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                <requestUrn>urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0059.tlg018.perseus-eng2:169-172</requestUrn>
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                <urn>urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0059.tlg018.perseus-eng2:169-172</urn>
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                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div type="translation" n="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0059.tlg018.perseus-eng2" xml:lang="eng"><div type="textpart" subtype="section" resp="perseus" n="169"><said who="#Socrates" rend="merge"><p><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>But again, with hearing and sight, or in the further bases of motion moving itself and heat burning itself, and all other <milestone unit="page" resp="Stephanus" n="169"/><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="169a"/> actions of the sort, the fact must appear incredible to some, but perhaps not to others. So what we want, my friend, is some great man who will determine to our satisfaction in every respect whether there is nothing in nature so constituted as to have its own faculty applicable to itself, and not only some other object, or whether there are some such, and others not such; and whether, again, if there are things that have such relation to themselves, they include a science which we assert to be temperance. For my part, I distrust my own competence to determine these questions, and hence I am neither able to affirm whether it is possible <milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="169b"/> that there should be a science of science, nor willing, let it be ever so true, to acknowledge this to be temperance until I have made out whether such a thing as this would benefit us or not. For, you see, I have a presentiment that temperance is something beneficial and good; and you, therefore, son of Callaeschrus—since you lay it down that temperance is this very science of science, and moreover of the lack of science—shall first indicate the possibility, as I put it just now, and then the benefit added to the possibility, of such a thing; <milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="169c"/> and perhaps you will then satisfy me that your definition of temperance is correct.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>Now when Critias heard this and saw me in a difficulty, he seemed to me—just as the sight of someone yawning opposite causes people to be affected in the same way—to be compelled by the sense of my difficulty to be caught in a difficulty himself. And so, since he usually contrived to distinguish himself, he was too ashamed to bring himself to admit to me before the company that he was unable to determine the questions <milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="169d"/> with which I challenged him, and he made a very indistinct reply in order to conceal his difficulty. Then I, to forward the discussion, remarked: Well, if you prefer, Critias, let us concede for the moment that there may possibly be a science of science : some other time we shall consider whether such is the fact or not. Come then; suppose it is perfectly possible: how is one helped thereby to know what one knows and does not know? For this, you are aware, we said <note anchored="true" resp="Loeb"><bibl n="Plat. Charm. 167a">Plat. Charm. 167a</bibl>.</note> was the meaning of self-knowledge and temperance, did we not?

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>Certainly, he said; and it must surely follow, Socrates; <milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="169e"/> for if a man has a science which knows itself, he will be similar himself to that which he has. For instance, he who has swiftness will be swift, he who has beauty will be beautiful, and he who has knowledge will know; and when he has knowledge that is of itself, he will then, surely, be in the position of knowing himself.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>I do not dispute, I said, that when a man has that which knows itself he will know himself; but having that, how is he bound to know what he knows and what he does not know?</p></said></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" resp="perseus" n="170"><milestone unit="page" resp="Stephanus" n="170"/><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="170a"/><said who="#Σωκράτης" rend="merge"><p><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>Because, Socrates, the two things are the same.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>I daresay, I said; but I am afraid I am still my old self: I still do not see how knowing what one knows and does not know is the same as the other.<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>How do you mean? he asked.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>In this way, I replied: will a science of science, if such exists, be able to do more than determine that one of two things is science, and the other is not science?

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>No, only that. <milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="170b"/> Now, is science or lack of science of health the same as science or lack of science of justice?

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>By no means.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>For the one, I suppose, is medicine, and the other politics, while the thing in question is merely science.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>Yes, to be sure.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>And if a man has no added knowledge of health and justice, but knows only science, as having science of that alone, he will probably know that he has a certain piece of scientific knowledge about himself and about other people, will he not?

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>Yes. <milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="170c"/> But how will this science help him to know what he knows? For of course he knows health by means of medicine, not temperance, and harmony by means of music, not temperance, and building by means of the builder’s art, not temperance; and so it will be in every case, will it not?

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>Apparently.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>And how will temperance, supposing it is only a science of sciences, help him to know that he knows health, or that he knows building?

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>By no means.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>Then he who is ignorant of all this will not know what he knows, but only that he knows.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>So it seems. <milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="170d"/> Then being temperate, or temperance, will not be this knowledge of what one knows or does not know, but, it would seem, merely knowing that one knows or does not know.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>It looks like it.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>Then such a person will also be unable to examine another man’s claim to some knowledge, and make out whether he knows or does not know what he says he knows: he will merely know, it would seem, that he has a certain knowledge; but of what it is, temperance will not cause him to know.<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>Apparently not. <milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="170e"/> So he will be able to distinguish neither the man who pretends to be a doctor, but is none, from the man who really is one, nor any other man who has knowledge from him who has none. But let us consider it another way: if the temperate man or anybody else would discriminate between the true doctor and the false, he will go to work thus, will he not? He will surely not talk to him about medicine; for, as we were saying, the doctor understands nothing else but health and disease. Is not that so?

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>Yes, it is.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>But about science he knows nothing, for that, you know, we assigned to temperance alone.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>Yes.</p></said></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" resp="perseus" n="171"><said who="#Σωκράτης" rend="merge"><p><milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>So the medical man knows nothing about medicine either, since <milestone unit="page" resp="Stephanus" n="171"/><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="171a"/> medicine is, of course, a science.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>True.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>Then the temperate man will know, indeed, that the doctor has a certain science; but when he has to put its nature to the proof, must he not consider what its subjects are? Is not each science marked out, not merely as a science, but as a particular one, by the particular subjects it has?

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>It is, to be sure.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>And medicine is marked out as different from the other sciences by being a science of health and disease.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>Yes.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>And so anyone who wishes to inquire into medicine <milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="171b"/> must make those things, whatever they may be, with which it is concerned, the matter of his inquiry; not those foreign things, I presume, with which it is not?

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>No, indeed.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>Then he who conducts his inquiry aright will consider the doctor, as a medical man, in connection with cases of health and disease.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>So it seems.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>And will inquire whether, in what is said or done in such cases, his words are truly spoken, and his acts rightly done?

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>He must.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>Well now, could anyone follow up either of these points without the medical art?

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>No, indeed. <milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="171c"/> Nobody at all, it would seem, but a doctor; and so not the temperate man either: for he would have to be a doctor, in addition to his temperance.<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>That is so.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>Then inevitably, if temperance is only a science of science and of lack of science, it will be equally unable to distinguish a doctor who knows the business of his art from one who does not know but pretends or thinks he does, and any other person who has knowledge of anything at all: one will only distinguish one’s fellow-artist, as craftsmen usually can.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>Apparently, he said. <milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="171d"/> Then what benefit, I asked, Critias, can we still look for from temperance, if it is like that? For if, as we began by assuming, the temperate man knew what he knew and what he did not know, and that he knows the one and does not know the other, and if he were able to observe this same condition in bother man, it would be vastly to our benefit, we agree, to be temperate; since we should pass all our lives, both we who had temperance and all the rest who were governed by us, <milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="171e"/> without error. For neither should we ourselves attempt to do what we did not know, instead of finding out those who knew and placing the matter in their hands, nor should we permit others under our governance to do anything but what they were likely to do aright; and they would do that when they had knowledge of it; and so it would be that a house which was ordered, or a state which was administered, as temperance bade, and everything else <milestone unit="page" resp="Stephanus" n="172"/><milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="172a"/> that was ruled by temperance, could not but be well ordered;</p></said></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" resp="perseus" n="172"><said who="#Socrates" rend="merge"><p>for with error abolished, and rightness leading, in their every action men would be bound to do honorably and well under such conditions, and those who did well would be happy. Did we not so speak of temperance, I said, Critias, when we remarked how great a boon it was to know what one knows and what one does not know?

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>To be sure we did, he replied.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>Whereas now, I went on, you see that nowhere can any such science be found.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>I see, he said. <milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="172b"/> Then may we say, I asked, that there is this good point in the knowledge of knowledge and of lack of knowledge, which we now find to be what temperance is, that he who has it will not only learn more easily whatever he learns, but will perceive everything more plainly, since besides the particular things that he learns he will behold the science; and hence he will probe more surely the state of other men respecting the things which he has learnt himself, while those who probe without such knowledge will do it more feebly and poorly? Are these, my friend, the kind of advantages that we shall gain <milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="172c"/> from temperance? But are we really looking at something greater, and requiring it to be something greater than it really is?

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>Probably, he replied, that is so.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>I daresay, I said; and I daresay also our inquiry has been worthless. And this I conclude, because I observe certain strange facts about temperance, if it is anything like that. For suppose, if you please, we concede that there may possibly be a science of science, and let us grant, and not withdraw, our original proposition that temperance is the knowledge of what one knows and does not know; <milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="172d"/>granting all this, let us still more thoroughly inquire whether on these terms it will be of any profit to us. For our suggestion just now, that temperance of that sort, as our guide in ordering house or state, must be a great boon, was not, to my thinking, Critias, a proper admission.<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>How so? he asked.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>Because, I replied, we too tightly admitted that it would be a great boon to mankind if each of us should do what he knows, but should place what he did not know in the hands of others who had the knowledge. <milestone unit="section" resp="Stephanus" n="172e"/>Well, was that, he asked, not a proper admission?<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>Not to my mind, I answered.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>In very truth, your words are strange! he said, Socrates.

<milestone unit="para" ed="P"/>Yes, by the Dog, I said, and they strike me too in the same way; and it was in view of this, just now, that I spoke of strange results that I noticed, and said I feared we were not inquiring rightly.</p></said></div></div></body></text></TEI>
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            </GetPassage>