Allan Nguyen
Kwan Hua
Rhetoric 103A
8 October 2016
The Framework: Why It
is Important That It is Better to Endure Suffering
In Gorgias, Socrates’s long, discourse-filled
journey to discover rhetoric’s true nature, and of course denounce it, has lead
him to one of the fathers of sophistry, Gorgias. Though Socrates initially
begins his debate with Gorgias, one of Gorgias’s young, fervid disciples,
Polus, attempts to step in and defend Gorgias and the power of rhetoric after
Socrates deems rhetoric to be a form of flattery. Starting at 466a, Polus
challenges Socrates by asking him how rhetoricians could have possibly become so
highly regarded by the state and amassed such power if people had viewed them as
flatterers. Polus wants to show that rhetoric is much more subtle than simple
flattery and through its subtleness can achieve much more. However, to Polus’s surprise,
Socrates, who first responds by taunting Polus as per usual, does not address rhetoric’s
subtlety at all and instead goes for a much more radical claim: rhetoricians
have not gained power at all. In fact, Socrates claims that rhetoricians have
the least power of all citizens.
Of course this is not a claim that
Polus can simply accept as a lot of rhetoricians seemingly have tons of
influence over the cities they live in, and so Socrates is urged to explain the
first of the many steps he takes to prove his claim. Socrates begins by stating
that “power is a good to the possessor” (466b). This is intuitively true, and
Polus agrees pretty readily. People tend to view the power that they have as a
benefit more than a burden. The next step that Socrates takes is by pointing
out that rhetoricians only do what they think is best. Polus at first sees no
problem with that, as being able to do what you think is best seems to be a
good indication of power. However, Socrates then creates a distinction between
doing what you think is best, and doing what you will to do. He illustrates
this distinction with an example about medicine and an example about voyaging.
People take medicine because their will is to feel better, and likewise people
go on voyages because their will is to acquire wealth. People do not simply
take medicine for the sake of taking medicine since medicine is bitter and
unenjoyable to drink. People do not go on voyages for the sake of voyaging
because voyaging can be pretty dangerous. Like taking medicine and going on
voyages, other actions that people take are also done because they will for
something beyond the action itself. Some actions are done in accordance with
what a person wills to do while others are not.
The distinction Socrates wishes to
make is that not all of the actions that people think are best are actually in
accordance with what a person wills to do. Rhetoricians, who clearly are
allowed to do what they think is best, might not actually be doing what they
will to do. Socrates connects this distinction with the notion of power by
asking Polus, “if a fool does what he thinks best…would you call this great
power?” (466e). Polus denies this is possible. If a fool does what he thinks is
best, his actions are likely to misalign with what he wills to do. Thus, his
actions cause more troubles for him instead of benefitting him. Then, the
actions cannot be a good since they cause trouble. Since power was agreed to be
a good for its possessor, the fool, who is allowed to do what he thinks best,
does not have power. Furthermore, the fools who are the least restricted in
being able to do what they think is best must have the least amount of power
since their misguided actions can more easily bring them trouble.
So far the
argument has only proven that it is merely possible for the rhetoricians to have
the least amount of power in the city since Socrates has not yet proven that
rhetoricians are fools who believe the best actions are different ones from the
actions that will actually help them achieve what they will to do. Socrates
attempts to prove this by showing that all men, rhetoricians included, do
things for the sake of a good. To prove that all men act for a good, Socrates first
has Polus agree that everything is either good, evil, or neither. Things that
are neither, which he calls indifferent things, include actions such as walking
or speaking and objects such as rocks and chairs. Socrates backs his claim that men act for the
sake of the good by stating that “indifferent things [are] done for the sake of
the good” rather than “good for the sake of the indifferent” (468a). The
example that Socrates gives to support this statement is that we get up and
start walking around when we think walking will lead us to some good. Even when
we kill someone and take their belongings, we believe it is for some good,
according to Socrates. Since we all will for the good, our actions would stray
away from our will if they did not achieve the good.
With all those steps taken, Socrates
has created a framework to try to show that rhetoricians have the least amount
of power in the city because their actions work against the good which they
will to do. With that framework, Socrates goes on to try to prove his claim through
the famous argument on whether causing suffering or enduring it is more closely
aligned with the good.
2 comments:
Allan,
This is excellent close reading. Your title is somewhat misleading, however since it seems that you will go through a discussion of whether causing suffering or enduring it is more closely aligned with the good; this is not what you isolate in your selected passage, but rather the status of rhetoric. If you see this earlier argument as a set up for the discourse on suffering, exactly what role and function does it have? As a précis-form, I would have liked to see just a little more notation (or transitions) that give us a general outline of the parts of the argument before you take us through the passages chronologically, but you guide us through these parts very well. Overall well done.
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