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[251c] but must call the good good, and a man man. I fancy, Theaetetus, you often run across people who take such matters seriously; sometimes they are elderly men whose poverty of intellect makes them admire such quibbles, and who think this is a perfect mine of wisdom they have discovered.1

Theaetetus
Certainly.

Stranger
Then, to include in our discussion all those who have ever engaged in any talk whatsoever about being,


1 Those are here satirized who deny the possibillty of all except identical predication. Such were Antisthenes, Euthydemus, and Dionysodorus. The two last are probably those referred to as old men whose learning came late in life.

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    • R. G. Bury, The Symposium of Plato, 211B
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