<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:py="http://codespeak.net/lxml/objectify/pytype" py:pytype="TREE"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div type="translation" n="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0059.tlg013.perseus-eng2" xml:lang="eng"><div type="textpart" subtype="section" resp="perseus" n="108"><milestone unit="page" resp="Stephanus" n="108"/><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="108a"/><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> And so far as is better, too?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> So far.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> And at such time also as is better?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Certainly.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> But again, when one sings, one has sometimes to accompany the song with harping and stepping?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Yes, one has.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> And at such time as is better?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Yes.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> And so far as is better?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> I agree.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Well now, since you applied the term <q type="emph">better</q> to the two cases <milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="108b"/>of harping for accompaniment of a song and close wrestling, what do you call the <q type="emph">better</q> in the case of harping, to correspond with what in the case of wrestling I call gymnastic? What do you call the other?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> I do not understand.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Well, try to copy me: for my answer gave you, I think, what is correct in every instance; and that is correct, I presume, which proceeds by rule of the art, is it not?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Yes.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> And was not the art here gymnastic?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> To be sure.</said></p><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="108c"/><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> And I said that the better <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb">Socrates means by <q type="emph">better</q> or <q type="emph">the better way</q> the general method of attaining excellence in any art.</note> in the case of wrestling was gymnastic.</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> You did.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> And I was quite fair?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> I think so.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Come then, in your turn—for it would befit you also, I fancy, to argue fairly <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb">Socrates here repeats <foreign xml:lang="grc">καλῶς</foreign> (which means <gloss>handsomely</gloss> as well as <gloss>correctly</gloss>) in allusion to Alcibiades’ good looks. Cf. <bibl n="Plat. Alc. 1.113b">Plat. Alc.1 113b</bibl></note>—tell me, first, what is the art which includes harping and singing and treading the measure correctly? What is it called as a whole? You cannot yet tell me?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> No, indeed.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Well, try another way: who are the goddesses that foster the art?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> The Muses, you mean, Socrates?</said></p><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="108d"/><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> I do. Now, just think, and say by what name the art is called after them.</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Music, <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb"><q type="socalled">Music</q> with the Greeks included poetry and dancing as well as our <q type="emph">music.</q></note> I suppose you mean.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Yes, I do. And what is that which proceeds correctly by its rule? As in the other case I was correct in mentioning to you gymnastic as that which goes by the art, so I ask you, accordingly, what you say in this case. What manner of proceeding is required?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> A musical one, I suppose.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> You are right. Come then, what is it that you term <q type="emph">better,</q> in respect of what is better in waging war and being at peace? <milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="108e"/>Just as in our other instances you said that the <q type="emph">better</q> implied the more musical and again, in the parallel case, the more gymnastical, try now if you can tell me what is the <q type="emph">better</q> in this case.</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> But I am quite unable.</said></p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" resp="perseus" n="109"><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> But surely that is disgraceful; for if you should speak to somebody as his adviser on food, and say that one sort was better than another, at this time and in this quantity, and he then asked you—What do you mean by the <q type="emph">better,</q> Alcibiades?—in a matter like that you could tell him you meant the more wholesome, although you do not set up to be a physician; yet in a case where you set up <milestone unit="page" resp="Stephanus" n="109"/><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="109a"/>to have knowledge and are ready to stand up and advise as though you knew, are you not ashamed to be unable, as appears, to answer a question upon it? Does it not seem disgraceful?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Very.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Then consider and do your best to tell me the connection of <q type="emph">better</q> in being at peace or at war with those to whom we ought to be so disposed.</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Well, I am considering, but I fail to perceive it.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> But you must know what treatment it is that we allege against each other when we enter upon a war, <milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="109b"/>and what name we give it when we do so?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> I do: we say we are victims of deceit or violence or spoliation.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Enough: how do we suffer each of these things? Try and tell me what difference there is between one way and another.</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Do you mean by that, Socrates, whether it is in a just way or an unjust way?</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Precisely.</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Why, there you have all the difference in the world.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Well then, on which sort are you going to advise the Athenians to make war—those who are acting unjustly, or those who are doing what is just?</said></p><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="109c"/><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> That is a hard question: for even if someone decides that he must go to war with those who are doing what is just, he would not admit that they were doing so.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> For that would not be lawful, I suppose?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> No, indeed; nor is it considered honorable either.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> So you too will appeal to these things in making your speeches?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Necessarily.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Then must not that <q type="emph">better</q> about which I was asking in reference to making or not making war, on those on whom we ought to or not, and when we ought to or not, be simply and solely the juster?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Apparently it is.</said></p><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="109d"/><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> How now, friend Alcibiades? Have you overlooked your own ignorance of this matter, or have I overlooked <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb">Cf. above, <bibl n="Plat. Alc. 1.106e">Plat. Alc.1 106e</bibl>.</note> your learning it and taking lessons of a master who taught you to distinguish the more just and the more unjust? And who is he? Inform me in my turn, in order that you may introduce me to him as another pupil.</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> You are joking, Socrates.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> No, I swear by our common God of Friendship, whose name <milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="109e"/>I would by no means take in vain. Come, if you can, tell me who the man is.</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> But what if I cannot? Do you think I could not know about what is just and unjust in any other way?</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Yes, you might, supposing you discovered it.</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> But do you not think I might discover it?</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Yes, quite so, if you inquired.</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> And do you not think I might inquire?</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> I do, if you thought you did not know.</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> And was there not a time when I held that view?</said></p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" resp="perseus" n="110"><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Well spoken. Then can you tell me at what time it was <milestone unit="page" resp="Stephanus" n="110"/><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="110a"/>that you thought you did not know what is just and unjust? Pray, was it a year ago that you were inquiring, and thought you did not know? Or did you think you knew? Please answer truly, that our debates may not be futile.</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Well, I thought I knew.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> And two years, and three years, and four years back, were you not of the same mind?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> I was.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> But, you see, before that time you were a child, were you not?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Yes.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> So I know well enough that then you thought you knew.</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> How do you know it so well?</said></p><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="110b"/><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Many a time I heard you, when as a child you were dicing or playing some other game at your teacher’s or elsewhere, instead of showing hesitation about what was just and unjust, speak in very loud and confident tones about one or other of your playmates, saying he was a rascal and a cheat who played unfairly. Is not this a true account?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> But what was I to do, Socrates, when somebody cheated me?</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Yet if you were ignorant then whether you were being unfairly treated or not, how can you ask—<q type="spoken">What are you to do?</q></said></p><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="110c"/><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Well, but on my word, I was not ignorant: no, I clearly understood that I was being wronged.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> So you thought you knew, even as a child, it seems, what was just and unjust.</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> I did; and I knew too.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> At what sort of time did you discover it? For surely it was not while you thought you knew.</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> No, indeed.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Then when did you think you were ignorant? Consider; I believe you will fail to find such a time.</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Upon my word, Socrates, I really cannot say.</said></p><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="110d"/><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> So you do not know it by discovery.</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Not at all, apparently.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> But you said just now that you did not know it by learning either; and if you neither discovered nor learnt it, how do you come to know it, and whence?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Well, perhaps that answer I gave you was not correct, that I knew it by my own discovery.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Then how was it done?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> I learnt it, I suppose, in the same way as everyone else.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Back we come to the same argument. From whom? Please tell me.</said></p><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="110e"/><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> From the many.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> They are no very serious teachers with whom you take refuge, if you ascribe it to the many!</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Why, are they not competent to teach?</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Not how to play, or not to play, draughts; and yet that, I imagine, is a slight matter compared with justice. What? Do you not think so?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Yes.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Then if they are unable to teach the slighter, can they teach the more serious matter?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> I think so: at any rate, there are many other things that they are able to teach, more serious than draughts.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> What sort of things?</said></p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" resp="perseus" n="111"><milestone unit="page" resp="Stephanus" n="111"/><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="111a"/><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> For instance, it was from them that I learnt to speak Greek, and I could not say who was my teacher, but can only ascribe it to the same people who, you say, are not serious teachers.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Ah, gallant sir, the many may be good teachers of that, and they can justly be praised for their teaching of such subjects.</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> And why?</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Because in those subjects they have the equipment proper to good teachers.</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> What do you mean by that?</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> You know that those who are going to teach anything should first know it themselves, do you not?</said></p><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="111b"/><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Of course.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> And that those who know should agree with each other and not differ?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Yes.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> But if they differ upon anything, will you say that they know it?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> No, indeed.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Then how can they be teachers of it?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> By no means.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Well now, do you find that the many differ about the nature of stone or wood? If you ask one of them, <milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="111c"/>do they not agree on the same answer, and make for the same things when they want to get a piece of stone or wood? It is just the same, too, with everything of the sort: for I am pretty nearly right in understanding you to mean just this by knowing how to speak Greek, am I not?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Yes.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> And on these matters, as we stated, they not only agree with each other and with themselves in private, but states also use in public the same terms about them to each other, without any dispute?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> They do.</said></p><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="111d"/><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Then naturally they will be good teachers of these matters.</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Yes.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> And if we should wish to provide anyone with knowledge of them, we should be right in sending him to be taught by <q type="mentioned">the many</q> that you speak of?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Certainly.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> But what if we wished to know not only what men were like or what horses were like, but which of them were good runners or not? Would the many still suffice to teach us this?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> No, indeed.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> And you have ample proof that they do not know this, <milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="111e"/>and are not proficient teachers of it, in their not agreeing about it at all with themselves?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> I have.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> And what if we wished to know not only what men were like, but what healthy or diseased men were like? Would the many suffice to teach us?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> No, indeed.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> And you would have proof of their being bad teachers of that, if you saw them differing about it?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> I should.</said></p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" resp="perseus" n="112"><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Well then, do you now find that the many agree with themselves or each other <milestone unit="page" resp="Stephanus" n="112"/><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="112a"/>about just and unjust men or things?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Far from it, on my word, Socrates.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> In fact, they differ most especially on these points?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Very much so.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> And I suppose you never yet saw or heard of people differing so sharply on questions of health or the opposite as to fight and kill one another in battle because of them.</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> No, indeed.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> But on questions of justice or injustice I am sure you have; <milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="112b"/> and if you have not seen them, at any rate you have heard of them from many people, especially Homer. For you have heard <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified"> i.e., at the recitations of rhapsodes; cf. the <title>Ion</title> of Plato.</note> the <title>Odyssey</title> and the <title>Iliad</title>?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> I certainly have, I suppose, Socrates.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> And these poems are about a difference of just and unjust</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Yes.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> And from this difference arose the fights and deaths of the Achaeans, and of the Trojans as well, and of the suitors of Penelope in their strife with Odysseus.</said></p><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="112c"/><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> That is true.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> And I imagine that when the Athenians and Spartans and Boeotians lost their men at <placeName key="perseus,Tanagra">Tanagra</placeName>, <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb">457 B.C.</note> and later at <placeName key="tgn,7011235">Coronea</placeName>, <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb">447 B.C.</note> among whom your own father perished, the difference that caused their deaths and fights was solely on a question of just and unjust, was it not?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> That is true.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Then are we to say that these people understand those questions, on which <milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="112d"/>they differ so sharply that they are led by their mutual disputes to take these extreme measures against each other?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Apparently not.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> And you refer me to teachers of that sort, whom you admit yourself to be without knowledge?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> It seems I do.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Then how is it likely that you should know what is just and unjust, when you are so bewildered about these matters and are shown to have neither learnt them from anyone nor discovered them for yourself?.</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> By what you say, it is not likely.</said></p><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="112e"/><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> There again, Alcibiades, do you see how unfairly you speak?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> In what ?</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> In stating that I say so.</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Why, do you not say that l do not know about the just and unjust?</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Not at all.</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Well, do I say it?</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Yes.</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> How, pray ?</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> I will show you, in the following way. If I ask you which is the greater number, one or two, you will answer <q type="emph">two</q>?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Yes, I shall.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> How much greater?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> By one.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> Then which of us says that two are one more than one?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> I.</said></p><p><said who="#Socrates"><label>Soc.</label> And I was asking, and you were answering?</said></p><p><said who="#Alcibiades"><label>Alc.</label> Yes.</said></p></div></div></body></text></TEI>