Socrates

… corresponding to the four subsections of our line: Understanding [noe ̄sin] for the highest, thought [dianoian] for the second, belief [pistin] for the third and imagining [eikasian] for the last. Arrange them in a ratio [ana logon] and consider that each shares in clarity to the degree that the subsection it is set over shares in truth.


Republic


3 thoughts on “Socrates

  1. shinichi Post author

    15. Analogies, Parables, Paradoxes

    Get On Down: Plato’s Rhetoric of Education in the Republic

    by Kathy Eden

    in A Companion to Rhetoric and Rhetorical Criticism

    edited by Walter Jost, Wendy Olmsted

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  2. shinichi Post author

    The Republic

    Book VI

    Socrates – Glaucon

    by Plato

    translated by Benjamin Jowett

    http://classics.mit.edu/Plato/republic.7.vi.html

    You have quite conceived my meaning, I said; and now, corresponding to these four divisions, let there be four faculties in the soul-reason answering to the highest, understanding to the second, faith (or conviction) to the third, and perception of shadows to the last-and let there be a scale of them, and let us suppose that the several faculties have clearness in the same degree that their objects have truth.

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