166:, Socrates examines a student of Dionysodorus who appears not to have learned basic elements of generalship. The implication seems to be either that Dionysodorus has shamelessly taken the student's payments without giving him his money's worth, or that Dionysodorus himself is ignorant of the very art of generalship he claims to teach. This is apparently in keeping with Plato's critique of Dionysodorus, although the biographical details are in conflict.
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who supported the democracy; if the general and sophist are one and the same, Dionysodorus may have become a naturalized
Athenian citizen along with many other foreign residents before the
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preserves, and refutes, a specific argument of
Euthydemus, which implied that "a man knows that there is a trireme in the
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features
Dionysodorus and Euthydemus as prominent interlocutors. According to the dialogue, the brothers were born on the
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106:, the two taught fighting in armor and legal oration before developing an interest in sophistry. Xenophon in the
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speech, who potentially matches the sophist on several biographical details. This
Dionysodorus was a general and
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151:. Scholars have suggested that Plato here chose the brothers as token sophists worthy of ridicule.
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further attributes the teaching of generalship to
Dionysodorus specifically.
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30:, c. 430 – late 5th century or early 4th century BCE) was an
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48:. Closely associated with his brother and fellow sophist
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against
Socrates and his student Clinias (III), son of
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because he knows each of the two things separately."
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Fallacies and
Pitfalls of Language: The Language Trap
218:, Indianapolis: Hackett Publishing, 2002; pp. 136–137
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16:5th-century BC Greek sophist philosopher
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442:Metic philosophers in Classical Athens
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273:, Toronto: Prentice-Hall, 1994; pp. 13
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176:List of speakers in Plato's dialogues
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437:5th-century BC Greek people
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309:Sophistical Refutations
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351:of the 5th century BC
216:The People of Plato
129:Battle of Arginusae
44:, generalship, and
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145:logical fallacies
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42:martial arts
28:Dionysódōros
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20:Dionysodorus
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306:Aristotle,
291:Aristotle,
245:Memorabilia
231:, 271e–272a
212:Debra Nails
164:Memorabilia
109:Memorabilia
38:philosopher
431:Categories
411:Protagoras
386:Euthydemus
282:Nails, 152
243:Xenophon,
229:Euthydemus
195:Euthydemus
182:References
141:Euthydemus
135:Philosophy
104:Euthydemus
78:island of
71:Euthydemus
50:Euthydemus
401:Lycophron
366:Callicles
297:, 1401a26
153:Aristotle
35:sophistic
447:Sophists
406:Prodicus
361:Antiphon
349:Sophists
312:, 177b12
294:Rhetoric
256:Lysias,
170:See also
149:Axiochus
125:taxiarch
100:Socrates
68:Plato's
58:Xenophon
396:Hippias
391:Gorgias
371:Critias
227:Plato,
193:Plato,
157:Piraeus
102:in the
46:oration
197:, 271c
117:Lysias
96:Athens
84:Thurii
76:Aegean
376:Damon
247:, 3.1
92:Italy
80:Chios
54:Plato
24:Greek
64:Life
56:and
260:, 1
86:in
433::
236:^
214:,
202:^
131:.
119:'
60:.
341:e
334:t
327:v
22:(
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