
In this lively Socratic dialogue, a sharp‑tongued Socrates meets the twin sophists Euthydemus and Dionysodorus, who delight in turning ordinary conversation into a maze of tricks and contradictions. Their relentless eristic games expose how easily language can be twisted, prompting Socrates to tease out the hidden assumptions behind each claim. The exchange is as much a comedy of errors as it is a serious probe of the foundations of reasoning.
Through witty back‑and‑forth, the dialogue sketches the earliest forms of logical analysis—definition, division, and the art of spotting fallacies that still haunt modern debate. Listeners hear the ancient puzzlers grapple with questions of sense versus nonsense, discovering how the very act of questioning can reveal the limits of rhetoric. The humor never obscures the deeper insight: that clear thinking begins with recognizing the tricks we play on ourselves.
Even today, the encounter feels fresh, offering a reminder that the battle against sloppy argument is as old as philosophy itself. As the conversation unfolds, the listener is invited to sharpen their own sense of logic while enjoying a timeless performance of wit and wisdom.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (113K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Sue Asscher, and David Widger
Release date
1999-01-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

-428–-348
One of the foundational thinkers of Western philosophy, this ancient Greek writer explored justice, love, knowledge, and the ideal state through vivid dialogues that still feel alive today. His works, many featuring Socrates as a central voice, have shaped philosophy, politics, ethics, and education for more than two millennia.
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