previous next

[253a] they are in much the same condition as the letters of the alphabet; for some of these do not fit each other, and others do.

Theaetetus
Of course.

Stranger
And the vowels, to a greater degree than the others, run through them all as a bond, so that without one of the vowels the other letters cannot be joined one to another.

Theaetetus
Certainly.

Stranger
Now does everybody know which letters can join with which others? Or does he who is to join them properly have need of art?

Theaetetus
He has need of art.

Stranger
What art?

Theaetetus
The art of grammar.

Stranger
And is not the same true in connection with high and [253b] low sounds? Is not he who has the art to know the sounds which mingle and those which do not, musical, and he who does not know unmusical?

Theaetetus
Yes.

Stranger
And we shall find similar conditions, then, in all the other arts and processes which are devoid of art?

Theaetetus
Of course.

Stranger
Now since we have agreed that the classes or genera also commingle with one another, or do not commingle, in the same way, must not he possess some science and proceed by the processes of reason who is to show correctly which of the classes harmonize with which, and which reject one another, [253c] and also if he is to show whether there are some elements extending through all and holding them together so that they can mingle, and again, when they separate, whether there are other universal causes of separation?

Theaetetus
Certainly he needs science, and perhaps even the greatest of sciences.

Stranger
Then, Theaetetus, what name shall we give to this science? Or, by Zeus, have we unwittingly stumbled upon the science that belongs to free men and perhaps found the philosopher while we were looking for the sophist?

Theaetetus
What do you mean? [253d]

Stranger
Shall we not say that the division of things by classes and the avoidance of the belief that the same class is another, or another the same, belongs to the science of dialectic?

Theaetetus
Yes, we shall.

Stranger
Then he who is able to do this has a clear perception of one form or idea extending entirely through many individuals each of which lies apart, and of many forms differing from one another but included in one greater form, and again of one form evolved by the union of many wholes, [253e] and of many forms entirely apart and separate. This is the knowledge and ability to distinguish by classes how individual things can or cannot be associated with one another.

Theaetetus
Certainly it is.

Stranger
But you surely, I suppose, will not grant the art of dialectic to any but the man who pursues philosophy in purity and righteousness.

Theaetetus
How could it be granted to anyone else?

Stranger
Then it is in some region like this that we shall always, both now and hereafter, discover the philosopher, if we look for him;


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 United States License.

An XML version of this text is available for download, with the additional restriction that you offer Perseus any modifications you make. Perseus provides credit for all accepted changes, storing new additions in a versioning system.

load focus Greek (1903)
hide Places (automatically extracted)

View a map of the most frequently mentioned places in this document.

Download Pleiades ancient places geospacial dataset for this text.

hide References (1 total)
hide Display Preferences
Greek Display:
Arabic Display:
View by Default:
Browse Bar: