PHILEBUS
PERSONS OF THE DIALOGUE: Socrates, Protarchus,
Philebus.
SOCRATES: Observe, Protarchus, the nature of the
position which you are now going to take from
Philebus, and what the other position is which I
maintain, and which, if you do not approve of it, is
to be controverted by you. Shall you and I sum up the
two sides?
PROTARCHUS: By all means.
SOCRATES:
Philebus was saying that enjoyment and pleasure and
delight, and the class of feelings akin to them, are a
good to every living being, whereas I contend, that
not these, but wisdom and intelligence and memory, and
their kindred, right opinion and true reasoning, are
better and more desirable than pleasure for all who
are able to partake of them, and that to all such who
are or ever will be they are the most advantageous of
all things. Have I not given, Philebus, a fair
statement of the two sides of the argument?
PHILEBUS: Nothing could be fairer, Socrates.
SOCRATES: And do you, Protarchus, accept the position
which is assigned to you?
PROTARCHUS: I cannot do otherwise, since our excellent
Philebus has left the field.
SOCRATES: Surely the truth about these matters ought,
by all means, to be ascertained.
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: Shall we further agree—
PROTARCHUS: To what?
SOCRATES: That you and I must now try to indicate some
state and disposition of the soul, which has the
property of making all men happy.
PROTARCHUS: Yes, by all means.
SOCRATES: And you say that pleasure, and I say that
wisdom, is such a state?
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: And what if there be a third state, which is
better than either? Then both of us are vanquished—are
we not? But if this life, which really has the power
of making men happy, turn out to be more akin to
pleasure than to wisdom, the life of pleasure may
still have the advantage over the life of wisdom.
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: Or suppose that the better life is more
nearly allied to wisdom, then wisdom conquers, and
pleasure is defeated;—do you agree?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: And what do you say, Philebus?
PHILEBUS: I say, and shall always say, that pleasure
is easily the conqueror; but you must decide for
yourself, Protarchus.
PROTARCHUS: You, Philebus, have handed over the
argument to me, and have no longer a voice in the
matter?
PHILEBUS: True enough. Nevertheless I would clear
myself and deliver my soul of you; and I call the
goddess herself to witness that I now do so.
PROTARCHUS: You may appeal to us; we too will be the
witnesses of your words. And now, Socrates, whether
Philebus is pleased or displeased, we will proceed
with the argument.
SOCRATES: Then let us begin with the goddess herself,
of whom Philebus says that she is called Aphrodite,
but that her real name is Pleasure.
PROTARCHUS: Very good.
SOCRATES: The awe which I always feel, Protarchus,
about the names of the gods is more than human—it
exceeds all other fears. And now I would not sin
against Aphrodite by naming her amiss; let her be
called what she pleases. But Pleasure I know to be
manifold, and with her, as I was just now saying, we
must begin, and consider what her nature is. She has
one name, and therefore you would imagine that she is
one; and yet surely she takes the most varied and even
unlike forms. For do we not say that the intemperate
has pleasure, and that the temperate has pleasure in
his very temperance,—that the fool is pleased when he
is full of foolish fancies and hopes, and that the
wise man has pleasure in his wisdom? and how foolish
would any one be who affirmed that all these opposite
pleasures are severally alike!
PROTARCHUS: Why, Socrates, they are opposed in so far
as they spring from opposite sources, but they are not
in themselves opposite. For must not pleasure be of
all things most absolutely like pleasure,—that is,
like itself?
SOCRATES: Yes, my good friend, just as colour is like
colour;—in so far as colours are colours, there is no
difference between them; and yet we all know that
black is not only unlike, but even absolutely opposed
to white: or again, as figure is like figure, for all
figures are comprehended under one class; and yet
particular figures may be absolutely opposed to one
another, and there is an infinite diversity of them.
And we might find similar examples in many other
things; therefore do not rely upon this argument,
which would go to prove the unity of the most extreme
opposites. And I suspect that we shall find a similar
opposition among pleasures.
PROTARCHUS: Very likely; but how will this invalidate
the argument?
SOCRATES:
Why, I shall reply, that dissimilar as they are, you
apply to them a new predicate, for you say that all
pleasant things are good; now although no one can
argue that pleasure is not pleasure, he may argue, as
we are doing, that pleasures are oftener bad than
good; but you call them all good, and at the same time
are compelled, if you are pressed, to acknowledge that
they are unlike. And so you must tell us what is the
identical quality existing alike in good and bad
pleasures, which makes you designate all of them as
good.
PROTARCHUS: What do you mean, Socrates? Do you think
that any one who asserts pleasure to be the good, will
tolerate the notion that some pleasures are good and
others bad?
SOCRATES: And yet you will acknowledge that they are
different from one another, and sometimes opposed?
PROTARCHUS: Not in so far as they are pleasures.
SOCRATES: That is a return to the old position,
Protarchus, and so we are to say (are we?) that there
is no difference in pleasures, but that they are all
alike; and the examples which have just been cited do
not pierce our dull minds, but we go on arguing all
the same, like the weakest and most inexperienced
reasoners?
PROTARCHUS: What do you mean?
SOCRATES: Why, I mean to say, that in self-defence I
may, if I like, follow your example, and assert boldly
that the two things most unlike are most absolutely
alike; and the result will be that you and I will
prove ourselves to be very tyros in the art of
disputing; and the argument will be blown away and
lost. Suppose that we put back, and return to the old
position; then perhaps we may come to an understanding
with one another.
PROTARCHUS: How do you mean?
SOCRATES: Shall I, Protarchus, have my own question
asked of me by you?
PROTARCHUS: What question?
SOCRATES: Ask me whether wisdom and science and mind,
and those other qualities which I, when asked by you
at first what is the nature of the good, affirmed to
be good, are not in the same case with the pleasures
of which you spoke.
PROTARCHUS: What do you mean?
SOCRATES: The sciences are a numerous class, and will
be found to present great differences. But even
admitting that, like the pleasures, they are opposite
as well as different, should I be worthy of the name
of dialectician if, in order to avoid this difficulty,
I were to say (as you are saying of pleasure) that
there is no difference between one science and
another;—would not the argument founder and disappear
like an idle tale, although we might ourselves escape
drowning by clinging to a fallacy?
PROTARCHUS: May none of this befal us, except the
deliverance! Yet I like the even-handed justice which
is applied to both our arguments. Let us assume, then,
that there are many and diverse pleasures, and many
and different sciences.
SOCRATES: And let us have no concealment, Protarchus,
of the differences between my good and yours; but let
us bring them to the light in the hope that, in the
process of testing them, they may show whether
pleasure is to be called the good, or wisdom, or some
third quality; for surely we are not now simply
contending in order that my view or that yours may
prevail, but I presume that we ought both of us to be
fighting for the truth.
PROTARCHUS: Certainly we ought.
SOCRATES: Then let us have a more definite
understanding and establish the principle on which the
argument rests.
PROTARCHUS: What principle?
SOCRATES: A principle about which all men are always
in a difficulty, and some men sometimes against their
will.
PROTARCHUS: Speak plainer.
SOCRATES: The principle which has just turned up,
which is a marvel of nature; for that one should be
many or many one, are wonderful propositions; and he
who affirms either is very open to attack.
PROTARCHUS: Do you mean, when a person says that I,
Protarchus, am by nature one and also many, dividing
the single 'me' into many 'me's,' and even opposing
them as great and small, light and heavy, and in ten
thousand other ways?
SOCRATES: Those, Protarchus, are the common and
acknowledged paradoxes about the one and many, which I
may say that everybody has by this time agreed to
dismiss as childish and obvious and detrimental to the
true course of thought; and no more favour is shown to
that other puzzle, in which a person proves the
members and parts of anything to be divided, and then
confessing that they are all one, says laughingly in
disproof of his own words: Why, here is a miracle, the
one is many and infinite, and the many are only one.
PROTARCHUS: But what, Socrates, are those other
marvels connected with this subject which, as you
imply, have not yet become common and acknowledged?
SOCRATES: When, my boy, the one does not belong to the
class of things that are born and perish, as in the
instances which we were giving, for in those cases,
and when unity is of this concrete nature, there is,
as I was saying, a universal consent that no
refutation is needed; but when the assertion is made
that man is one, or ox is one, or beauty one, or the
good one, then the interest which attaches to these
and similar unities and the attempt which is made to
divide them gives birth to a controversy.
PROTARCHUS: Of what nature?
SOCRATES:
In the first place, as to whether these unities have a
real existence; and then how each individual unity,
being always the same, and incapable either of
generation or of destruction, but retaining a
permanent individuality, can be conceived either as
dispersed and multiplied in the infinity of the world
of generation, or as still entire and yet divided from
itself, which latter would seem to be the greatest
impossibility of all, for how can one and the same
thing be at the same time in one and in many things?
These, Protarchus, are the real difficulties, and this
is the one and many to which they relate; they are the
source of great perplexity if ill decided, and the
right determination of them is very helpful.
PROTARCHUS: Then, Socrates, let us begin by clearing
up these questions.
SOCRATES: That is what I should wish.
PROTARCHUS: And I am sure that all my other friends
will be glad to hear them discussed; Philebus,
fortunately for us, is not disposed to move, and we
had better not stir him up with questions.
SOCRATES: Good; and where shall we begin this great
and multifarious battle, in which such various points
are at issue? Shall we begin thus?
PROTARCHUS: How?
SOCRATES: We say that the one and many become
identified by thought, and that now, as in time past,
they run about together, in and out of every word
which is uttered, and that this union of them will
never cease, and is not now beginning, but is, as I
believe, an everlasting quality of thought itself,
which never grows old. Any young man, when he first
tastes these subtleties, is delighted, and fancies
that he has found a treasure of wisdom; in the first
enthusiasm of his joy he leaves no stone, or rather no
thought unturned, now rolling up the many into the
one, and kneading them together, now unfolding and
dividing them; he puzzles himself first and above all,
and then he proceeds to puzzle his neighbours, whether
they are older or younger, or of his own age—that
makes no difference; neither father nor mother does he
spare; no human being who has ears is safe from him,
hardly even his dog, and a barbarian would have no
chance of escaping him, if an interpreter could only
be found.
PROTARCHUS: Considering, Socrates, how many we are,
and that all of us are young men, is there not a
danger that we and Philebus may all set upon you, if
you abuse us? We understand what you mean; but is
there no charm by which we may dispel all this
confusion, no more excellent way of arriving at the
truth? If there is, we hope that you will guide us
into that way, and we will do our best to follow, for
the enquiry in which we are engaged, Socrates, is not
unimportant.
SOCRATES: The reverse of unimportant, my boys, as
Philebus calls you, and there neither is nor ever will
be a better than my own favourite way, which has
nevertheless already often deserted me and left me
helpless in the hour of need.
PROTARCHUS: Tell us what that is.
SOCRATES: One which may be easily pointed out, but is
by no means easy of application; it is the parent of
all the discoveries in the arts.
PROTARCHUS: Tell us what it is.
SOCRATES:
A gift of heaven, which, as I conceive, the gods
tossed among men by the hands of a new Prometheus, and
therewith a blaze of light; and the ancients, who were
our betters and nearer the gods than we are, handed
down the tradition, that whatever things are said to
be are composed of one and many, and have the finite
and infinite implanted in them: seeing, then, that
such is the order of the world, we too ought in every
enquiry to begin by laying down one idea of that which
is the subject of enquiry; this unity we shall find in
everything. Having found it, we may next proceed to
look for two, if there be two, or, if not, then for
three or some other number, subdividing each of these
units, until at last the unity with which we began is
seen not only to be one and many and infinite, but
also a definite number; the infinite must not be
suffered to approach the many until the entire number
of the species intermediate between unity and infinity
has been discovered,—then, and not till then, we may
rest from division, and without further troubling
ourselves about the endless individuals may allow them
to drop into infinity. This, as I was saying, is the
way of considering and learning and teaching one
another, which the gods have handed down to us. But
the wise men of our time are either too quick or too
slow in conceiving plurality in unity. Having no
method, they make their one and many anyhow, and from
unity pass at once to infinity; the intermediate steps
never occur to them. And this, I repeat, is what makes
the difference between the mere art of disputation and
true dialectic.
PROTARCHUS: I think that I partly understand you
Socrates, but I should like to have a clearer notion
of what you are saying.
SOCRATES: I may illustrate my meaning by the letters
of the alphabet, Protarchus, which you were made to
learn as a child.
PROTARCHUS: How do they afford an illustration?
SOCRATES: The sound which passes through the lips
whether of an individual or of all men is one and yet
infinite.
PROTARCHUS: Very true.
SOCRATES: And yet not by knowing either that sound is
one or that sound is infinite are we perfect in the
art of speech, but the knowledge of the number and
nature of sounds is what makes a man a grammarian.
PROTARCHUS: Very true.
SOCRATES: And the knowledge which makes a man a
musician is of the same kind.
PROTARCHUS: How so?
SOCRATES: Sound is one in music as well as in grammar?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: And there is a higher note and a lower note,
and a note of equal pitch:—may we affirm so much?
PROTARCHUS: Yes.
SOCRATES: But you would not be a real musician if this
was all that you knew; though if you did not know this
you would know almost nothing of music.
PROTARCHUS: Nothing.
SOCRATES:
But when you have learned what sounds are high and
what low, and the number and nature of the intervals
and their limits or proportions, and the systems
compounded out of them, which our fathers discovered,
and have handed down to us who are their descendants
under the name of harmonies; and the affections
corresponding to them in the movements of the human
body, which when measured by numbers ought, as they
say, to be called rhythms and measures; and they tell
us that the same principle should be applied to every
one and many;—when, I say, you have learned all this,
then, my dear friend, you are perfect; and you may be
said to understand any other subject, when you have a
similar grasp of it. But the infinity of kinds and the
infinity of individuals which there is in each of
them, when not classified, creates in every one of us
a state of infinite ignorance; and he who never looks
for number in anything, will not himself be looked for
in the number of famous men.
PROTARCHUS: I think that what Socrates is now saying
is excellent, Philebus.
PHILEBUS: I think so too, but how do his words bear
upon us and upon the argument?
SOCRATES: Philebus is right in asking that question of
us, Protarchus.
PROTARCHUS: Indeed he is, and you must answer him.
SOCRATES: I will; but you must let me make one little
remark first about these matters; I was saying, that
he who begins with any individual unity, should
proceed from that, not to infinity, but to a definite
number, and now I say conversely, that he who has to
begin with infinity should not jump to unity, but he
should look about for some number representing a
certain quantity, and thus out of all end in one. And
now let us return for an illustration of our principle
to the case of letters.
PROTARCHUS: What do you mean?
SOCRATES: Some god or divine man, who in the
Egyptian legend is said to have been Theuth, observing
that the human voice was infinite, first distinguished
in this infinity a certain number of vowels, and then
other letters which had sound, but were not pure
vowels (i.e., the semivowels); these too exist in a
definite number; and lastly, he distinguished a third
class of letters which we now call mutes, without
voice and without sound, and divided these, and
likewise the two other classes of vowels and
semivowels, into the individual sounds, and told the
number of them, and gave to each and all of them the
name of letters; and observing that none of us could
learn any one of them and not learn them all, and in
consideration of this common bond which in a manner
united them, he assigned to them all a single art, and
this he called the art of grammar or letters.
PHILEBUS: The illustration, Protarchus, has assisted
me in understanding the original statement, but I
still feel the defect of which I just now complained.
SOCRATES: Are you going to ask, Philebus, what this
has to do with the argument?
PHILEBUS: Yes, that is a question which Protarchus and
I have been long asking.
SOCRATES: Assuredly you have already arrived at the
answer to the question which, as you say, you have
been so long asking?
PHILEBUS: How so?
SOCRATES: Did we not begin by enquiring into the
comparative eligibility of pleasure and wisdom?
PHILEBUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: And we maintain that they are each of them
one?
PHILEBUS: True.
SOCRATES: And the precise question to which the
previous discussion desires an answer is, how they are
one and also many (i.e., how they have one genus and
many species), and are not at once infinite, and what
number of species is to be assigned to either of them
before they pass into infinity (i.e. into the infinite
number of individuals).
PROTARCHUS:
That is a very serious question, Philebus, to which
Socrates has ingeniously brought us round, and please
to consider which of us shall answer him; there may be
something ridiculous in my being unable to answer, and
therefore imposing the task upon you, when I have
undertaken the whole charge of the argument, but if
neither of us were able to answer, the result methinks
would be still more ridiculous. Let us consider, then,
what we are to do:—Socrates, if I understood him
rightly, is asking whether there are not kinds of
pleasure, and what is the number and nature of them,
and the same of wisdom.
SOCRATES: Most true, O son of Callias; and the
previous argument showed that if we are not able to
tell the kinds of everything that has unity, likeness,
sameness, or their opposites, none of us will be of
the smallest use in any enquiry.
PROTARCHUS: That seems to be very near the truth,
Socrates. Happy would the wise man be if he knew all
things, and the next best thing for him is that he
should know himself. Why do I say so at this moment? I
will tell you. You, Socrates, have granted us this
opportunity of conversing with you, and are ready to
assist us in determining what is the best of human
goods. For when Philebus said that pleasure and
delight and enjoyment and the like were the chief
good, you answered—No, not those, but another class of
goods; and we are constantly reminding ourselves of
what you said, and very properly, in order that we may
not forget to examine and compare the two. And these
goods, which in your opinion are to be designated as
superior to pleasure, and are the true objects of
pursuit, are mind and knowledge and understanding and
art, and the like. There was a dispute about which
were the best, and we playfully threatened that you
should not be allowed to go home until the question
was settled; and you agreed, and placed yourself at
our disposal. And now, as children say, what has been
fairly given cannot be taken back; cease then to fight
against us in this way.
SOCRATES: In what way?
PHILEBUS: Do not perplex us, and keep asking questions
of us to which we have not as yet any sufficient
answer to give; let us not imagine that a general
puzzling of us all is to be the end of our discussion,
but if we are unable to answer, do you answer, as you
have promised. Consider, then, whether you will divide
pleasure and knowledge according to their kinds; or
you may let the matter drop, if you are able and
willing to find some other mode of clearing up our
controversy.
SOCRATES: If you say that, I have nothing to
apprehend, for the words 'if you are willing' dispel
all my fear; and, moreover, a god seems to have
recalled something to my mind.
PHILEBUS: What is that?
SOCRATES: I remember to have heard long ago certain
discussions about pleasure and wisdom, whether awake
or in a dream I cannot tell; they were to the effect
that neither the one nor the other of them was the
good, but some third thing, which was different from
them, and better than either. If this be clearly
established, then pleasure will lose the victory, for
the good will cease to be identified with her:—Am I
not right?
PROTARCHUS: Yes.
SOCRATES: And there will cease to be any need of
distinguishing the kinds of pleasures, as I am
inclined to think, but this will appear more clearly
as we proceed.
PROTARCHUS: Capital, Socrates; pray go on as you
propose.
SOCRATES: But, let us first agree on some little
points.
PROTARCHUS: What are they?
SOCRATES:
Is the good perfect or imperfect?
PROTARCHUS: The most perfect, Socrates, of all things.
SOCRATES: And is the good sufficient?
PROTARCHUS: Yes, certainly, and in a degree surpassing
all other things.
SOCRATES: And no one can deny that all percipient
beings desire and hunt after good, and are eager to
catch and have the good about them, and care not for
the attainment of anything which is not accompanied by
good.
PROTARCHUS: That is undeniable.
SOCRATES: Now let us part off the life of pleasure
from the life of wisdom, and pass them in review.
PROTARCHUS: How do you mean?
SOCRATES:
Let there be no wisdom in the life of pleasure, nor
any pleasure in the life of wisdom, for if either of
them is the chief good, it cannot be supposed to want
anything, but if either is shown to want anything,
then it cannot really be the chief good.
PROTARCHUS: Impossible.
SOCRATES: And will you help us to test these two
lives?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: Then answer.
PROTARCHUS: Ask.
SOCRATES: Would you choose, Protarchus, to live all
your life long in the enjoyment of the greatest
pleasures?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly I should.
SOCRATES: Would you consider that there was still
anything wanting to you if you had perfect pleasure?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly not.
SOCRATES: Reflect; would you not want wisdom and
intelligence and forethought, and similar qualities?
would you not at any rate want sight?
PROTARCHUS: Why should I? Having pleasure I should
have all things.
SOCRATES: Living thus, you would always throughout
your life enjoy the greatest pleasures?
PROTARCHUS: I should.
SOCRATES: But if you had neither mind, nor memory,
nor knowledge, nor true opinion, you would in the
first place be utterly ignorant of whether you were
pleased or not, because you would be entirely devoid
of intelligence.
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES:
And similarly, if you had no memory you would not
recollect that you had ever been pleased, nor would
the slightest recollection of the pleasure which you
feel at any moment remain with you; and if you had no
true opinion you would not think that you were pleased
when you were; and if you had no power of calculation
you would not be able to calculate on future pleasure,
and your life would be the life, not of a man, but of
an oyster or 'pulmo marinus.' Could this be otherwise?
PROTARCHUS: No.
SOCRATES: But is such a life eligible?
PROTARCHUS: I cannot answer you, Socrates; the
argument has taken away from me the power of speech.
SOCRATES: We must keep up our spirits;—let us now take
the life of mind and examine it in turn.
PROTARCHUS: And what is this life of mind?
SOCRATES: I want to know whether any one of us would
consent to live, having wisdom and mind and knowledge
and memory of all things, but having no sense of
pleasure or pain, and wholly unaffected by these and
the like feelings?
PROTARCHUS: Neither life, Socrates, appears eligible
to me, nor is likely, as I should imagine, to be
chosen by any one else.
SOCRATES: What would you say, Protarchus, to both of
these in one, or to one that was made out of the union
of the two?
PROTARCHUS: Out of the union, that is, of pleasure
with mind and wisdom?
SOCRATES: Yes, that is the life which I mean.
PROTARCHUS: There can be no difference of opinion; not
some but all would surely choose this third rather
than either of the other two, and in addition to them.
SOCRATES: But do you see the consequence?
PROTARCHUS: To be sure I do. The consequence is, that
two out of the three lives which have been proposed
are neither sufficient nor eligible for man or for
animal.
SOCRATES: Then now there can be no doubt that neither
of them has the good, for the one which had would
certainly have been sufficient and perfect and
eligible for every living creature or thing that was
able to live such a life; and if any of us had chosen
any other, he would have chosen contrary to the nature
of the truly eligible, and not of his own free will,
but either through ignorance or from some unhappy
necessity.
PROTARCHUS: Certainly that seems to be true.
SOCRATES: And now have I not sufficiently shown that
Philebus' goddess is not to be regarded as identical
with the good?
PHILEBUS: Neither is your 'mind' the good, Socrates,
for that will be open to the same objections.
SOCRATES: Perhaps, Philebus, you may be right in
saying so of my 'mind'; but of the true, which is also
the divine mind, far otherwise. However, I will not at
present claim the first place for mind as against the
mixed life; but we must come to some understanding
about the second place. For you might affirm pleasure
and I mind to be the cause of the mixed life; and in
that case although neither of them would be the good,
one of them might be imagined to be the cause of the
good. And I might proceed further to argue in
opposition to Philebus, that the element which makes
this mixed life eligible and good, is more akin and
more similar to mind than to pleasure. And if this is
true, pleasure cannot be truly said to share either in
the first or second place, and does not, if I may
trust my own mind, attain even to the third.
PROTARCHUS: Truly, Socrates, pleasure appears to me to
have had a fall; in fighting for the palm, she has
been smitten by the argument, and is laid low. I must
say that mind would have fallen too, and may therefore
be thought to show discretion in not putting forward a
similar claim. And if pleasure were deprived not only
of the first but of the second place, she would be
terribly damaged in the eyes of her admirers, for not
even to them would she still appear as fair as before.
SOCRATES: Well, but had we not better leave her now,
and not pain her by applying the crucial test, and
finally detecting her?
PROTARCHUS: Nonsense, Socrates.
SOCRATES: Why? because I said that we had better not
pain pleasure, which is an impossibility?
PROTARCHUS: Yes, and more than that, because you do
not seem to be aware that none of us will let you go
home until you have finished the argument.
SOCRATES: Heavens! Protarchus, that will be a tedious
business, and just at present not at all an easy one.
For in going to war in the cause of mind, who is
aspiring to the second prize, I ought to have weapons
of another make from those which I used before; some,
however, of the old ones may do again. And must I then
finish the argument?
PROTARCHUS: Of course you must.
SOCRATES: Let us be very careful in laying the
foundation.
PROTARCHUS: What do you mean?
SOCRATES: Let us divide all existing things into two,
or rather, if you do not object, into three classes.
PROTARCHUS: Upon what principle would you make the
division?
SOCRATES: Let us take some of our newly-found notions.
PROTARCHUS: Which of them?
SOCRATES: Were we not saying that God revealed a
finite element of existence, and also an infinite?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: Let us assume these two principles, and also
a third, which is compounded out of them; but I fear
that I am ridiculously clumsy at these processes of
division and enumeration.
PROTARCHUS: What do you mean, my good friend?
SOCRATES: I say that a fourth class is still wanted.
PROTARCHUS: What will that be?
SOCRATES: Find the cause of the third or compound, and
add this as a fourth class to the three others.
PROTARCHUS: And would you like to have a fifth class
or cause of resolution as well as a cause of
composition?
SOCRATES: Not, I think, at present; but if I want a
fifth at some future time you shall allow me to have
it.
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: Let us begin with the first three; and as we
find two out of the three greatly divided and
dispersed, let us endeavour to reunite them, and see
how in each of them there is a one and many.
PROTARCHUS: If you would explain to me a little more
about them, perhaps I might be able to follow you.
SOCRATES: Well, the two classes are the same which I
mentioned before, one the finite, and the other the
infinite; I will first show that the infinite is in a
certain sense many, and the finite may be hereafter
discussed.
PROTARCHUS: I agree.
SOCRATES: And now consider well; for the question to
which I invite your attention is difficult and
controverted. When you speak of hotter and colder, can
you conceive any limit in those qualities? Does not
the more and less, which dwells in their very nature,
prevent their having any end? for if they had an end,
the more and less would themselves have an end.
PROTARCHUS: That is most true.
SOCRATES: Ever, as we say, into the hotter and the
colder there enters a more and a less.
PROTARCHUS: Yes.
SOCRATES: Then, says the argument, there is never any
end of them, and being endless they must also be
infinite.
PROTARCHUS: Yes, Socrates, that is exceedingly true.
SOCRATES: Yes, my dear Protarchus, and your answer
reminds me that such an expression as 'exceedingly,'
which you have just uttered, and also the term
'gently,' have the same significance as more or less;
for whenever they occur they do not allow of the
existence of quantity—they are always introducing
degrees into actions, instituting a comparison of a
more or a less excessive or a more or a less gentle,
and at each creation of more or less, quantity
disappears. For, as I was just now saying, if quantity
and measure did not disappear, but were allowed to
intrude in the sphere of more and less and the other
comparatives, these last would be driven out of their
own domain. When definite quantity is once admitted,
there can be no longer a 'hotter' or a 'colder' (for
these are always progressing, and are never in one
stay); but definite quantity is at rest, and has
ceased to progress. Which proves that comparatives,
such as the hotter and the colder, are to be ranked in
the class of the infinite.
PROTARCHUS: Your remark certainly has the look of
truth, Socrates; but these subjects, as you were
saying, are difficult to follow at first. I think
however, that if I could hear the argument repeated by
you once or twice, there would be a substantial
agreement between us.
SOCRATES: Yes, and I will try to meet your wish; but,
as I would rather not waste time in the enumeration of
endless particulars, let me know whether I may not
assume as a note of the infinite—
PROTARCHUS: What?
SOCRATES: I want to know whether such things as appear
to us to admit of more or less, or are denoted by the
words 'exceedingly,' 'gently,' 'extremely,' and the
like, may not be referred to the class of the
infinite, which is their unity, for, as was asserted
in the previous argument, all things that were divided
and dispersed should be brought together, and have the
mark or seal of some one nature, if possible, set upon
them—do you remember?
PROTARCHUS: Yes.
SOCRATES: And all things which do not admit of more or
less, but admit their opposites, that is to say, first
of all, equality, and the equal, or again, the double,
or any other ratio of number and measure—all these
may, I think, be rightly reckoned by us in the class
of the limited or finite; what do you say?
PROTARCHUS: Excellent, Socrates.
SOCRATES: And now what nature shall we ascribe to the
third or compound kind?
PROTARCHUS: You, I think, will have to tell me that.
SOCRATES: Rather God will tell you, if there be any
God who will listen to my prayers.
PROTARCHUS: Offer up a prayer, then, and think.
SOCRATES: I am thinking, Protarchus, and I believe
that some God has befriended us.
PROTARCHUS: What do you mean, and what proof have you
to offer of what you are saying?
SOCRATES: I will tell you, and do you listen to my
words.
PROTARCHUS: Proceed.
SOCRATES: Were we not speaking just now of hotter and
colder?
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: Add to them drier, wetter, more, less,
swifter, slower, greater, smaller, and all that in the
preceding argument we placed under the unity of more
and less.
PROTARCHUS: In the class of the infinite, you mean?
SOCRATES: Yes; and now mingle this with the other.
PROTARCHUS: What is the other.
SOCRATES: The class of the finite which we ought to
have brought together as we did the infinite; but,
perhaps, it will come to the same thing if we do so
now;—when the two are combined, a third will appear.
PROTARCHUS: What do you mean by the class of the
finite?
SOCRATES: The class of the equal and the double, and
any class which puts an end to difference and
opposition, and by introducing number creates harmony
and proportion among the different elements.
PROTARCHUS: I understand; you seem to me to mean that
the various opposites, when you mingle with them the
class of the finite, takes certain forms.
SOCRATES: Yes, that is my meaning.
PROTARCHUS: Proceed.
SOCRATES: Does not the right participation in the
finite give health—in disease, for instance?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: And whereas the high and low, the swift and
the slow are infinite or unlimited, does not the
addition of the principles aforesaid introduce a
limit, and perfect the whole frame of music?
PROTARCHUS: Yes, certainly.
SOCRATES: Or, again, when cold and heat prevail, does
not the introduction of them take away excess and
indefiniteness, and infuse moderation and harmony?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: And from a like admixture of the finite and
infinite come the seasons, and all the delights of
life?
PROTARCHUS: Most true.
SOCRATES: I omit ten thousand other things, such as
beauty and health and strength, and the many beauties
and high perfections of the soul: O my beautiful
Philebus, the goddess, methinks, seeing the universal
wantonness and wickedness of all things, and that
there was in them no limit to pleasures and
self-indulgence, devised the limit of law and order,
whereby, as you say, Philebus, she torments, or as I
maintain, delivers the soul.—What think you,
Protarchus?
PROTARCHUS: Her ways are much to my mind, Socrates.
SOCRATES: You will observe that I have spoken of three
classes?
PROTARCHUS: Yes, I think that I understand you: you
mean to say that the infinite is one class, and that
the finite is a second class of existences; but what
you would make the third I am not so certain.
SOCRATES: That is because the amazing variety of the
third class is too much for you, my dear friend; but
there was not this difficulty with the infinite, which
also comprehended many classes, for all of them were
sealed with the note of more and less, and therefore
appeared one.
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: And the finite or limit had not many
divisions, and we readily acknowledged it to be by
nature one?
PROTARCHUS: Yes.
SOCRATES: Yes, indeed; and when I speak of the third
class, understand me to mean any offspring of these,
being a birth into true being, effected by the measure
which the limit introduces.
PROTARCHUS: I understand.
SOCRATES: Still there was, as we said, a fourth class
to be investigated, and you must assist in the
investigation; for does not everything which comes
into being, of necessity come into being through a
cause?
PROTARCHUS: Yes, certainly; for how can there be
anything which has no cause?
SOCRATES: And is not the agent the same as the cause
in all except name; the agent and the cause may be
rightly called one?
PROTARCHUS: Very true.
SOCRATES: And the same may be said of the patient, or
effect; we shall find that they too differ, as I was
saying, only in name—shall we not?
PROTARCHUS: We shall.
SOCRATES: The agent or cause always naturally leads,
and the patient or effect naturally follows it?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: Then the cause and what is subordinate to it
in generation are not the same, but different?
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: Did not the things which were generated, and
the things out of which they were generated, furnish
all the three classes?
PROTARCHUS: Yes.
SOCRATES: And the creator or cause of them has been
satisfactorily proven to be distinct from them,—and
may therefore be called a fourth principle?
PROTARCHUS: So let us call it.
SOCRATES: Quite right; but now, having distinguished
the four, I think that we had better refresh our
memories by recapitulating each of them in order.
PROTARCHUS: By all means.
SOCRATES: Then the first I will call the infinite or
unlimited, and the second the finite or limited; then
follows the third, an essence compound and generated;
and I do not think that I shall be far wrong in
speaking of the cause of mixture and generation as the
fourth.
PROTARCHUS: Certainly not.
SOCRATES: And now what is the next question, and how
came we hither? Were we not enquiring whether the
second place belonged to pleasure or wisdom?
PROTARCHUS: We were.
SOCRATES: And now, having determined these points,
shall we not be better able to decide about the first
and second place, which was the original subject of
dispute?
PROTARCHUS: I dare say.
SOCRATES: We said, if you remember, that the mixed
life of pleasure and wisdom was the conqueror—did we
not?
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: And we see what is the place and nature of
this life and to what class it is to be assigned?
PROTARCHUS: Beyond a doubt.
SOCRATES: This is evidently comprehended in the third
or mixed class; which is not composed of any two
particular ingredients, but of all the elements of
infinity, bound down by the finite, and may therefore
be truly said to comprehend the conqueror life.
PROTARCHUS: Most true.
SOCRATES: And what shall we say, Philebus, of your
life which is all sweetness; and in which of the
aforesaid classes is that to be placed? Perhaps you
will allow me to ask you a question before you answer?
PHILEBUS: Let me hear.
SOCRATES: Have pleasure and pain a limit, or do they
belong to the class which admits of more and less?
PHILEBUS: They belong to the class which admits of
more, Socrates; for pleasure would not be perfectly
good if she were not infinite in quantity and degree.
SOCRATES: Nor would pain, Philebus, be perfectly evil.
And therefore the infinite cannot be that element
which imparts to pleasure some degree of good. But
now—admitting, if you like, that pleasure is of the
nature of the infinite—in which of the aforesaid
classes, O Protarchus and Philebus, can we without
irreverence place wisdom and knowledge and mind? And
let us be careful, for I think that the danger will be
very serious if we err on this point.
PHILEBUS: You magnify, Socrates, the importance of
your favourite god.
SOCRATES: And you, my friend, are also magnifying your
favourite goddess; but still I must beg you to answer
the question.
PROTARCHUS: Socrates is quite right, Philebus, and we
must submit to him.
PHILEBUS: And did not you, Protarchus, propose to
answer in my place?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly I did; but I am now in a great
strait, and I must entreat you, Socrates, to be our
spokesman, and then we shall not say anything wrong or
disrespectful of your favourite.
SOCRATES: I must obey you, Protarchus; nor is the task
which you impose a difficult one; but did I really, as
Philebus implies, disconcert you with my playful
solemnity, when I asked the question to what class
mind and knowledge belong?
PROTARCHUS: You did, indeed, Socrates.
SOCRATES: Yet the answer is easy, since all
philosophers assert with one voice that mind is the
king of heaven and earth—in reality they are
magnifying themselves. And perhaps they are right. But
still I should like to consider the class of mind, if
you do not object, a little more fully.
PHILEBUS: Take your own course, Socrates, and never
mind length; we shall not tire of you.
SOCRATES: Very good; let us begin then, Protarchus, by
asking a question.
PROTARCHUS: What question?
SOCRATES: Whether all this which they call the
universe is left to the guidance of unreason and
chance medley, or, on the contrary, as our fathers
have declared, ordered and governed by a marvellous
intelligence and wisdom.
PROTARCHUS: Wide asunder are the two assertions,
illustrious Socrates, for that which you were just now
saying to me appears to be blasphemy; but the other
assertion, that mind orders all things, is worthy of
the aspect of the world, and of the sun, and of the
moon, and of the stars and of the whole circle of the
heavens; and never will I say or think otherwise.
SOCRATES: Shall we then agree with them of old time in
maintaining this doctrine,—not merely reasserting the
notions of others, without risk to ourselves,—but
shall we share in the danger, and take our part of the
reproach which will await us, when an ingenious
individual declares that all is disorder?
PROTARCHUS: That would certainly be my wish.
SOCRATES: Then now please to consider the next stage
of the argument.
PROTARCHUS: Let me hear.
SOCRATES: We see that the elements which enter into
the nature of the bodies of all animals, fire, water,
air, and, as the storm-tossed sailor cries, 'land'
(i.e., earth), reappear in the constitution of the
world.
PROTARCHUS: The proverb may be applied to us; for
truly the storm gathers over us, and we are at our
wit's end.
SOCRATES: There is something to be remarked about each
of these elements.
PROTARCHUS: What is it?
SOCRATES: Only a small fraction of any one of them
exists in us, and that of a mean sort, and not in any
way pure, or having any power worthy of its nature.
One instance will prove this of all of them; there is
fire within us, and in the universe.
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: And is not our fire small and weak and mean?
But the fire in the universe is wonderful in quantity
and beauty, and in every power that fire has.
PROTARCHUS: Most true.
SOCRATES: And is the fire in the universe nourished
and generated and ruled by the fire in us, or is the
fire in you and me, and in other animals, dependent on
the universal fire?
PROTARCHUS: That is a question which does not deserve
an answer.
SOCRATES: Right; and you would say the same, if I am
not mistaken, of the earth which is in animals and the
earth which is in the universe, and you would give a
similar reply about all the other elements?
PROTARCHUS: Why, how could any man who gave any other
be deemed in his senses?
SOCRATES: I do not think that he could—but now go on
to the next step. When we saw those elements of which
we have been speaking gathered up in one, did we not
call them a body?
PROTARCHUS: We did.
SOCRATES: And the same may be said of the cosmos,
which for the same reason may be considered to be a
body, because made up of the same elements.
PROTARCHUS: Very true.
SOCRATES: But is our body nourished wholly by this
body, or is this body nourished by our body, thence
deriving and having the qualities of which we were
just now speaking?
PROTARCHUS: That again, Socrates, is a question which
does not deserve to be asked.
SOCRATES: Well, tell me, is this question worth
asking?
PROTARCHUS: What question?
SOCRATES: May our body be said to have a soul?
PROTARCHUS: Clearly.
SOCRATES: And whence comes that soul, my dear
Protarchus, unless the body of the universe, which
contains elements like those in our bodies but in
every way fairer, had also a soul? Can there be
another source?
PROTARCHUS: Clearly, Socrates, that is the only
source.
SOCRATES: Why, yes, Protarchus; for surely we cannot
imagine that of the four classes, the finite, the
infinite, the composition of the two, and the cause,
the fourth, which enters into all things, giving to
our bodies souls, and the art of self-management, and
of healing disease, and operating in other ways to
heal and organize, having too all the attributes of
wisdom;—we cannot, I say, imagine that whereas the
self-same elements exist, both in the entire heaven
and in great provinces of the heaven, only fairer and
purer, this last should not also in that higher sphere
have designed the noblest and fairest things?
PROTARCHUS: Such a supposition is quite unreasonable.
SOCRATES: Then if this be denied, should we not be
wise in adopting the other view and maintaining that
there is in the universe a mighty infinite and an
adequate limit, of which we have often spoken, as well
as a presiding cause of no mean power, which orders
and arranges years and seasons and months, and may be
justly called wisdom and mind?
PROTARCHUS: Most justly.
SOCRATES: And wisdom and mind cannot exist without
soul?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly not.
SOCRATES: And in the divine nature of Zeus would you
not say that there is the soul and mind of a king,
because there is in him the power of the cause? And
other gods have other attributes, by which they are
pleased to be called.
PROTARCHUS: Very true.
SOCRATES: Do not then suppose that these words are
rashly spoken by us, O Protarchus, for they are in
harmony with the testimony of those who said of old
time that mind rules the universe.
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: And they furnish an answer to my enquiry;
for they imply that mind is the parent of that class
of the four which we called the cause of all; and I
think that you now have my answer.
PROTARCHUS: I have indeed, and yet I did not observe
that you had answered.
SOCRATES: A jest is sometimes refreshing, Protarchus,
when it interrupts earnest.
PROTARCHUS: Very true.
SOCRATES: I think, friend, that we have now pretty
clearly set forth the class to which mind belongs and
what is the power of mind.
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: And the class to which pleasure belongs has
also been long ago discovered?
PROTARCHUS: Yes.
SOCRATES: And let us remember, too, of both of them,
(1) that mind was akin to the cause and of this
family; and (2) that pleasure is infinite and belongs
to the class which neither has, nor ever will have in
itself, a beginning, middle, or end of its own.
PROTARCHUS: I shall be sure to remember.
SOCRATES: We must next examine what is their place and
under what conditions they are generated. And we will
begin with pleasure, since her class was first
examined; and yet pleasure cannot be rightly tested
apart from pain.
PROTARCHUS: If this is the road, let us take it.
SOCRATES: I wonder whether you would agree with me
about the origin of pleasure and pain.
PROTARCHUS: What do you mean?
SOCRATES: I mean to say that their natural seat is in
the mixed class.
PROTARCHUS: And would you tell me again, sweet
Socrates, which of the aforesaid classes is the mixed
one?
SOCRATES: I will, my fine fellow, to the best of my
ability.
PROTARCHUS: Very good.
SOCRATES: Let us then understand the mixed class to be
that which we placed third in the list of four.
PROTARCHUS: That which followed the infinite and the
finite; and in which you ranked health, and, if I am
not mistaken, harmony.
SOCRATES: Capital; and now will you please to give me
your best attention?
PROTARCHUS: Proceed; I am attending.
SOCRATES: I say that when the harmony in animals is
dissolved, there is also a dissolution of nature and a
generation of pain.
PROTARCHUS: That is very probable.
SOCRATES: And the restoration of harmony and return to
nature is the source of pleasure, if I may be allowed
to speak in the fewest and shortest words about
matters of the greatest moment.
PROTARCHUS: I believe that you are right, Socrates;
but will you try to be a little plainer?
SOCRATES: Do not obvious and every-day phenomena
furnish the simplest illustration?
PROTARCHUS: What phenomena do you mean?
SOCRATES: Hunger, for example, is a dissolution and a
pain.
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: Whereas eating is a replenishment and a
pleasure?
PROTARCHUS: Yes.
SOCRATES: Thirst again is a destruction and a pain,
but the effect of moisture replenishing the dry place
is a pleasure: once more, the unnatural separation and
dissolution caused by heat is painful, and the natural
restoration and refrigeration is pleasant.
PROTARCHUS: Very true.
SOCRATES: And the unnatural freezing of the moisture
in an animal is pain, and the natural process of
resolution and return of the elements to their
original state is pleasure. And would not the general
proposition seem to you to hold, that the destroying
of the natural union of the finite and infinite,
which, as I was observing before, make up the class of
living beings, is pain, and that the process of return
of all things to their own nature is pleasure?
PROTARCHUS: Granted; what you say has a general truth.
SOCRATES: Here then is one kind of pleasures and pains
originating severally in the two processes which we
have described?
PROTARCHUS: Good.
SOCRATES: Let us next assume that in the soul herself
there is an antecedent hope of pleasure which is sweet
and refreshing, and an expectation of pain, fearful
and anxious.
PROTARCHUS: Yes; this is another class of pleasures
and pains, which is of the soul only, apart from the
body, and is produced by expectation.
SOCRATES: Right; for in the analysis of these, pure,
as I suppose them to be, the pleasures being unalloyed
with pain and the pains with pleasure, methinks that
we shall see clearly whether the whole class of
pleasure is to be desired, or whether this quality of
entire desirableness is not rather to be attributed to
another of the classes which have been mentioned; and
whether pleasure and pain, like heat and cold, and
other things of the same kind, are not sometimes to be
desired and sometimes not to be desired, as being not
in themselves good, but only sometimes and in some
instances admitting of the nature of good.
PROTARCHUS: You say most truly that this is the track
which the investigation should pursue.
SOCRATES: Well, then, assuming that pain ensues on the
dissolution, and pleasure on the restoration of the
harmony, let us now ask what will be the condition of
animated beings who are neither in process of
restoration nor of dissolution. And mind what you say:
I ask whether any animal who is in that condition can
possibly have any feeling of pleasure or pain, great
or small?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly not.
SOCRATES: Then here we have a third state, over and
above that of pleasure and of pain?
PROTARCHUS: Very true.
SOCRATES: And do not forget that there is such a
state; it will make a great difference in our judgment
of pleasure, whether we remember this or not. And I
should like to say a few words about it.
PROTARCHUS: What have you to say?
SOCRATES: Why, you know that if a man chooses the life
of wisdom, there is no reason why he should not live
in this neutral state.
PROTARCHUS: You mean that he may live neither
rejoicing nor sorrowing?
SOCRATES: Yes; and if I remember rightly, when the
lives were compared, no degree of pleasure, whether
great or small, was thought to be necessary to him who
chose the life of thought and wisdom.
PROTARCHUS: Yes, certainly, we said so.
SOCRATES: Then he will live without pleasure; and who
knows whether this may not be the most divine of all
lives?
PROTARCHUS: If so, the gods, at any rate, cannot be
supposed to have either joy or sorrow.
SOCRATES: Certainly not—there would be a great
impropriety in the assumption of either alternative.
But whether the gods are or are not indifferent to
pleasure is a point which may be considered hereafter
if in any way relevant to the argument, and whatever
is the conclusion we will place it to the account of
mind in her contest for the second place, should she
have to resign the first.
PROTARCHUS: Just so.
SOCRATES: The other class of pleasures, which as we
were saying is purely mental, is entirely derived from
memory.
PROTARCHUS: What do you mean?
SOCRATES: I must first of all analyze memory, or
rather perception which is prior to memory, if the
subject of our discussion is ever to be properly
cleared up.
PROTARCHUS: How will you proceed?
SOCRATES: Let us imagine affections of the body which
are extinguished before they reach the soul, and leave
her unaffected; and again, other affections which
vibrate through both soul and body, and impart a shock
to both and to each of them.
PROTARCHUS: Granted.
SOCRATES: And the soul may be truly said to be
oblivious of the first but not of the second?
PROTARCHUS: Quite true.
SOCRATES: When I say oblivious, do not suppose that I
mean forgetfulness in a literal sense; for
forgetfulness is the exit of memory, which in this
case has not yet entered; and to speak of the loss of
that which is not yet in existence, and never has
been, is a contradiction; do you see?
PROTARCHUS: Yes.
SOCRATES: Then just be so good as to change the terms.
PROTARCHUS: How shall I change them?
SOCRATES: Instead of the oblivion of the soul, when
you are describing the state in which she is
unaffected by the shocks of the body, say
unconsciousness.
PROTARCHUS: I see.
SOCRATES: And the union or communion of soul and body
in one feeling and motion would be properly called
consciousness?
PROTARCHUS: Most true.
SOCRATES: Then now we know the meaning of the word?
PROTARCHUS: Yes.
SOCRATES: And memory may, I think, be rightly
described as the preservation of consciousness?
PROTARCHUS: Right.
SOCRATES: But do we not distinguish memory from
recollection?
PROTARCHUS: I think so.
SOCRATES: And do we not mean by recollection the power
which the soul has of recovering, when by herself,
some feeling which she experienced when in company
with the body?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: And when she recovers of herself the lost
recollection of some consciousness or knowledge, the
recovery is termed recollection and reminiscence?
PROTARCHUS: Very true.
SOCRATES: There is a reason why I say all this.
PROTARCHUS: What is it?
SOCRATES: I want to attain the plainest possible
notion of pleasure and desire, as they exist in the
mind only, apart from the body; and the previous
analysis helps to show the nature of both.
PROTARCHUS: Then now, Socrates, let us proceed to the
next point.
SOCRATES: There are certainly many things to be
considered in discussing the generation and whole
complexion of pleasure. At the outset we must
determine the nature and seat of desire.
PROTARCHUS: Ay; let us enquire into that, for we shall
lose nothing.
SOCRATES: Nay, Protarchus, we shall surely lose the
puzzle if we find the answer.
PROTARCHUS: A fair retort; but let us proceed.
SOCRATES: Did we not place hunger, thirst, and the
like, in the class of desires?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: And yet they are very different; what common
nature have we in view when we call them by a single
name?
PROTARCHUS: By heavens, Socrates, that is a question
which is not easily answered; but it must be answered.
SOCRATES: Then let us go back to our examples.
PROTARCHUS: Where shall we begin?
SOCRATES: Do we mean anything when we say 'a man
thirsts'?
PROTARCHUS: Yes.
SOCRATES: We mean to say that he 'is empty'?
PROTARCHUS: Of course.
SOCRATES: And is not thirst desire?
PROTARCHUS: Yes, of drink.
SOCRATES: Would you say of drink, or of replenishment
with drink?
PROTARCHUS: I should say, of replenishment with drink.
SOCRATES: Then he who is empty desires, as would
appear, the opposite of what he experiences; for he is
empty and desires to be full?
PROTARCHUS: Clearly so.
SOCRATES: But how can a man who is empty for the first
time, attain either by perception or memory to any
apprehension of replenishment, of which he has no
present or past experience?
PROTARCHUS: Impossible.
SOCRATES: And yet he who desires, surely desires
something?
PROTARCHUS: Of course.
SOCRATES: He does not desire that which he
experiences, for he experiences thirst, and thirst is
emptiness; but he desires replenishment?
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: Then there must be something in the thirsty
man which in some way apprehends replenishment?
PROTARCHUS: There must.
SOCRATES: And that cannot be the body, for the body is
supposed to be emptied?
PROTARCHUS: Yes.
SOCRATES: The only remaining alternative is that the
soul apprehends the replenishment by the help of
memory; as is obvious, for what other way can there
be?
PROTARCHUS: I cannot imagine any other.
SOCRATES: But do you see the consequence?
PROTARCHUS: What is it?
SOCRATES: That there is no such thing as desire of the
body.
PROTARCHUS: Why so?
SOCRATES: Why, because the argument shows that the
endeavour of every animal is to the reverse of his
bodily state.
PROTARCHUS: Yes.
SOCRATES: And the impulse which leads him to the
opposite of what he is experiencing proves that he has
a memory of the opposite state.
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: And the argument, having proved that memory
attracts us towards the objects of desire, proves also
that the impulses and the desires and the moving
principle in every living being have their origin in
the soul.
PROTARCHUS: Most true.
SOCRATES: The argument will not allow that our body
either hungers or thirsts or has any similar
experience.
PROTARCHUS: Quite right.
SOCRATES: Let me make a further observation; the
argument appears to me to imply that there is a kind
of life which consists in these affections.
PROTARCHUS: Of what affections, and of what kind of
life, are you speaking?
SOCRATES: I am speaking of being emptied and
replenished, and of all that relates to the
preservation and destruction of living beings, as well
as of the pain which is felt in one of these states
and of the pleasure which succeeds to it.
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: And what would you say of the intermediate
state?
PROTARCHUS: What do you mean by 'intermediate'?
SOCRATES: I mean when a person is in actual suffering
and yet remembers past pleasures which, if they would
only return, would relieve him; but as yet he has them
not. May we not say of him, that he is in an
intermediate state?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: Would you say that he was wholly pained or
wholly pleased?
PROTARCHUS: Nay, I should say that he has two pains;
in his body there is the actual experience of pain,
and in his soul longing and expectation.
SOCRATES: What do you mean, Protarchus, by the two
pains? May not a man who is empty have at one time a
sure hope of being filled, and at other times be quite
in despair?
PROTARCHUS: Very true.
SOCRATES: And has he not the pleasure of memory when
he is hoping to be filled, and yet in that he is empty
is he not at the same time in pain?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: Then man and the other animals have at the
same time both pleasure and pain?
PROTARCHUS: I suppose so.
SOCRATES: But when a man is empty and has no hope of
being filled, there will be the double experience of
pain. You observed this and inferred that the double
experience was the single case possible.
PROTARCHUS: Quite true, Socrates.
SOCRATES: Shall the enquiry into these states of
feeling be made the occasion of raising a question?
PROTARCHUS: What question?
SOCRATES: Whether we ought to say that the pleasures
and pains of which we are speaking are true or false?
or some true and some false?
PROTARCHUS: But how, Socrates, can there be false
pleasures and pains?
SOCRATES: And how, Protarchus, can there be true and
false fears, or true and false expectations, or true
and false opinions?
PROTARCHUS: I grant that opinions may be true or
false, but not pleasures.
SOCRATES: What do you mean? I am afraid that we are
raising a very serious enquiry.
PROTARCHUS: There I agree.
SOCRATES: And yet, my boy, for you are one of
Philebus' boys, the point to be considered, is,
whether the enquiry is relevant to the argument.
PROTARCHUS: Surely.
SOCRATES: No tedious and irrelevant discussion can be
allowed; what is said should be pertinent.
PROTARCHUS: Right.
SOCRATES: I am always wondering at the question which
has now been raised.
PROTARCHUS: How so?
SOCRATES: Do you deny that some pleasures are false,
and others true?
PROTARCHUS: To be sure I do.
SOCRATES: Would you say that no one ever seemed to
rejoice and yet did not rejoice, or seemed to feel
pain and yet did not feel pain, sleeping or waking,
mad or lunatic?
PROTARCHUS: So we have always held, Socrates.
SOCRATES: But were you right? Shall we enquire into
the truth of your opinion?
PROTARCHUS: I think that we should.
SOCRATES: Let us then put into more precise terms the
question which has arisen about pleasure and opinion.
Is there such a thing as opinion?
PROTARCHUS: Yes.
SOCRATES: And such a thing as pleasure?
PROTARCHUS: Yes.
SOCRATES: And an opinion must be of something?
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: And a man must be pleased by something?
PROTARCHUS: Quite correct.
SOCRATES: And whether the opinion be right or wrong,
makes no difference; it will still be an opinion?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: And he who is pleased, whether he is rightly
pleased or not, will always have a real feeling of
pleasure?
PROTARCHUS: Yes; that is also quite true.
SOCRATES: Then, how can opinion be both true and
false, and pleasure true only, although pleasure and
opinion are both equally real?
PROTARCHUS: Yes; that is the question.
SOCRATES: You mean that opinion admits of truth and
falsehood, and hence becomes not merely opinion, but
opinion of a certain quality; and this is what you
think should be examined?
PROTARCHUS: Yes.
SOCRATES: And further, even if we admit the existence
of qualities in other objects, may not pleasure and
pain be simple and devoid of quality?
PROTARCHUS: Clearly.
SOCRATES: But there is no difficulty in seeing that
pleasure and pain as well as opinion have qualities,
for they are great or small, and have various degrees
of intensity; as was indeed said long ago by us.
PROTARCHUS: Quite true.
SOCRATES: And if badness attaches to any of them,
Protarchus, then we should speak of a bad opinion or
of a bad pleasure?
PROTARCHUS: Quite true, Socrates.
SOCRATES: And if rightness attaches to any of them,
should we not speak of a right opinion or right
pleasure; and in like manner of the reverse of
rightness?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: And if the thing opined be erroneous, might
we not say that the opinion, being erroneous, is not
right or rightly opined?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: And if we see a pleasure or pain which errs
in respect of its object, shall we call that right or
good, or by any honourable name?
PROTARCHUS: Not if the pleasure is mistaken; how could
we?
SOCRATES: And surely pleasure often appears to
accompany an opinion which is not true, but false?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly it does; and in that case,
Socrates, as we were saying, the opinion is false, but
no one could call the actual pleasure false.
SOCRATES: How eagerly, Protarchus, do you rush to the
defence of pleasure!
PROTARCHUS: Nay, Socrates, I only repeat what I hear.
SOCRATES: And is there no difference, my friend,
between that pleasure which is associated with right
opinion and knowledge, and that which is often found
in all of us associated with falsehood and ignorance?
PROTARCHUS: There must be a very great difference,
between them.
SOCRATES: Then, now let us proceed to contemplate this
difference.
PROTARCHUS: Lead, and I will follow.
SOCRATES: Well, then, my view is—
PROTARCHUS: What is it?
SOCRATES: We agree—do we not?—that there is such a
thing as false, and also such a thing as true opinion?
PROTARCHUS: Yes.
SOCRATES: And pleasure and pain, as I was just now
saying, are often consequent upon these—upon true and
false opinion, I mean.
PROTARCHUS: Very true.
SOCRATES: And do not opinion and the endeavour to form
an opinion always spring from memory and perception?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: Might we imagine the process to be something
of this nature?
PROTARCHUS: Of what nature?
SOCRATES: An object may be often seen at a distance
not very clearly, and the seer may want to determine
what it is which he sees.
PROTARCHUS: Very likely.
SOCRATES: Soon he begins to interrogate himself.
PROTARCHUS: In what manner?
SOCRATES: He asks himself—'What is that which appears
to be standing by the rock under the tree?' This is
the question which he may be supposed to put to
himself when he sees such an appearance.
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: To which he may guess the right answer,
saying as if in a whisper to himself—'It is a man.'
PROTARCHUS: Very good.
SOCRATES: Or again, he may be misled, and then he will
say—'No, it is a figure made by the shepherds.'
PROTARCHUS: Yes.
SOCRATES: And if he has a companion, he repeats his
thought to him in articulate sounds, and what was
before an opinion, has now become a proposition.
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: But if he be walking alone when these
thoughts occur to him, he may not unfrequently keep
them in his mind for a considerable time.
PROTARCHUS: Very true.
SOCRATES: Well, now, I wonder whether you would agree
in my explanation of this phenomenon.
PROTARCHUS: What is your explanation?
SOCRATES: I think that the soul at such times is like
a book.
PROTARCHUS: How so?
SOCRATES: Memory and perception meet, and they and
their attendant feelings seem to almost to write down
words in the soul, and when the inscribing feeling
writes truly, then true opinion and true propositions
which are the expressions of opinion come into our
souls—but when the scribe within us writes falsely,
the result is false.
PROTARCHUS: I quite assent and agree to your
statement.
SOCRATES: I must bespeak your favour also for another
artist, who is busy at the same time in the chambers
of the soul.
PROTARCHUS: Who is he?
SOCRATES: The painter, who, after the scribe has done
his work, draws images in the soul of the things which
he has described.
PROTARCHUS: But when and how does he do this?
SOCRATES: When a man, besides receiving from sight or
some other sense certain opinions or statements, sees
in his mind the images of the subjects of them;—is not
this a very common mental phenomenon?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: And the images answering to true opinions
and words are true, and to false opinions and words
false; are they not?
PROTARCHUS: They are.
SOCRATES: If we are right so far, there arises a
further question.
PROTARCHUS: What is it?
SOCRATES: Whether we experience the feeling of which I
am speaking only in relation to the present and the
past, or in relation to the future also?
PROTARCHUS: I should say in relation to all times
alike.
SOCRATES: Have not purely mental pleasures and pains
been described already as in some cases anticipations
of the bodily ones; from which we may infer that
anticipatory pleasures and pains have to do with the
future?
PROTARCHUS: Most true.
SOCRATES: And do all those writings and paintings
which, as we were saying a little while ago, are
produced in us, relate to the past and present only,
and not to the future?
PROTARCHUS: To the future, very much.
SOCRATES: When you say, 'Very much,' you mean to imply
that all these representations are hopes about the
future, and that mankind are filled with hopes in
every stage of existence?
PROTARCHUS: Exactly.
SOCRATES: Answer me another question.
PROTARCHUS: What question?
SOCRATES: A just and pious and good man is the friend
of the gods; is he not?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly he is.
SOCRATES: And the unjust and utterly bad man is the
reverse?
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: And all men, as we were saying just now, are
always filled with hopes?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: And these hopes, as they are termed, are
propositions which exist in the minds of each of us?
PROTARCHUS: Yes.
SOCRATES: And the fancies of hope are also pictured in
us; a man may often have a vision of a heap of gold,
and pleasures ensuing, and in the picture there may be
a likeness of himself mightily rejoicing over his good
fortune.
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: And may we not say that the good, being
friends of the gods, have generally true pictures
presented to them, and the bad false pictures?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: The bad, too, have pleasures painted in
their fancy as well as the good; but I presume that
they are false pleasures.
PROTARCHUS: They are.
SOCRATES: The bad then commonly delight in false
pleasures, and the good in true pleasures?
PROTARCHUS: Doubtless.
SOCRATES: Then upon this view there are false
pleasures in the souls of men which are a ludicrous
imitation of the true, and there are pains of a
similar character?
PROTARCHUS: There are.
SOCRATES: And did we not allow that a man who had an
opinion at all had a real opinion, but often about
things which had no existence either in the past,
present, or future?
PROTARCHUS: Quite true.
SOCRATES: And this was the source of false opinion and
opining; am I not right?
PROTARCHUS: Yes.
SOCRATES: And must we not attribute to pleasure and
pain a similar real but illusory character?
PROTARCHUS: How do you mean?
SOCRATES: I mean to say that a man must be admitted to
have real pleasure who is pleased with anything or
anyhow; and he may be pleased about things which
neither have nor have ever had any real existence,
and, more often than not, are never likely to exist.
PROTARCHUS: Yes, Socrates, that again is undeniable.
SOCRATES: And may not the same be said about fear and
anger and the like; are they not often false?
PROTARCHUS: Quite so.
SOCRATES: And can opinions be good or bad except in as
far as they are true or false?
PROTARCHUS: In no other way.
SOCRATES: Nor can pleasures be conceived to be bad
except in so far as they are false.
PROTARCHUS: Nay, Socrates, that is the very opposite
of truth; for no one would call pleasures and pains
bad because they are false, but by reason of some
other great corruption to which they are liable.
SOCRATES: Well, of pleasures which are corrupt and
caused by corruption we will hereafter speak, if we
care to continue the enquiry; for the present I would
rather show by another argument that there are many
false pleasures existing or coming into existence in
us, because this may assist our final decision.
PROTARCHUS: Very true; that is to say, if there are
such pleasures.
SOCRATES: I think that there are, Protarchus; but this
is an opinion which should be well assured, and not
rest upon a mere assertion.
PROTARCHUS: Very good.
SOCRATES: Then now, like wrestlers, let us approach
and grasp this new argument.
PROTARCHUS: Proceed.
SOCRATES: We were maintaining a little while since,
that when desires, as they are termed, exist in us,
then the body has separate feelings apart from the
soul—do you remember?
PROTARCHUS: Yes, I remember that you said so.
SOCRATES: And the soul was supposed to desire the
opposite of the bodily state, while the body was the
source of any pleasure or pain which was experienced.
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: Then now you may infer what happens in such
cases.
PROTARCHUS: What am I to infer?
SOCRATES: That in such cases pleasures and pains come
simultaneously; and there is a juxtaposition of the
opposite sensations which correspond to them, as has
been already shown.
PROTARCHUS: Clearly.
SOCRATES: And there is another point to which we have
agreed.
PROTARCHUS: What is it?
SOCRATES: That pleasure and pain both admit of more
and less, and that they are of the class of infinites.
PROTARCHUS: Certainly, we said so.
SOCRATES: But how can we rightly judge of them?
PROTARCHUS: How can we?
SOCRATES: Is it our intention to judge of their
comparative importance and intensity, measuring
pleasure against pain, and pain against pain, and
pleasure against pleasure?
PROTARCHUS: Yes, such is our intention, and we shall
judge of them accordingly.
SOCRATES: Well, take the case of sight. Does not the
nearness or distance of magnitudes obscure their true
proportions, and make us opine falsely; and do we not
find the same illusion happening in the case of
pleasures and pains?
PROTARCHUS: Yes, Socrates, and in a degree far
greater.
SOCRATES: Then what we are now saying is the opposite
of what we were saying before.
PROTARCHUS: What was that?
SOCRATES: Then the opinions were true and false, and
infected the pleasures and pains with their own
falsity.
PROTARCHUS: Very true.
SOCRATES: But now it is the pleasures which are said
to be true and false because they are seen at various
distances, and subjected to comparison; the pleasures
appear to be greater and more vehement when placed
side by side with the pains, and the pains when placed
side by side with the pleasures.
PROTARCHUS: Certainly, and for the reason which you
mention.
SOCRATES: And suppose you part off from pleasures and
pains the element which makes them appear to be
greater or less than they really are: you will
acknowledge that this element is illusory, and you
will never say that the corresponding excess or defect
of pleasure or pain is real or true.
PROTARCHUS: Certainly not.
SOCRATES: Next let us see whether in another direction
we may not find pleasures and pains existing and
appearing in living beings, which are still more false
than these.
PROTARCHUS: What are they, and how shall we find them?
SOCRATES: If I am not mistaken, I have often repeated
that pains and aches and suffering and uneasiness of
all sorts arise out of a corruption of nature caused
by concretions, and dissolutions, and repletions, and
evacuations, and also by growth and decay?
PROTARCHUS: Yes, that has been often said.
SOCRATES: And we have also agreed that the restoration
of the natural state is pleasure?
PROTARCHUS: Right.
SOCRATES: But now let us suppose an interval of time
at which the body experiences none of these changes.
PROTARCHUS: When can that be, Socrates?
SOCRATES: Your question, Protarchus, does not help the
argument.
PROTARCHUS: Why not, Socrates?
SOCRATES: Because it does not prevent me from
repeating mine.
PROTARCHUS: And what was that?
SOCRATES: Why, Protarchus, admitting that there is no
such interval, I may ask what would be the necessary
consequence if there were?
PROTARCHUS: You mean, what would happen if the body
were not changed either for good or bad?
SOCRATES: Yes.
PROTARCHUS: Why then, Socrates, I should suppose that
there would be neither pleasure nor pain.
SOCRATES: Very good; but still, if I am not mistaken,
you do assert that we must always be experiencing one
of them; that is what the wise tell us; for, say they,
all things are ever flowing up and down.
PROTARCHUS: Yes, and their words are of no mean
authority.
SOCRATES: Of course, for they are no mean authorities
themselves; and I should like to avoid the brunt of
their argument. Shall I tell you how I mean to escape
from them? And you shall be the partner of my flight.
PROTARCHUS: How?
SOCRATES: To them we will say: 'Good; but are we, or
living things in general, always conscious of what
happens to us—for example, of our growth, or the like?
Are we not, on the contrary, almost wholly unconscious
of this and similar phenomena?' You must answer for
them.
PROTARCHUS: The latter alternative is the true one.
SOCRATES: Then we were not right in saying, just now,
that motions going up and down cause pleasures and
pains?
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: A better and more unexceptionable way of
speaking will be—
PROTARCHUS: What?
SOCRATES: If we say that the great changes produce
pleasures and pains, but that the moderate and lesser
ones do neither.
PROTARCHUS: That, Socrates, is the more correct mode
of speaking.
SOCRATES: But if this be true, the life to which I was
just now referring again appears.
PROTARCHUS: What life?
SOCRATES: The life which we affirmed to be devoid
either of pain or of joy.
PROTARCHUS: Very true.
SOCRATES: We may assume then that there are three
lives, one pleasant, one painful, and the third which
is neither; what say you?
PROTARCHUS: I should say as you do that there are
three of them.
SOCRATES: But if so, the negation of pain will not be
the same with pleasure.
PROTARCHUS: Certainly not.
SOCRATES: Then when you hear a person saying, that
always to live without pain is the pleasantest of all
things, what would you understand him to mean by that
statement?
PROTARCHUS: I think that by pleasure he must mean the
negative of pain.
SOCRATES: Let us take any three things; or suppose
that we embellish a little and call the first gold,
the second silver, and there shall be a third which is
neither.
PROTARCHUS: Very good.
SOCRATES: Now, can that which is neither be either
gold or silver?
PROTARCHUS: Impossible.
SOCRATES: No more can that neutral or middle life be
rightly or reasonably spoken or thought of as pleasant
or painful.
PROTARCHUS: Certainly not.
SOCRATES: And yet, my friend, there are, as we know,
persons who say and think so.
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: And do they think that they have pleasure
when they are free from pain?
PROTARCHUS: They say so.
SOCRATES: And they must think or they would not say
that they have pleasure.
PROTARCHUS: I suppose not.
SOCRATES: And yet if pleasure and the negation of pain
are of distinct natures, they are wrong.
PROTARCHUS: But they are undoubtedly of distinct
natures.
SOCRATES: Then shall we take the view that they are
three, as we were just now saying, or that they are
two only—the one being a state of pain, which is an
evil, and the other a cessation of pain, which is of
itself a good, and is called pleasant?
PROTARCHUS: But why, Socrates, do we ask the question
at all? I do not see the reason.
SOCRATES: You, Protarchus, have clearly never heard of
certain enemies of our friend Philebus.
PROTARCHUS: And who may they be?
SOCRATES: Certain persons who are reputed to be
masters in natural philosophy, who deny the very
existence of pleasure.
PROTARCHUS: Indeed!
SOCRATES: They say that what the school of Philebus
calls pleasures are all of them only avoidances of
pain.
PROTARCHUS: And would you, Socrates, have us agree
with them?
SOCRATES: Why, no, I would rather use them as a sort
of diviners, who divine the truth, not by rules of
art, but by an instinctive repugnance and extreme
detestation which a noble nature has of the power of
pleasure, in which they think that there is nothing
sound, and her seductive influence is declared by them
to be witchcraft, and not pleasure. This is the use
which you may make of them. And when you have
considered the various grounds of their dislike, you
shall hear from me what I deem to be true pleasures.
Having thus examined the nature of pleasure from both
points of view, we will bring her up for judgment.
PROTARCHUS: Well said.
SOCRATES: Then let us enter into an alliance with
these philosophers and follow in the track of their
dislike. I imagine that they would say something of
this sort; they would begin at the beginning, and ask
whether, if we wanted to know the nature of any
quality, such as hardness, we should be more likely to
discover it by looking at the hardest things, rather
than at the least hard? You, Protarchus, shall answer
these severe gentlemen as you answer me.
PROTARCHUS: By all means, and I reply to them, that
you should look at the greatest instances.
SOCRATES: Then if we want to see the true nature of
pleasures as a class, we should not look at the most
diluted pleasures, but at the most extreme and most
vehement?
PROTARCHUS: In that every one will agree.
SOCRATES: And the obvious instances of the greatest
pleasures, as we have often said, are the pleasures of
the body?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: And are they felt by us to be or become
greater, when we are sick or when we are in health?
And here we must be careful in our answer, or we shall
come to grief.
PROTARCHUS: How will that be?
SOCRATES: Why, because we might be tempted to answer,
'When we are in health.'
PROTARCHUS: Yes, that is the natural answer.
SOCRATES: Well, but are not those pleasures the
greatest of which mankind have the greatest desires?
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: And do not people who are in a fever, or any
similar illness, feel cold or thirst or other bodily
affections more intensely? Am I not right in saying
that they have a deeper want and greater pleasure in
the satisfaction of their want?
PROTARCHUS: That is obvious as soon as it is said.
SOCRATES: Well, then, shall we not be right in saying,
that if a person would wish to see the greatest
pleasures he ought to go and look, not at health, but
at disease? And here you must distinguish:—do not
imagine that I mean to ask whether those who are very
ill have more pleasures than those who are well, but
understand that I am speaking of the magnitude of
pleasure; I want to know where pleasures are found to
be most intense. For, as I say, we have to discover
what is pleasure, and what they mean by pleasure who
deny her very existence.
PROTARCHUS: I think I follow you.
SOCRATES: You will soon have a better opportunity of
showing whether you do or not, Protarchus. Answer now,
and tell me whether you see, I will not say more, but
more intense and excessive pleasures in wantonness
than in temperance? Reflect before you speak.
PROTARCHUS: I understand you, and see that there is a
great difference between them; the temperate are
restrained by the wise man's aphorism of 'Never too
much,' which is their rule, but excess of pleasure
possessing the minds of fools and wantons becomes
madness and makes them shout with delight.
SOCRATES: Very good, and if this be true, then the
greatest pleasures and pains will clearly be found in
some vicious state of soul and body, and not in a
virtuous state.
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: And ought we not to select some of these for
examination, and see what makes them the greatest?
PROTARCHUS: To be sure we ought.
SOCRATES: Take the case of the pleasures which arise
out of certain disorders.
PROTARCHUS: What disorders?
SOCRATES: The pleasures of unseemly disorders, which
our severe friends utterly detest.
PROTARCHUS: What pleasures?
SOCRATES: Such, for example, as the relief of itching
and other ailments by scratching, which is the only
remedy required. For what in Heaven's name is the
feeling to be called which is thus produced in
us?—Pleasure or pain?
PROTARCHUS: A villainous mixture of some kind,
Socrates, I should say.
SOCRATES: I did not introduce the argument, O
Protarchus, with any personal reference to Philebus,
but because, without the consideration of these and
similar pleasures, we shall not be able to determine
the point at issue.
PROTARCHUS: Then we had better proceed to analyze this
family of pleasures.
SOCRATES: You mean the pleasures which are mingled
with pain?
PROTARCHUS: Exactly.
SOCRATES: There are some mixtures which are of the
body, and only in the body, and others which are of
the soul, and only in the soul; while there are other
mixtures of pleasures with pains, common both to soul
and body, which in their composite state are called
sometimes pleasures and sometimes pains.
PROTARCHUS: How is that?
SOCRATES: Whenever, in the restoration or in the
derangement of nature, a man experiences two opposite
feelings; for example, when he is cold and is growing
warm, or again, when he is hot and is becoming cool,
and he wants to have the one and be rid of the
other;—the sweet has a bitter, as the common saying
is, and both together fasten upon him and create
irritation and in time drive him to distraction.
PROTARCHUS: That description is very true to nature.
SOCRATES: And in these sorts of mixtures the pleasures
and pains are sometimes equal, and sometimes one or
other of them predominates?
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: Of cases in which the pain exceeds the
pleasure, an example is afforded by itching, of which
we were just now speaking, and by the tingling which
we feel when the boiling and fiery element is within,
and the rubbing and motion only relieves the surface,
and does not reach the parts affected; then if you put
them to the fire, and as a last resort apply cold to
them, you may often produce the most intense pleasure
or pain in the inner parts, which contrasts and
mingles with the pain or pleasure, as the case may be,
of the outer parts; and this is due to the forcible
separation of what is united, or to the union of what
is separated, and to the juxtaposition of pleasure and
pain.
PROTARCHUS: Quite so.
SOCRATES: Sometimes the element of pleasure prevails
in a man, and the slight undercurrent of pain makes
him tingle, and causes a gentle irritation; or again,
the excessive infusion of pleasure creates an
excitement in him,—he even leaps for joy, he assumes
all sorts of attitudes, he changes all manner of
colours, he gasps for breath, and is quite amazed, and
utters the most irrational exclamations.
PROTARCHUS: Yes, indeed.
SOCRATES: He will say of himself, and others will say
of him, that he is dying with these delights; and the
more dissipated and good-for-nothing he is, the more
vehemently he pursues them in every way; of all
pleasures he declares them to be the greatest; and he
reckons him who lives in the most constant enjoyment
of them to be the happiest of mankind.
PROTARCHUS: That, Socrates, is a very true description
of the opinions of the majority about pleasures.
SOCRATES: Yes, Protarchus, quite true of the mixed
pleasures, which arise out of the communion of
external and internal sensations in the body; there
are also cases in which the mind contributes an
opposite element to the body, whether of pleasure or
pain, and the two unite and form one mixture.
Concerning these I have already remarked, that when a
man is empty he desires to be full, and has pleasure
in hope and pain in vacuity. But now I must further
add what I omitted before, that in all these and
similar emotions in which body and mind are opposed
(and they are innumerable), pleasure and pain coalesce
in one.
PROTARCHUS: I believe that to be quite true.
SOCRATES: There still remains one other sort of
admixture of pleasures and pains.
PROTARCHUS: What is that?
SOCRATES: The union which, as we were saying, the mind
often experiences of purely mental feelings.
PROTARCHUS: What do you mean?
SOCRATES: Why, do we not speak of anger, fear, desire,
sorrow, love, emulation, envy, and the like, as pains
which belong to the soul only?
PROTARCHUS: Yes.
SOCRATES: And shall we not find them also full of the
most wonderful pleasures? need I remind you of the
anger
'Which stirs even a wise man to violence, And is
sweeter than honey and the honeycomb?'
And you remember how pleasures mingle with pains in
lamentation and bereavement?
PROTARCHUS: Yes, there is a natural connexion between
them.
SOCRATES: And you remember also how at the sight of
tragedies the spectators smile through their tears?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly I do.
SOCRATES: And are you aware that even at a comedy the
soul experiences a mixed feeling of pain and pleasure?
PROTARCHUS: I do not quite understand you.
SOCRATES: I admit, Protarchus, that there is some
difficulty in recognizing this mixture of feelings at
a comedy.
PROTARCHUS: There is, I think.
SOCRATES: And the greater the obscurity of the case
the more desirable is the examination of it, because
the difficulty in detecting other cases of mixed
pleasures and pains will be less.
PROTARCHUS: Proceed.
SOCRATES: I have just mentioned envy; would you not
call that a pain of the soul?
PROTARCHUS: Yes.
SOCRATES: And yet the envious man finds something in
the misfortunes of his neighbours at which he is
pleased?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: And ignorance, and what is termed
clownishness, are surely an evil?
PROTARCHUS: To be sure.
SOCRATES: From these considerations learn to know the
nature of the ridiculous.
PROTARCHUS: Explain.
SOCRATES: The ridiculous is in short the specific name
which is used to describe the vicious form of a
certain habit; and of vice in general it is that kind
which is most at variance with the inscription at
Delphi.
PROTARCHUS: You mean, Socrates, 'Know thyself.'
SOCRATES: I do; and the opposite would be, 'Know not
thyself.'
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: And now, O Protarchus, try to divide this
into three.
PROTARCHUS: Indeed I am afraid that I cannot.
SOCRATES: Do you mean to say that I must make the
division for you?
PROTARCHUS: Yes, and what is more, I beg that you
will.
SOCRATES: Are there not three ways in which ignorance
of self may be shown?
PROTARCHUS: What are they?
SOCRATES: In the first place, about money; the
ignorant may fancy himself richer than he is.
PROTARCHUS: Yes, that is a very common error.
SOCRATES: And still more often he will fancy that he
is taller or fairer than he is, or that he has some
other advantage of person which he really has not.
PROTARCHUS: Of course.
SOCRATES: And yet surely by far the greatest number
err about the goods of the mind; they imagine
themselves to be much better men than they are.
PROTARCHUS: Yes, that is by far the commonest
delusion.
SOCRATES: And of all the virtues, is not wisdom the
one which the mass of mankind are always claiming, and
which most arouses in them a spirit of contention and
lying conceit of wisdom?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: And may not all this be truly called an evil
condition?
PROTARCHUS: Very evil.
SOCRATES: But we must pursue the division a step
further, Protarchus, if we would see in envy of the
childish sort a singular mixture of pleasure and pain.
PROTARCHUS: How can we make the further division which
you suggest?
SOCRATES: All who are silly enough to entertain this
lying conceit of themselves may of course be divided,
like the rest of mankind, into two classes—one having
power and might; and the other the reverse.
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: Let this, then, be the principle of
division; those of them who are weak and unable to
revenge themselves, when they are laughed at, may be
truly called ridiculous, but those who can defend
themselves may be more truly described as strong and
formidable; for ignorance in the powerful is hateful
and horrible, because hurtful to others both in
reality and in fiction, but powerless ignorance may be
reckoned, and in truth is, ridiculous.
PROTARCHUS: That is very true, but I do not as yet see
where is the admixture of pleasures and pains.
SOCRATES: Well, then, let us examine the nature of
envy.
PROTARCHUS: Proceed.
SOCRATES: Is not envy an unrighteous pleasure, and
also an unrighteous pain?
PROTARCHUS: Most true.
SOCRATES: There is nothing envious or wrong in
rejoicing at the misfortunes of enemies?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly not.
SOCRATES: But to feel joy instead of sorrow at the
sight of our friends' misfortunes—is not that wrong?
PROTARCHUS: Undoubtedly.
SOCRATES: Did we not say that ignorance was always an
evil?
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: And the three kinds of vain conceit in our
friends which we enumerated—the vain conceit of
beauty, of wisdom, and of wealth, are ridiculous if
they are weak, and detestable when they are powerful:
May we not say, as I was saying before, that our
friends who are in this state of mind, when harmless
to others, are simply ridiculous?
PROTARCHUS: They are ridiculous.
SOCRATES: And do we not acknowledge this ignorance of
theirs to be a misfortune?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: And do we feel pain or pleasure in laughing
at it?
PROTARCHUS: Clearly we feel pleasure.
SOCRATES: And was not envy the source of this pleasure
which we feel at the misfortunes of friends?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: Then the argument shows that when we laugh
at the folly of our friends, pleasure, in mingling
with envy, mingles with pain, for envy has been
acknowledged by us to be mental pain, and laughter is
pleasant; and so we envy and laugh at the same
instant.
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: And the argument implies that there are
combinations of pleasure and pain in lamentations, and
in tragedy and comedy, not only on the stage, but on
the greater stage of human life; and so in endless
other cases.
PROTARCHUS: I do not see how any one can deny what you
say, Socrates, however eager he may be to assert the
opposite opinion.
SOCRATES: I mentioned anger, desire, sorrow, fear,
love, emulation, envy, and similar emotions, as
examples in which we should find a mixture of the two
elements so often named; did I not?
PROTARCHUS: Yes.
SOCRATES: We may observe that our conclusions hitherto
have had reference only to sorrow and envy and anger.
PROTARCHUS: I see.
SOCRATES: Then many other cases still remain?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: And why do you suppose me to have pointed
out to you the admixture which takes place in comedy?
Why but to convince you that there was no difficulty
in showing the mixed nature of fear and love and
similar affections; and I thought that when I had
given you the illustration, you would have let me off,
and have acknowledged as a general truth that the body
without the soul, and the soul without the body, as
well as the two united, are susceptible of all sorts
of admixtures of pleasures and pains; and so further
discussion would have been unnecessary. And now I want
to know whether I may depart; or will you keep me here
until midnight? I fancy that I may obtain my release
without many words;—if I promise that to-morrow I will
give you an account of all these cases. But at present
I would rather sail in another direction, and go to
other matters which remain to be settled, before the
judgment can be given which Philebus demands.
PROTARCHUS: Very good, Socrates; in what remains take
your own course.
SOCRATES: Then after the mixed pleasures the unmixed
should have their turn; this is the natural and
necessary order.
PROTARCHUS: Excellent.
SOCRATES: These, in turn, then, I will now endeavour
to indicate; for with the maintainers of the opinion
that all pleasures are a cessation of pain, I do not
agree, but, as I was saying, I use them as witnesses,
that there are pleasures which seem only and are not,
and there are others again which have great power and
appear in many forms, yet are intermingled with pains,
and are partly alleviations of agony and distress,
both of body and mind.
PROTARCHUS: Then what pleasures, Socrates, should we
be right in conceiving to be true?
SOCRATES: True pleasures are those which are given by
beauty of colour and form, and most of those which
arise from smells; those of sound, again, and in
general those of which the want is painless and
unconscious, and of which the fruition is palpable to
sense and pleasant and unalloyed with pain.
PROTARCHUS: Once more, Socrates, I must ask what you
mean.
SOCRATES: My meaning is certainly not obvious, and I
will endeavour to be plainer. I do not mean by beauty
of form such beauty as that of animals or pictures,
which the many would suppose to be my meaning; but,
says the argument, understand me to mean straight
lines and circles, and the plane or solid figures
which are formed out of them by turning-lathes and
rulers and measurers of angles; for these I affirm to
be not only relatively beautiful, like other things,
but they are eternally and absolutely beautiful, and
they have peculiar pleasures, quite unlike the
pleasures of scratching. And there are colours which
are of the same character, and have similar pleasures;
now do you understand my meaning?
PROTARCHUS: I am trying to understand, Socrates, and I
hope that you will try to make your meaning clearer.
SOCRATES: When sounds are smooth and clear, and have a
single pure tone, then I mean to say that they are not
relatively but absolutely beautiful, and have natural
pleasures associated with them.
PROTARCHUS: Yes, there are such pleasures.
SOCRATES: The pleasures of smell are of a less
ethereal sort, but they have no necessary admixture of
pain; and all pleasures, however and wherever
experienced, which are unattended by pains, I assign
to an analogous class. Here then are two kinds of
pleasures.
PROTARCHUS: I understand.
SOCRATES: To these may be added the pleasures of
knowledge, if no hunger of knowledge and no pain
caused by such hunger precede them.
PROTARCHUS: And this is the case.
SOCRATES: Well, but if a man who is full of knowledge
loses his knowledge, are there not pains of
forgetting?
PROTARCHUS: Not necessarily, but there may be times of
reflection, when he feels grief at the loss of his
knowledge.
SOCRATES: Yes, my friend, but at present we are
enumerating only the natural perceptions, and have
nothing to do with reflection.
PROTARCHUS: In that case you are right in saying that
the loss of knowledge is not attended with pain.
SOCRATES: These pleasures of knowledge, then, are
unmixed with pain; and they are not the pleasures of
the many but of a very few.
PROTARCHUS: Quite true.
SOCRATES: And now, having fairly separated the pure
pleasures and those which may be rightly termed
impure, let us further add to our description of them,
that the pleasures which are in excess have no
measure, but that those which are not in excess have
measure; the great, the excessive, whether more or
less frequent, we shall be right in referring to the
class of the infinite, and of the more and less, which
pours through body and soul alike; and the others we
shall refer to the class which has measure.
PROTARCHUS: Quite right, Socrates.
SOCRATES: Still there is something more to be
considered about pleasures.
PROTARCHUS: What is it?
SOCRATES: When you speak of purity and clearness, or
of excess, abundance, greatness and sufficiency, in
what relation do these terms stand to truth?
PROTARCHUS: Why do you ask, Socrates?
SOCRATES: Because, Protarchus, I should wish to test
pleasure and knowledge in every possible way, in order
that if there be a pure and impure element in either
of them, I may present the pure element for judgment,
and then they will be more easily judged of by you and
by me and by all of us.
PROTARCHUS: Most true.
SOCRATES: Let us investigate all the pure kinds; first
selecting for consideration a single instance.
PROTARCHUS: What instance shall we select?
SOCRATES: Suppose that we first of all take whiteness.
PROTARCHUS: Very good.
SOCRATES: How can there be purity in whiteness, and
what purity? Is that purest which is greatest or most
in quantity, or that which is most unadulterated and
freest from any admixture of other colours?
PROTARCHUS: Clearly that which is most unadulterated.
SOCRATES: True, Protarchus; and so the purest white,
and not the greatest or largest in quantity, is to be
deemed truest and most beautiful?
PROTARCHUS: Right.
SOCRATES: And we shall be quite right in saying that a
little pure white is whiter and fairer and truer than
a great deal that is mixed.
PROTARCHUS: Perfectly right.
SOCRATES: There is no need of adducing many similar
examples in illustration of the argument about
pleasure; one such is sufficient to prove to us that a
small pleasure or a small amount of pleasure, if pure
or unalloyed with pain, is always pleasanter and truer
and fairer than a great pleasure or a great amount of
pleasure of another kind.
PROTARCHUS: Assuredly; and the instance you have given
is quite sufficient.
SOCRATES: But what do you say of another
question:—have we not heard that pleasure is always a
generation, and has no true being? Do not certain
ingenious philosophers teach this doctrine, and ought
not we to be grateful to them?
PROTARCHUS: What do they mean?
SOCRATES: I will explain to you, my dear Protarchus,
what they mean, by putting a question.
PROTARCHUS: Ask, and I will answer.
SOCRATES: I assume that there are two natures, one
self-existent, and the other ever in want of
something.
PROTARCHUS: What manner of natures are they?
SOCRATES: The one majestic ever, the other inferior.
PROTARCHUS: You speak riddles.
SOCRATES: You have seen loves good and fair, and also
brave lovers of them.
PROTARCHUS: I should think so.
SOCRATES: Search the universe for two terms which are
like these two and are present everywhere.
PROTARCHUS: Yet a third time I must say, Be a little
plainer, Socrates.
SOCRATES: There is no difficulty, Protarchus; the
argument is only in play, and insinuates that some
things are for the sake of something else (relatives),
and that other things are the ends to which the former
class subserve (absolutes).
PROTARCHUS: Your many repetitions make me slow to
understand.
SOCRATES: As the argument proceeds, my boy, I dare say
that the meaning will become clearer.
PROTARCHUS: Very likely.
SOCRATES: Here are two new principles.
PROTARCHUS: What are they?
SOCRATES: One is the generation of all things, and the
other is essence.
PROTARCHUS: I readily accept from you both generation
and essence.
SOCRATES: Very right; and would you say that
generation is for the sake of essence, or essence for
the sake of generation?
PROTARCHUS: You want to know whether that which is
called essence is, properly speaking, for the sake of
generation?
SOCRATES: Yes.
PROTARCHUS: By the gods, I wish that you would repeat
your question.
SOCRATES: I mean, O my Protarchus, to ask whether you
would tell me that ship-building is for the sake of
ships, or ships for the sake of ship-building? and in
all similar cases I should ask the same question.
PROTARCHUS: Why do you not answer yourself, Socrates?
SOCRATES: I have no objection, but you must take your
part.
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: My answer is, that all things instrumental,
remedial, material, are given to us with a view to
generation, and that each generation is relative to,
or for the sake of, some being or essence, and that
the whole of generation is relative to the whole of
essence.
PROTARCHUS: Assuredly.
SOCRATES: Then pleasure, being a generation, must
surely be for the sake of some essence?
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: And that for the sake of which something
else is done must be placed in the class of good, and
that which is done for the sake of something else, in
some other class, my good friend.
PROTARCHUS: Most certainly.
SOCRATES: Then pleasure, being a generation, will be
rightly placed in some other class than that of good?
PROTARCHUS: Quite right.
SOCRATES: Then, as I said at first, we ought to be
very grateful to him who first pointed out that
pleasure was a generation only, and had no true being
at all; for he is clearly one who laughs at the notion
of pleasure being a good.
PROTARCHUS: Assuredly.
SOCRATES: And he would surely laugh also at those who
make generation their highest end.
PROTARCHUS: Of whom are you speaking, and what do they
mean?
SOCRATES: I am speaking of those who when they are
cured of hunger or thirst or any other defect by some
process of generation are delighted at the process as
if it were pleasure; and they say that they would not
wish to live without these and other feelings of a
like kind which might be mentioned.
PROTARCHUS: That is certainly what they appear to
think.
SOCRATES: And is not destruction universally admitted
to be the opposite of generation?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: Then he who chooses thus, would choose
generation and destruction rather than that third sort
of life, in which, as we were saying, was neither
pleasure nor pain, but only the purest possible
thought.
PROTARCHUS: He who would make us believe pleasure to
be a good is involved in great absurdities, Socrates.
SOCRATES: Great, indeed; and there is yet another of
them.
PROTARCHUS: What is it?
SOCRATES: Is there not an absurdity in arguing that
there is nothing good or noble in the body, or in
anything else, but that good is in the soul only, and
that the only good of the soul is pleasure; and that
courage or temperance or understanding, or any other
good of the soul, is not really a good?—and is there
not yet a further absurdity in our being compelled to
say that he who has a feeling of pain and not of
pleasure is bad at the time when he is suffering pain,
even though he be the best of men; and again, that he
who has a feeling of pleasure, in so far as he is
pleased at the time when he is pleased, in that degree
excels in virtue?
PROTARCHUS: Nothing, Socrates, can be more irrational
than all this.
SOCRATES: And now, having subjected pleasure to every
sort of test, let us not appear to be too sparing of
mind and knowledge: let us ring their metal bravely,
and see if there be unsoundness in any part, until we
have found out what in them is of the purest nature;
and then the truest elements both of pleasure and
knowledge may be brought up for judgment.
PROTARCHUS: Right.
SOCRATES: Knowledge has two parts,—the one productive,
and the other educational?
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: And in the productive or handicraft arts, is
not one part more akin to knowledge, and the other
less; and may not the one part be regarded as the
pure, and the other as the impure?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: Let us separate the superior or dominant
elements in each of them.
PROTARCHUS: What are they, and how do you separate
them?
SOCRATES: I mean to say, that if arithmetic,
mensuration, and weighing be taken away from any art,
that which remains will not be much.
PROTARCHUS: Not much, certainly.
SOCRATES: The rest will be only conjecture, and the
better use of the senses which is given by experience
and practice, in addition to a certain power of
guessing, which is commonly called art, and is
perfected by attention and pains.
PROTARCHUS: Nothing more, assuredly.
SOCRATES: Music, for instance, is full of this
empiricism; for sounds are harmonized, not by measure,
but by skilful conjecture; the music of the flute is
always trying to guess the pitch of each vibrating
note, and is therefore mixed up with much that is
doubtful and has little which is certain.
PROTARCHUS: Most true.
SOCRATES: And the same will be found to hold good of
medicine and husbandry and piloting and generalship.
PROTARCHUS: Very true.
SOCRATES: The art of the builder, on the other hand,
which uses a number of measures and instruments,
attains by their help to a greater degree of accuracy
than the other arts.
PROTARCHUS: How is that?
SOCRATES: In ship-building and house-building, and in
other branches of the art of carpentering, the builder
has his rule, lathe, compass, line, and a most
ingenious machine for straightening wood.
PROTARCHUS: Very true, Socrates.
SOCRATES: Then now let us divide the arts of which we
were speaking into two kinds,—the arts which, like
music, are less exact in their results, and those
which, like carpentering, are more exact.
PROTARCHUS: Let us make that division.
SOCRATES: Of the latter class, the most exact of all
are those which we just now spoke of as primary.
PROTARCHUS: I see that you mean arithmetic, and the
kindred arts of weighing and measuring.
SOCRATES: Certainly, Protarchus; but are not these
also distinguishable into two kinds?
PROTARCHUS: What are the two kinds?
SOCRATES: In the first place, arithmetic is of two
kinds, one of which is popular, and the other
philosophical.
PROTARCHUS: How would you distinguish them?
SOCRATES: There is a wide difference between them,
Protarchus; some arithmeticians reckon unequal units;
as for example, two armies, two oxen, two very large
things or two very small things. The party who are
opposed to them insist that every unit in ten thousand
must be the same as every other unit.
PROTARCHUS: Undoubtedly there is, as you say, a great
difference among the votaries of the science; and
there may be reasonably supposed to be two sorts of
arithmetic.
SOCRATES: And when we compare the art of mensuration
which is used in building with philosophical geometry,
or the art of computation which is used in trading
with exact calculation, shall we say of either of the
pairs that it is one or two?
PROTARCHUS: On the analogy of what has preceded, I
should be of opinion that they were severally two.
SOCRATES: Right; but do you understand why I have
discussed the subject?
PROTARCHUS: I think so, but I should like to be told
by you.
SOCRATES: The argument has all along been seeking a
parallel to pleasure, and true to that original
design, has gone on to ask whether one sort of
knowledge is purer than another, as one pleasure is
purer than another.
PROTARCHUS: Clearly; that was the intention.
SOCRATES: And has not the argument in what has
preceded, already shown that the arts have different
provinces, and vary in their degrees of certainty?
PROTARCHUS: Very true.
SOCRATES: And just now did not the argument first
designate a particular art by a common term, thus
making us believe in the unity of that art; and then
again, as if speaking of two different things, proceed
to enquire whether the art as pursed by philosophers,
or as pursued by non-philosophers, has more of
certainty and purity?
PROTARCHUS: That is the very question which the
argument is asking.
SOCRATES: And how, Protarchus, shall we answer the
enquiry?
PROTARCHUS: O Socrates, we have reached a point at
which the difference of clearness in different kinds
of knowledge is enormous.
SOCRATES: Then the answer will be the easier.
PROTARCHUS: Certainly; and let us say in reply, that
those arts into which arithmetic and mensuration
enter, far surpass all others; and that of these the
arts or sciences which are animated by the pure
philosophic impulse are infinitely superior in
accuracy and truth.
SOCRATES: Then this is your judgment; and this is the
answer which, upon your authority, we will give to all
masters of the art of misinterpretation?
PROTARCHUS: What answer?
SOCRATES: That there are two arts of arithmetic, and
two of mensuration; and also several other arts which
in like manner have this double nature, and yet only
one name.
PROTARCHUS: Let us boldly return this answer to the
masters of whom you speak, Socrates, and hope for good
luck.
SOCRATES: We have explained what we term the most
exact arts or sciences.
PROTARCHUS: Very good.
SOCRATES: And yet, Protarchus, dialectic will refuse
to acknowledge us, if we do not award to her the first
place.
PROTARCHUS: And pray, what is dialectic?
SOCRATES: Clearly the science which has to do with all
that knowledge of which we are now speaking; for I am
sure that all men who have a grain of intelligence
will admit that the knowledge which has to do with
being and reality, and sameness and unchangeableness,
is by far the truest of all. But how would you decide
this question, Protarchus?
PROTARCHUS: I have often heard Gorgias maintain,
Socrates, that the art of persuasion far surpassed
every other; this, as he says, is by far the best of
them all, for to it all things submit, not by
compulsion, but of their own free will. Now, I should
not like to quarrel either with you or with him.
SOCRATES: You mean to say that you would like to
desert, if you were not ashamed?
PROTARCHUS: As you please.
SOCRATES: May I not have led you into a
misapprehension?
PROTARCHUS: How?
SOCRATES: Dear Protarchus, I never asked which was the
greatest or best or usefullest of arts or sciences,
but which had clearness and accuracy, and the greatest
amount of truth, however humble and little useful an
art. And as for Gorgias, if you do not deny that his
art has the advantage in usefulness to mankind, he
will not quarrel with you for saying that the study of
which I am speaking is superior in this particular of
essential truth; as in the comparison of white
colours, a little whiteness, if that little be only
pure, was said to be superior in truth to a great mass
which is impure. And now let us give our best
attention and consider well, not the comparative use
or reputation of the sciences, but the power or
faculty, if there be such, which the soul has of
loving the truth, and of doing all things for the sake
of it; let us search into the pure element of mind and
intelligence, and then we shall be able to say whether
the science of which I have been speaking is most
likely to possess the faculty, or whether there be
some other which has higher claims.
PROTARCHUS: Well, I have been considering, and I can
hardly think that any other science or art has a
firmer grasp of the truth than this.
SOCRATES: Do you say so because you observe that the
arts in general and those engaged in them make use of
opinion, and are resolutely engaged in the
investigation of matters of opinion? Even he who
supposes himself to be occupied with nature is really
occupied with the things of this world, how created,
how acting or acted upon. Is not this the sort of
enquiry in which his life is spent?
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: He is labouring, not after eternal being,
but about things which are becoming, or which will or
have become.
PROTARCHUS: Very true.
SOCRATES: And can we say that any of these things
which neither are nor have been nor will be
unchangeable, when judged by the strict rule of truth
ever become certain?
PROTARCHUS: Impossible.
SOCRATES: How can anything fixed be concerned with
that which has no fixedness?
PROTARCHUS: How indeed?
SOCRATES: Then mind and science when employed about
such changing things do not attain the highest truth?
PROTARCHUS: I should imagine not.
SOCRATES: And now let us bid farewell, a long
farewell, to you or me or Philebus or Gorgias, and
urge on behalf of the argument a single point.
PROTARCHUS: What point?
SOCRATES: Let us say that the stable and pure and true
and unalloyed has to do with the things which are
eternal and unchangeable and unmixed, or if not, at
any rate what is most akin to them has; and that all
other things are to be placed in a second or inferior
class.
PROTARCHUS: Very true.
SOCRATES: And of the names expressing cognition, ought
not the fairest to be given to the fairest things?
PROTARCHUS: That is natural.
SOCRATES: And are not mind and wisdom the names which
are to be honoured most?
PROTARCHUS: Yes.
SOCRATES: And these names may be said to have their
truest and most exact application when the mind is
engaged in the contemplation of true being?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: And these were the names which I adduced of
the rivals of pleasure?
PROTARCHUS: Very true, Socrates.
SOCRATES: In the next place, as to the mixture, here
are the ingredients, pleasure and wisdom, and we may
be compared to artists who have their materials ready
to their hands.
PROTARCHUS: Yes.
SOCRATES: And now we must begin to mix them?
PROTARCHUS: By all means.
SOCRATES: But had we not better have a preliminary
word and refresh our memories?
PROTARCHUS: Of what?
SOCRATES: Of that which I have already mentioned. Well
says the proverb, that we ought to repeat twice and
even thrice that which is good.
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: Well then, by Zeus, let us proceed, and I
will make what I believe to be a fair summary of the
argument.
PROTARCHUS: Let me hear.
SOCRATES: Philebus says that pleasure is the true end
of all living beings, at which all ought to aim, and
moreover that it is the chief good of all, and that
the two names 'good' and 'pleasant' are correctly
given to one thing and one nature; Socrates, on the
other hand, begins by denying this, and further says,
that in nature as in name they are two, and that
wisdom partakes more than pleasure of the good. Is not
and was not this what we were saying, Protarchus?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: And is there not and was there not a further
point which was conceded between us?
PROTARCHUS: What was it?
SOCRATES: That the good differs from all other things.
PROTARCHUS: In what respect?
SOCRATES: In that the being who possesses good always
everywhere and in all things has the most perfect
sufficiency, and is never in need of anything else.
PROTARCHUS: Exactly.
SOCRATES: And did we not endeavour to make an
imaginary separation of wisdom and pleasure, assigning
to each a distinct life, so that pleasure was wholly
excluded from wisdom, and wisdom in like manner had no
part whatever in pleasure?
PROTARCHUS: We did.
SOCRATES: And did we think that either of them alone
would be sufficient?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly not.
SOCRATES: And if we erred in any point, then let any
one who will, take up the enquiry again and set us
right; and assuming memory and wisdom and knowledge
and true opinion to belong to the same class, let him
consider whether he would desire to possess or
acquire,—I will not say pleasure, however abundant or
intense, if he has no real perception that he is
pleased, nor any consciousness of what he feels, nor
any recollection, however momentary, of the
feeling,—but would he desire to have anything at all,
if these faculties were wanting to him? And about
wisdom I ask the same question; can you conceive that
any one would choose to have all wisdom absolutely
devoid of pleasure, rather than with a certain degree
of pleasure, or all pleasure devoid of wisdom, rather
than with a certain degree of wisdom?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly not, Socrates; but why repeat
such questions any more?
SOCRATES: Then the perfect and universally eligible
and entirely good cannot possibly be either of them?
PROTARCHUS: Impossible.
SOCRATES: Then now we must ascertain the nature of the
good more or less accurately, in order, as we were
saying, that the second place may be duly assigned.
PROTARCHUS: Right.
SOCRATES: Have we not found a road which leads towards
the good?
PROTARCHUS: What road?
SOCRATES: Supposing that a man had to be found, and
you could discover in what house he lived, would not
that be a great step towards the discovery of the man
himself?
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: And now reason intimates to us, as at our
first beginning, that we should seek the good, not in
the unmixed life but in the mixed.
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: There is greater hope of finding that which
we are seeking in the life which is well mixed than in
that which is not?
PROTARCHUS: Far greater.
SOCRATES: Then now let us mingle, Protarchus, at the
same time offering up a prayer to Dionysus or
Hephaestus, or whoever is the god who presides over
the ceremony of mingling.
PROTARCHUS: By all means.
SOCRATES: Are not we the cup-bearers? and here are two
fountains which are flowing at our side: one, which is
pleasure, may be likened to a fountain of honey; the
other, wisdom, a sober draught in which no wine
mingles, is of water unpleasant but healthful; out of
these we must seek to make the fairest of all possible
mixtures.
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: Tell me first;—should we be most likely to
succeed if we mingled every sort of pleasure with
every sort of wisdom?
PROTARCHUS: Perhaps we might.
SOCRATES: But I should be afraid of the risk, and I
think that I can show a safer plan.
PROTARCHUS: What is it?
SOCRATES: One pleasure was supposed by us to be truer
than another, and one art to be more exact than
another.
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: There was also supposed to be a difference
in sciences; some of them regarding only the transient
and perishing, and others the permanent and
imperishable and everlasting and immutable; and when
judged by the standard of truth, the latter, as we
thought, were truer than the former.
PROTARCHUS: Very good and right.
SOCRATES: If, then, we were to begin by mingling the
sections of each class which have the most of truth,
will not the union suffice to give us the loveliest of
lives, or shall we still want some elements of another
kind?
PROTARCHUS: I think that we ought to do what you
suggest.
SOCRATES: Let us suppose a man who understands
justice, and has reason as well as understanding about
the true nature of this and of all other things.
PROTARCHUS: We will suppose such a man.
SOCRATES: Will he have enough of knowledge if he is
acquainted only with the divine circle and sphere, and
knows nothing of our human spheres and circles, but
uses only divine circles and measures in the building
of a house?
PROTARCHUS: The knowledge which is only superhuman,
Socrates, is ridiculous in man.
SOCRATES: What do you mean? Do you mean that you are
to throw into the cup and mingle the impure and
uncertain art which uses the false measure and the
false circle?
PROTARCHUS: Yes, we must, if any of us is ever to find
his way home.
SOCRATES: And am I to include music, which, as I was
saying just now, is full of guesswork and imitation,
and is wanting in purity?
PROTARCHUS: Yes, I think that you must, if human life
is to be a life at all.
SOCRATES: Well, then, suppose that I give way, and,
like a doorkeeper who is pushed and overborne by the
mob, I open the door wide, and let knowledge of every
sort stream in, and the pure mingle with the impure?
PROTARCHUS: I do not know, Socrates, that any great
harm would come of having them all, if only you have
the first sort.
SOCRATES: Well, then, shall I let them all flow into
what Homer poetically terms 'a meeting of the waters'?
PROTARCHUS: By all means.
SOCRATES: There—I have let them in, and now I must
return to the fountain of pleasure. For we were not
permitted to begin by mingling in a single stream the
true portions of both according to our original
intention; but the love of all knowledge constrained
us to let all the sciences flow in together before the
pleasures.
PROTARCHUS: Quite true.
SOCRATES: And now the time has come for us to consider
about the pleasures also, whether we shall in like
manner let them go all at once, or at first only the
true ones.
PROTARCHUS: It will be by far the safer course to let
flow the true ones first.
SOCRATES: Let them flow, then; and now, if there are
any necessary pleasures, as there were arts and
sciences necessary, must we not mingle them?
PROTARCHUS: Yes; the necessary pleasures should
certainly be allowed to mingle.
SOCRATES: The knowledge of the arts has been admitted
to be innocent and useful always; and if we say of
pleasures in like manner that all of them are good and
innocent for all of us at all times, we must let them
all mingle?
PROTARCHUS: What shall we say about them, and what
course shall we take?
SOCRATES: Do not ask me, Protarchus; but ask the
daughters of pleasure and wisdom to answer for
themselves.
PROTARCHUS: How?
SOCRATES: Tell us, O beloved—shall we call you
pleasures or by some other name?—would you rather live
with or without wisdom? I am of opinion that they
would certainly answer as follows:
PROTARCHUS: How?
SOCRATES: They would answer, as we said before, that
for any single class to be left by itself pure and
isolated is not good, nor altogether possible; and
that if we are to make comparisons of one class with
another and choose, there is no better companion than
knowledge of things in general, and likewise the
perfect knowledge, if that may be, of ourselves in
every respect.
PROTARCHUS: And our answer will be:—In that ye have
spoken well.
SOCRATES: Very true. And now let us go back and
interrogate wisdom and mind: Would you like to have
any pleasures in the mixture? And they will
reply:—'What pleasures do you mean?'
PROTARCHUS: Likely enough.
SOCRATES: And we shall take up our parable and say: Do
you wish to have the greatest and most vehement
pleasures for your companions in addition to the true
ones? 'Why, Socrates,' they will say, 'how can we?
seeing that they are the source of ten thousand
hindrances to us; they trouble the souls of men, which
are our habitation, with their madness; they prevent
us from coming to the birth, and are commonly the ruin
of the children which are born to us, causing them to
be forgotten and unheeded; but the true and pure
pleasures, of which you spoke, know to be of our
family, and also those pleasures which accompany
health and temperance, and which every Virtue, like a
goddess, has in her train to follow her about wherever
she goes,—mingle these and not the others; there would
be great want of sense in any one who desires to see a
fair and perfect mixture, and to find in it what is
the highest good in man and in the universe, and to
divine what is the true form of good—there would be
great want of sense in his allowing the pleasures,
which are always in the company of folly and vice, to
mingle with mind in the cup.'—Is not this a very
rational and suitable reply, which mind has made, both
on her own behalf, as well as on the behalf of memory
and true opinion?
PROTARCHUS: Most certainly.
SOCRATES: And still there must be something more
added, which is a necessary ingredient in every
mixture.
PROTARCHUS: What is that?
SOCRATES: Unless truth enter into the composition,
nothing can truly be created or subsist.
PROTARCHUS: Impossible.
SOCRATES: Quite impossible; and now you and Philebus
must tell me whether anything is still wanting in the
mixture, for to my way of thinking the argument is now
completed, and may be compared to an incorporeal law,
which is going to hold fair rule over a living body.
PROTARCHUS: I agree with you, Socrates.
SOCRATES: And may we not say with reason that we are
now at the vestibule of the habitation of the good?
PROTARCHUS: I think that we are.
SOCRATES: What, then, is there in the mixture which is
most precious, and which is the principal cause why
such a state is universally beloved by all? When we
have discovered it, we will proceed to ask whether
this omnipresent nature is more akin to pleasure or to
mind.
PROTARCHUS: Quite right; in that way we shall be
better able to judge.
SOCRATES: And there is no difficulty in seeing the
cause which renders any mixture either of the highest
value or of none at all.
PROTARCHUS: What do you mean?
SOCRATES: Every man knows it.
PROTARCHUS: What?
SOCRATES: He knows that any want of measure and
symmetry in any mixture whatever must always of
necessity be fatal, both to the elements and to the
mixture, which is then not a mixture, but only a
confused medley which brings confusion on the
possessor of it.
PROTARCHUS: Most true.
SOCRATES: And now the power of the good has retired
into the region of the beautiful; for measure and
symmetry are beauty and virtue all the world over.
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: Also we said that truth was to form an
element in the mixture.
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: Then, if we are not able to hunt the good
with one idea only, with three we may catch our prey;
Beauty, Symmetry, Truth are the three, and these taken
together we may regard as the single cause of the
mixture, and the mixture as being good by reason of
the infusion of them.
PROTARCHUS: Quite right.
SOCRATES: And now, Protarchus, any man could decide
well enough whether pleasure or wisdom is more akin to
the highest good, and more honourable among gods and
men.
PROTARCHUS: Clearly, and yet perhaps the argument had
better be pursued to the end.
SOCRATES: We must take each of them separately in
their relation to pleasure and mind, and pronounce
upon them; for we ought to see to which of the two
they are severally most akin.
PROTARCHUS: You are speaking of beauty, truth, and
measure?
SOCRATES: Yes, Protarchus, take truth first, and,
after passing in review mind, truth, pleasure, pause
awhile and make answer to yourself—as to whether
pleasure or mind is more akin to truth.
PROTARCHUS: There is no need to pause, for the
difference between them is palpable; pleasure is the
veriest impostor in the world; and it is said that in
the pleasures of love, which appear to be the
greatest, perjury is excused by the gods; for
pleasures, like children, have not the least particle
of reason in them; whereas mind is either the same as
truth, or the most like truth, and the truest.
SOCRATES: Shall we next consider measure, in like
manner, and ask whether pleasure has more of this than
wisdom, or wisdom than pleasure?
PROTARCHUS: Here is another question which may be
easily answered; for I imagine that nothing can ever
be more immoderate than the transports of pleasure, or
more in conformity with measure than mind and
knowledge.
SOCRATES: Very good; but there still remains the third
test: Has mind a greater share of beauty than
pleasure, and is mind or pleasure the fairer of the
two?
PROTARCHUS: No one, Socrates, either awake or
dreaming, ever saw or imagined mind or wisdom to be in
aught unseemly, at any time, past, present, or future.
SOCRATES: Right.
PROTARCHUS: But when we see some one indulging in
pleasures, perhaps in the greatest of pleasures, the
ridiculous or disgraceful nature of the action makes
us ashamed; and so we put them out of sight, and
consign them to darkness, under the idea that they
ought not to meet the eye of day.
SOCRATES: Then, Protarchus, you will proclaim
everywhere, by word of mouth to this company, and by
messengers bearing the tidings far and wide, that
pleasure is not the first of possessions, nor yet the
second, but that in measure, and the mean, and the
suitable, and the like, the eternal nature has been
found.
PROTARCHUS: Yes, that seems to be the result of what
has been now said.
SOCRATES: In the second class is contained the
symmetrical and beautiful and perfect or sufficient,
and all which are of that family.
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: And if you reckon in the third class mind
and wisdom, you will not be far wrong, if I divine
aright.
PROTARCHUS: I dare say.
SOCRATES: And would you not put in the fourth class
the goods which we were affirming to appertain
specially to the soul—sciences and arts and true
opinions as we called them? These come after the third
class, and form the fourth, as they are certainly more
akin to good than pleasure is.
PROTARCHUS: Surely.
SOCRATES: The fifth class are the pleasures which were
defined by us as painless, being the pure pleasures of
the soul herself, as we termed them, which accompany,
some the sciences, and some the senses.
PROTARCHUS: Perhaps.
SOCRATES: And now, as Orpheus says,
'With the sixth generation cease the glory of my
song.'
Here, at the sixth award, let us make an end; all that
remains is to set the crown on our discourse.
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: Then let us sum up and reassert what has
been said, thus offering the third libation to the
saviour Zeus.
PROTARCHUS: How?
SOCRATES: Philebus affirmed that pleasure was always
and absolutely the good.
PROTARCHUS: I understand; this third libation,
Socrates, of which you spoke, meant a recapitulation.
SOCRATES: Yes, but listen to the sequel; convinced of
what I have just been saying, and feeling indignant at
the doctrine, which is maintained, not by Philebus
only, but by thousands of others, I affirmed that mind
was far better and far more excellent, as an element
of human life, than pleasure.
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: But, suspecting that there were other things
which were also better, I went on to say that if there
was anything better than either, then I would claim
the second place for mind over pleasure, and pleasure
would lose the second place as well as the first.
PROTARCHUS: You did.
SOCRATES: Nothing could be more satisfactorily shown
than the unsatisfactory nature of both of them.
PROTARCHUS: Very true.
SOCRATES: The claims both of pleasure and mind to be
the absolute good have been entirely disproven in this
argument, because they are both wanting in
self-sufficiency and also in adequacy and perfection.
PROTARCHUS: Most true.
SOCRATES: But, though they must both resign in favour
of another, mind is ten thousand times nearer and more
akin to the nature of the conqueror than pleasure.
PROTARCHUS: Certainly.
SOCRATES: And, according to the judgment which has now
been given, pleasure will rank fifth.
PROTARCHUS: True.
SOCRATES: But not first; no, not even if all the oxen
and horses and animals in the world by their pursuit
of enjoyment proclaim her to be so;—although the many
trusting in them, as diviners trust in birds,
determine that pleasures make up the good of life, and
deem the lusts of animals to be better witnesses than
the inspirations of divine philosophy.
PROTARCHUS: And now, Socrates, we tell you that the
truth of what you have been saying is approved by the
judgment of all of us.
SOCRATES: And will you let me go?
PROTARCHUS: There is a little which yet remains, and I
will remind you of it, for I am sure that you will not
be the first to go away from an argument.