[178c]
which he thinks will be actually come to pass for him who thought them? Take, for instance, heat; if some ordinary man thinks he is going to take a fever, that is to say, that this particular heat will be, and some other man, who is a physician, thinks the contrary, whose opinion shall we expect the future to prove right? Or perhaps the opinion of both, and the man will become, not hot or feverish to the physician, but to himself both?Theodorus
No, that would be ridiculous.Socrates
But, I imagine, in regard to the sweetness or dryness
No, that would be ridiculous.Socrates
But, I imagine, in regard to the sweetness or dryness