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[520b] rhetoric, a very fine affair, and despise the other. Yet in reality sophistic is a finer thing than rhetoric by so much as legislation is finer than judicature, and gymnastic than medicine: in fact, for my own part, I always regarded public speakers and sophists as the only people who have no call to complain of the thing that they themselves educate, for its wickedness towards them; as otherwise they must in the same words be also charging themselves with having been of no use to those whom they say they benefit. Is it not so?


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  • Commentary references to this page (3):
    • Gonzalez Lodge, Commentary on Plato: Gorgias, 464c
    • Gonzalez Lodge, Commentary on Plato: Gorgias, 471d
    • Gonzalez Lodge, Commentary on Plato: Gorgias, 519c
  • Cross-references to this page (1):
    • Raphael Kühner, Bernhard Gerth, Ausführliche Grammatik der griechischen Sprache, KG 3.2.3
  • Cross-references in general dictionaries to this page (3):
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