Isocrates: No Sophist
A strict definition of sophistry has evolved throughout the centuries, yet sophists are identifiable in every age, whether in Plato's Dialogues, Shakespeare's dramas, or today's politicians and scholars. What then is a sophist? A sophist was, in ancient Greece, an itinerant teacher, who provided an education in rhetoric for a fee. Sophists were criticized by others, like Plato and Aristophanes (notably in "The Clouds"), for basing their doctrine not on truth but on the ability to cleverly twist one's words in order to win an argument. Isocrates was considered to be such a sophist by some and indeed he did hire himself out as a logographer or speech writer for citizens who had to represent themselves in court. Yet he himself wrote a treatise called "Against the Sophists," indicating that he considered himself something quite separate. It would not be out of keeping with sophistry for a sophist to distinguish himself from other sophists by emphasizing their faults (and it is certainly a way of advertising still utilized today in political campaigns). So while Isocrates asserted a kind of differentiation among sophists, it is not unreasonable to suggest that sophistry is still sophistry no matter what spin one chooses to put on it. In the end, one is either a sophist or not. This paper will show why Isocrates was not a sophist, because he was rather something else -- a pragmatist and a middle-road between rhetoric and philosophy.
That Isocrates devoted himself to teaching rhetoric and composition to basic students (at least those who showed the promise of talent) may illustrate his belief in the importance of basic education, or it may illustrate his desire to draw more pupils (and thus more fees). Yet his written letters to political leaders indicate that he had at heart the special cause of Grecian unification. These suggest that Isocrates' focus was on establishing a stable structure not only in Athenian society but in all of Greece, through understanding and working...
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