The Phaedrus
begins as a speech on erotic love; whether such passion is necessary for
“friendship” or perhaps even detrimental to it.
However, it eventually pivots on that controversial theme into a
discussion on the goal of speeches in general and finally to a discourse on
writing and the dialectic and their relation to knowledge itself. I begin by quoting from John M. Cooper’s
introduction to the dialogue and then move on to present the words of Socrates,
Lysis and their friend, Phaedrus.
As a debate
coach for some eleven years, I particularly enjoyed Socrates’ dissertation on
giving speeches. In light of the dissimulation
and deception so common in politics today, it might be particularly worthwhile
to carefully read and consider 8, 10, and 16 below.
1. Knowledge can only be in the mind:
Socrates- “Writings cannot contain or constitute knowledge of any import
matter. Knowledge can only be lodged in
a mind, and its essential feature there is an endless capacity to express,
interpret, and reinterpret itself suitably, in response to every challenge –
something a written text once let go by its author plainly lacks: it can only
keep on repeating the same words to whoever picks it up.” p. 507
2. The danger of explaining away the
myths- science a dangerous answer: Socrates- Anyone who does not believe in them
[“monsters” of myth], who wants to explain them away and make them plausible by
means of some sort of rough ingenuity, will need a great deal of time.
But I have
no time for such things; and the reason, my friend, is this. I am still unable, as the Delphic inscription
orders, to know myself; and it really seems to me ridiculous to look into other
things before I have understood that.”
p. 510
3. Lovers are poor judges: Socrates-“A lover will praise what
you say and what you do far beyond what is best, partly because he is afraid of
being disliked, and partly because desire has impaired his judgment.” p. 512
4. To whom should we give our love: Socrates- “. . . not to people who will take pleasure in the bloom of your
youth, but to those who will share their goods with you when you are older; not
to people who achieve their goal and then boast about it in public, but to those
who will keep a modest silence with everyone; not to people whose devotion is
short-lived, but to those who will be steady friends their whole lives; not to
the people who look for an excuse to quarrel as soon as their desire has
passed, but to those who will prove their worth when the bloom or your youth
has faded.” P. 513
5. On Eternity, “the Source” has no
beginning: Socrates- “That is because anything that has a
beginning comes from some source but there is no source for this, since a
source that got its start form something else would no longer be the
source.” p. 524
6. Knowledge of what really is, of
the Truth: Socrates-
“Still, this is the way it is—risky as it may be, you see, I must attempt to
speak the truth, especially since the truth is my subject. What is in this place is without color and
without shape and without solidity, a being that really is what it is, the
subject of all true knowledge, visible only to intelligence, the soul’s
steersman. Now a god’s mind is nourished
by intelligence and pure knowledge, as is the mind of any soul that is
concerned to take in what is appropriate to it, and so it is delighted at last
to be seeing what is real and watching what is true, feeding on all this and
felling wonderful, until the circular motion brings it around to whether it
started. On the way around it has a view
of Justice as it is; it has a view of Self-control; it has a view of
Knowledge—not the knowledge that is close to change, that becomes different as
it knows the different things which we consider real down here. No, it is the knowledge of what really is
what it is.” p. 525
7. Earthly beauty reminds us of truth
and is the source of love: Socrates- “Now this takes me to the whole point of my discussion of the
fourth kind of madness [possession of our
soul by some higher force]—that which someone shows when he sees the
beauty we have down here and is reminded of true beauty; then he takes wing and
flutters in his eagerness to rise up, but is unable to do so; and he gazes
aloft, like a bird, paying no attention to what is down below—and that is what
brings on him the charge that he has gone mad.
This is the best and noblest of all the forms that possession by god can
take for anyone who has it or is connected to it, and when someone who loves
beautiful boys is touched by this madness he is called a lover.” p. 527
8. On speeches and the power of
persuasion: Socrates- “Well, then, we ought to examine the
topic we proposed just now: When is a speech well written and delivered, and
when is it not?
Phaedrus: Plainly.
Socrates:
Won’t someone who is to speak well and nobly have to have in mind the truth
about the subject he is going to discuss?
Phaedrus:
What I have actually heard about this, Socrates, my friend, is that it is not
necessary for the intending orator to learn what is really just, but only what
will seem just to the crowd who will act as judges. Nor again what is really good or noble, but
only what will seem so. For that is what
persuasion proceeds from, not truth.” p.
536
9. On the “art” of rhetoric: Socrates- “Well, then, isn’t the rhetorical art, taken as a whole, a way of
directing the soul by means of speech, not only in the lawcourts and on other
public occasions but also in private?
Isn’t it one and the same art whether its subject is great or small, and
no more to be held in esteem—if it is followed correctly—when its questions are
serious than when they are trivial?” p.
537
10. On debate and the “adversarial”
legal system manipulated by rhetoric: Socrates- “Answer
this question yourself: What do adversaries do in the lawcourts? Don’t they speak on opposite sides? What else can they do?
Phaedrus:
That’s it, exactly.
Socrates:
About what is just and what is unjust?
Phaedrus:
Yes.
Socrates:
And won’t whoever does this artfully make the same thing appear to the same
people sometimes just and sometimes, when he prefers, unjust?
Phaedrus: Of course.
Socrates: And when he addresses the Assembly, he will
make the city approve a policy at one time as a good one, and reject it—the
very same policy—as just the opposite at another.
Phaedrus: Right.” P. 538
11. Speakers misled their listeners; think Karl
Marx etc.: Socrates- “In
fact, by some chance the two speeches do, as it seems, contain an example of
the way in which someone who knows the truth can toy with his audience and
mislead them.” p. 539
12. On definitions: Socrates - “Just so with our
discussion of love: Whether its definition was or was not correct, at least it
allowed the speech to proceed clearly and consistently with itself.” p.562
13. Parts of a
Speech: Socrates - First, I believe, there is the Preamble with which a
speech must begin. This is what you mean
isn’t it--the fine points of art? p.543
Phedrus: Yes
Socrates: Second
come the Statement of Facts and the Evidence of Witnesses concerning it; third,
Indirect Evidence; fourth, Claims to plausibility. And I believe at least that excellent
Byzantine word-wizard adds Confirmation and Supplementary Confirmation.
Phedrus:
Your mean the worthy Theodorus?
Socrates:
Quite. And he also adds Refutation and
Supplementary Refutation to be used both in prosecution and in defense. Nor must we forget the most excellent Evenus
of Paros, who was the first to discover Covert Implication and Indirect Praise
and who--some say--has even arranged Indirect Censures in verse as an aid to
memory: a wise man indeed!” p. 543
14. Making the worse appear better: Socrates - “How can we leave them out
when it is they who realized that what is likely must be held in higher honor
than what is true; they who, by the power of language, make small things appear
great and great things small. . . “
p.543
15. More on Speeches:
Socrates - And what shall we say
of the whole gallery of terms Polus set up--speaking with Reduplication,
Speaking in Maxims, Speaking in Images--and of the terms Licymnius gave him as
a present to help him explain Good Diction? . . . As to the way of ending a
speech everyone seems to be in agreement, though some call in Recapitulation and
others by some other name.
Phadrus: You
mean, summarizing everything at the end and reminding the audience of what
they’ve heard?” p. 544
16. Just say what the people want to
hear: Socrates - “For
the fact is, as we said ourselves at the beginning of this discussion, that one
who intends to be an able rhetorician has no need to know the truth about the
things that are just or good or yet about the people who are such either by
nature or upbringing. No one is a
lawcourt, you see, cares at all about the truth of such matters. They only care about what is convincing. This is called “the likely,” and that is what
a man who intends to speak according to art should concentrate on. Sometimes, in fact, whether you are
prosecuting or defending a case, you must not even say what actually happened,
if it was not likely to have happened--you must say something that is likely
instead. Whatever you say, you should
pursue what is likely and leave the truth aside: that whole art consists in
cleaving to that throughout you speech.
Phadurs:
That’s an excellent presentation of what people say who profess to be expert in
speeches, Socrates. I recall that we
raised this issue briefly earlier on, but it seems to be their single most
important point.
Socrates: No
doubt you’ve churned through Tisias’ book quite carefully. Then let Tisias tell us this also: By “the
likely” does he mean anything but what is accepted by the crowd?” p. 549
17. The creation of writing and a
challenge to its value: Socrates - “Well, this is what I’ve hear. Among the ancient gods of Naucratis in Egypt
there was one to whom the bird called the ibis is sacred. The name of this divinity was Theuth, and it
was he who first discovered numbers and calculation, geometry and astronomy as
well as games of checkers and dice, and, above all else, writing.
Now the king
of all Egypt at the time was Thamus, who lived in the great city in the upper
region that the Greeks call Egyptian Thebes; Thamus they call Ammon. Theuth came to exhibit his arts to him and
urged him to disseminate them to all the Egyptians. Thamus asked him about the usefulness of each
art, and while Theuth was explaining it, Thamus praised him for whatever he
thought was right in his explanations and criticized him for whatever he
thought was wrong.
The story
goes that Thamus said much to Theuth, both for and against each art, which it
would take too long to repeat but when
they came to writing, Theuth said: “O king, here is something that, once
learned will make the Egyptians wiser and will improve their memory; I have
discovered a potion for memory and for wisdom.”
Thamus, however, replied” “O most expert Theuth, one man can give birth
to the elements of an art but only another can judge how they can benefit or
harm those who will use them. And now,
since you are the father of writing, your affection for it has made you
describe its effects as the opposite of what they really are. In fact, it will introduce forgetfulness into
the soul of those who learn it: they will not practice using their memory
because they will put their trust in writing, which is external and depends on
signs that belong to others, instead of trying to remember from the inside,
completely on their own. You have not
discovered a potion for remembering, but for reminding; you provide your
students with the appearance of wisdom, not with its reality. Your invention will enable them to hear many
things without being properly taught, and they will imagine that they have come
to know much while for the most part they will know nothing. And they will be difficult to get along with
since they will merely appear to be wise instead of really being so.” pp.
551-552
18. What is the only true value of
writing?: Socrates – “Well, then, those who
think they can leave writing instructions for an art, as well as those who
accept them, thinking that writing can yield results that are clear or certain,
must be quite naive and truly ignorant of Ammon’s prophetic judgment:
otherwise, how could they possibly think that words that have been written down
can do more than remind those who already know what the writing is about?” p. 552
19. Socrates’ prayer:
“O dear Pan and all the other gods of this place, grant that I may be
beautiful inside. Let all my external
possessions be in friendly harmony with what is within. May I consider the wise man rich. As for
gold, let me have as much as a moderate man could bear and carry with
him.” pp. 555-556
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