(The Nature of
the One and the Many)
The Parmenides
Translated by Benjamin
Jowett
- Persons of the Dialogue
- CEPHALUS
- ADEIMANTUS
- GLAUCON
- ANTIPHON
- PYTHODORUS
- SOCRATES
- ZENO
- PARMENIDES
- ARISTOTELES
-
- Scene
- Cephalus rehearses a dialogue which is supposed to have been narrated
- in his presence by Antiphon, the half-brother of Adeimantus and Glaucon,
- to certain Clazomenians.
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-
- We had come from our home at Clazomenae to Athens, and met Adeimantus
- and Glaucon in the Agora. Welcome, Cephalus, said Adeimantus, taking
- me by the hand; is there anything which we can do for you in Athens?
-
- Yes; that is why I am here; I wish to ask a favour of you.
-
- What may that be? he said.
- I want you to tell me the name of your half brother, which I have
- forgotten; he was a mere child when I last came hither from Clazomenae,
- but that was a long time ago; his father's name, if I remember rightly,
- was Pyrilampes?
-
- Yes, he said, and the name of our brother, Antiphon; but why do you
- ask?
-
- Let me introduce some countrymen of mine, I said; they are lovers
- of philosophy, and have heard that Antiphon was intimate with a certain
- Pythodorus, a friend of Zeno, and remembers a conversation which took
- place between Socrates, Zeno, and Parmenides many years ago, Pythodorus
- having often recited it to him.
-
- Quite true.
- And could we hear it? I asked.
- Nothing easier, he replied; when he was a youth he made a careful
- study of the piece; at present his thoughts run in another direction;
- like his grandfather Antiphon he is devoted to horses. But, if that
- is what you want, let us go and look for him; he dwells at Melita,
- which is quite near, and he has only just left us to go home.
-
- Accordingly we went to look for him; he was at home, and in the act
- of giving a bridle to a smith to be fitted. When he had done with
- the smith, his brothers told him the purpose of our visit; and he
- saluted me as an acquaintance whom he remembered from my former visit,
- and we asked him to repeat the dialogue. At first he was not very
- willing, and complained of the trouble, but at length he consented.
- He told us that Pythodorus had described to him the appearance of
- Parmenides and Zeno; they came to Athens, as he said, at the great
- Panathenaea; the former was, at the time of his visit, about 65 years
- old, very white with age, but well favoured. Zeno was nearly 40 years
- of age, tall and fair to look upon; in the days of his youth he was
- reported to have been beloved by Parmenides. He said that they lodged
- with Pythodorus in the Ceramicus, outside the wall, whither Socrates,
- then a very young man, came to see them, and many others with him;
- they wanted to hear the writings of Zeno, which had been brought to
- Athens for the first time on the occasion of their visit. These Zeno
- himself read to them in the absence of Parmenides, and had very nearly
- finished when Pythodorus entered, and with him Parmenides and Aristoteles
- who was afterwards one of the Thirty, and heard the little that remained
- of the dialogue. Pythodorus had heard Zeno repeat them before.
-
- When the recitation was completed, Socrates requested that the first
- thesis of the first argument might be read over again, and this having
- been done, he said: What is your meaning, Zeno? Do you maintain that
- if being is many, it must be both like and unlike, and that this is
- impossible, for neither can the like be unlike, nor the unlike like-is
- that your position?
-
- Just so, said Zeno.
- And if the unlike cannot be like, or the like unlike, then according
- to you, being could not be many; for this would involve an impossibility.
- In all that you say have you any other purpose except to disprove
- the being of the many? and is not each division of your treatise intended
- to furnish a separate proof of this, there being in all as many proofs
- of the not-being of the many as you have composed arguments? Is that
- your meaning, or have I misunderstood you?
-
- No, said Zeno; you have correctly understood my general purpose.
-
- I see, Parmenides, said Socrates, that Zeno would like to be not only
- one with you in friendship but your second self in his writings too;
- he puts what you say in another way, and would fain make believe that
- he is telling us something which is new. For you, in your poems, say
- The All is one, and of this you adduce excellent proofs; and he on
- the other hand says There is no many; and on behalf of this he offers
- overwhelming evidence. You affirm unity, he denies plurality. And
- so you deceive the world into believing that you are saying different
- things when really you are saying much the same. This is a strain
- of art beyond the reach of most of us.
-
- Yes, Socrates, said Zeno. But although you are as keen as a Spartan
- hound in pursuing the track, you do not fully apprehend the true motive
- of the composition, which is not really such an artificial work as
- you imagine; for what you speak of was an accident; there was no pretence
- of a great purpose; nor any serious intention of deceiving the world.
- The truth is, that these writings of mine were meant to protect the
- arguments of Parmenides against those who make fun of him and seek
- to show the many ridiculous and contradictory results which they suppose
- to follow from the affirmation of the one. My answer is addressed
- to the partisans of the many, whose attack I return with interest
- by retorting upon them that their hypothesis of the being of many,
- if carried out, appears to be still more ridiculous than the hypothesis
- of the being of one. Zeal for my master led me to write the book in
- the days of my youth, but some one stole the copy; and therefore I
- had no choice whether it should be published or not; the motive, however,
- of writing, was not the ambition of an elder man, but the pugnacity
- of a young one. This you do not seem to see, Socrates; though in other
- respects, as I was saying, your notion is a very just one.
-
- I understand, said Socrates, and quite accept your account. But tell
- me, Zeno, do you not further think that there is an idea of likeness
- in itself, and another idea of unlikeness, which is the opposite of
- likeness, and that in these two, you and I and all other things to
- which we apply the term many, participate-things which participate
- in likeness become in that degree and manner like; and so far as they
- participate in unlikeness become in that degree unlike, or both like
- and unlike in the degree in which they participate in both? And may
- not all things partake of both opposites, and be both like and unlike,
- by reason of this participation?-Where is the wonder? Now if a person
- could prove the absolute like to become unlike, or the absolute unlike
- to become like, that, in my opinion, would indeed be a wonder; but
- there is nothing extraordinary, Zeno, in showing that the things which
- only partake of likeness and unlikeness experience both. Nor, again,
- if a person were to show that all is one by partaking of one, and
- at the same time many by partaking of many, would that be very astonishing.
- But if he were to show me that the absolute one was many, or the absolute
- many one, I should be truly amazed. And so of all the rest: I should
- be surprised to hear that the natures or ideas themselves had these
- opposite qualities; but not if a person wanted to prove of me that
- I was many and also one. When he wanted to show that I was many he
- would say that I have a right and a left side, and a front and a back,
- and an upper and a lower half, for I cannot deny that I partake of
- multitude; when, on the other hand, he wants to prove that I am one,
- he will say, that we who are here assembled are seven, and that I
- am one and partake of the one. In both instances he proves his case.
- So again, if a person shows that such things as wood, stones, and
- the like, being many are also one, we admit that he shows the coexistence
- the one and many, but he does not show that the many are one or the
- one many; he is uttering not a paradox but a truism. If however, as
- I just now suggested, some one were to abstract simple notions of
- like, unlike, one, many, rest, motion, and similar ideas, and then
- to show that these admit of admixture and separation in themselves,
- I should be very much astonished. This part of the argument appears
- to be treated by you, Zeno, in a very spirited manner; but, as I was
- saying, I should be far more amazed if any one found in the ideas
- themselves which are apprehended by reason, the same puzzle and entanglement
- which you have shown to exist in visible objects.
-
- While Socrates was speaking, Pythodorus thought that Parmenides and
- Zeno were not altogether pleased at the successive steps of the argument;
- but still they gave the closest attention and often looked at one
- another, and smiled as if in admiration of him. When he had finished,
- Parmenides expressed their feelings in the following words:-
-
- Socrates, he said, I admire the bent of your mind towards philosophy;
- tell me now, was this your own distinction between ideas in themselves
- and the things which partake of them? and do you think that there
- is an idea of likeness apart from the likeness which we possess, and
- of the one and many, and of the other things which Zeno mentioned?
-
- I think that there are such ideas, said Socrates.
- Parmenides proceeded: And would you also make absolute ideas of the
- just and the beautiful and the good, and of all that class?
-
- Yes, he said, I should.
- And would you make an idea of man apart from us and from all other
- human creatures, or of fire and water?
-
- I am often undecided, Parmenides, as to whether I ought to include
- them or not.
-
- And would you feel equally undecided, Socrates, about things of which
- the mention may provoke a smile?-I mean such things as hair, mud,
- dirt, or anything else which is vile and paltry; would you suppose
- that each of these has an idea distinct from the actual objects with
- which we come into contact, or not?
-
- Certainly not, said Socrates; visible things like these are such as
- they appear to us, and I am afraid that there would be an absurdity
- in assuming any idea of them, although I sometimes get disturbed,
- and begin to think that there is nothing without an idea; but then
- again, when I have taken up this position, I run away, because I am
- afraid that I may fall into a bottomless pit of nonsense, and perish;
- and so I return to the ideas of which I was just now speaking, and
- occupy myself with them.
-
- Yes, Socrates, said Parmenides; that is because you are still young;
- the time will come, if I am not mistaken, when philosophy will have
- a firmer grasp of you, and then you will not despise even the meanest
- things; at your age, you are too much disposed to regard opinions
- of men. But I should like to know whether you mean that there are
- certain ideas of which all other things partake, and from which they
- derive their names; that similars, for example, become similar, because
- they partake of similarity; and great things become great, because
- they partake of greatness; and that just and beautiful things become
- just and beautiful, because they partake of justice and beauty?
-
- Yes, certainly, said Socrates that is my meaning.
- Then each individual partakes either of the whole of the idea or else
- of a part of the idea? Can there be any other mode of participation?
-
- There cannot be, he said.
- Then do you think that the whole idea is one, and yet, being one,
- is in each one of the many?
-
- Why not, Parmenides? said Socrates.
- Because one and the same thing will exist as a whole at the same time
- in many separate individuals, and will therefore be in a state of
- separation from itself.
-
- Nay, but the idea may be like the day which is one and the same in
- many places at once, and yet continuous with itself; in this way each
- idea may be one; and the same in all at the same time.
-
- I like your way, Socrates, of making one in many places at once. You
- mean to say, that if I were to spread out a sail and cover a number
- of men, there would be one whole including many-is not that your meaning?
-
- I think so.
- And would you say that the whole sail includes each man, or a part
- of it only, and different parts different men?
-
- The latter.
- Then, Socrates, the ideas themselves will be divisible, and things
- which participate in them will have a part of them only and not the
- whole idea existing in each of them?
-
- That seems to follow.
- Then would you like to say, Socrates, that the one idea is really
- divisible and yet remains one?
-
- Certainly not, he said.
- Suppose that you divide absolute greatness, and that of the many great
- things, each one is great in virtue of a portion of greatness less