
CRATYLUS - By Plato - Translated by Benjamin Jowett
Contents
CRATYLUS - By Plato
In this spirited conversation, Socrates gathers with Hermogenes and the outspoken Cratylus to tackle a timeless puzzle: are the names we use rooted in nature itself, or are they merely the result of human agreement? The dialogue opens with Hermogenes challenging Socrates to explain Cratylus’s claim that every word carries an inherent truth, a “correctness” that transcends cultural boundaries. As the three friends debate, they weave everyday examples—renaming slaves, calling a man a horse—to illustrate how language shapes, and perhaps reflects, reality.
Socrates leads the inquiry with his characteristic questions, probing the relationship between true and false statements and the words that express them. He guides the participants to consider whether a name is just a convenient label or a deeper link to the essence of the thing named. Listeners will be drawn into the subtle logic and playful irony that reveal how even the simplest utterance can carry profound philosophical weight.
Language
en
Duration
~2 hours (134K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
1999-01-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

-428–-348
A student of Socrates and the teacher of Aristotle, this Athenian philosopher helped shape the way people think about justice, knowledge, politics, and the soul. His dialogues have stayed alive for more than two thousand years because they still feel like arguments we are having today.
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by Plato

by Plato

by Plato

by Plato

by Plato

by Plato

by Plato

by Plato