theaet. What do you mean?
Str. Suppose a person to say that he will make you and me, and all creatures.
Theaet. What would he mean by "making"? He cannot be a husbandman; - for you said that he is a maker of animals.
Str. Yes; and I say that he is also the maker of the sea, and the earth, and the heavens, and the gods, and of all other things; and, further, that he can make them in no time, and sell them for a few pence.
Theaet. That must be a jest.
Str. And when a man says that he knows all things, and can teach them to another at a small cost, and in a short time, is not that a jest?
Theaet. Certainly.
Str. And is there any more artistic or graceful form of jest than imitation?
Theaet. Certainly not; and imitation is a very comprehensive term, which includes under one class the most diverse sorts of things.
Str. We know, of course, that he who professes by one art to make all things is really a painter, and by the painter's art makes resemblances of real things which have the same name with them; and he can deceive the less intelligent sort of young children, to whom he shows his pictures at a distance, into the belief that he has the absolute power of making whatever he likes.
Theaet. Certainly.
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