Socrates and the Sophists

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How would you feel if someone called you a sophist? Before you answer, it's important to know how the meaning of this word has evolved. "During the fifth century, sophists were teachers, speakers, and philosophers who were paid to use rhetoric (Mardner 1)." But many people opposed their style of teaching. Socrates was a philosopher who disagreed with the Sophist's point-of-view. The main differences between the Sophist and Socrates were their views on absolute truth.

"The sophist believed that there was no absolute truth and that truth was what one believed it to be (Porter 1)." Sophists were not teachers of truth but teachers of thought. Their students were expected to be able to argue both sides of a debate but were not required to take a stand on a subject. "Sophists concluded that there is no absolute proof of anything and that language counts for nothing (Gibson 285)." Sophist teachers were masters at teaching rhetoric but refused to teach them the absolute truth. Underneath their teachings Sophist teachers were receiving excess funds, exempt from serving as soldiers, and didn't have to pay taxes (Revel 36).

Socrates was a philosopher who set out to prove, to the gods, that he wasn't the wisest man. Since he could not afford a "good" Sophist teacher, surely a student of one had to be smarter than he. He decides to converse with the youth of Athens, but concludes that he actually is wiser than everyone he speaks with. He then realizes that their lack of intelligence is the fault of their teachers. Socrates understands that the practice of "sophism" leads to a lack of self-knowledge and moral values. Socrates was later accused of corrupting the youth of Athens and put on trial. In The Apology of Socrates he sta...

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...? So if someone calls you a Sophist hopefully a glaring look is in store for them in return.

Works Cited

Gibson, Walker. "In Praise of the Sophists." College English March 1993: 284-289.

Mardner, David. "Sophist" Georgia Institute of Technology (1995). Online 27 November 2004 http://www.gatech.edu/gallery/rhetoric/terms/sophism.html

Plato. "The Apology of Socrates" The Norton Anthology: World Masterpieces. Ed. Maynard Mack

W.W. Norton & Company Inc: New York, NY, 1997. 500-520.

Porter, D. "Political Speech in Ancient Athens" (2000). Online 27 November 2004. http://www.richeast.org/htwm/greeks/porter/rhetdos.html

Revel, Jean-Francois. "The Sophists." Encounter January 1989: 36-37.

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