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discovered the beginnings of them advanced them in all only a little way, whereas the celebrities of to-day are the heirs (so to speak) of a long succession of men who have advanced them bit by bit, and so have developed them to their present form, Tisias coming next after the first founders, then
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as the key movers in the history of rhetoric. Quoting the W. A. Pickard-Cambridge text: "For it may be that in everything, as the saying is 'the first start is the main part'... This is in fact what has happened in regard to rhetorical speeches and to practically all the other arts: for those who
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after Tisias, and
Theodorus next to him, while several people have made their several contributions to it: and therefore it is not to be wondered at that the art has attained considerable dimensions." The later
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for mentioning "confirmation and further confirmation," and calls
Theodorus "that most excellent artist in words." Phaedrus responds in turn by calling Theodorus "worthy."
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translation of the passage gives us the perhaps more appropriate reading of "word-artificer" for Plato's witticism.
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and their associates..." Some commentators conclude from the passage that
Theodorus is linked significantly with
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again in referencing
Theodorus, with the translation giving the curious variation of "Daedalus of words." The
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describes him as excelling rather in the theory than the practice of his art.
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references Plato's usage in his history of
Oratory in the third book of the
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provides a brief listing of his works, declaring him the author of
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Pickard-Cambridge, W. A. (2001) . Richard McKeon (ed.).
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The Basic Works of
Aristotle, De Sophisticis Elenchis (
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Dictionary of Greek and Roman
Biography and Mythology
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78:refers to him in a similarly cursorial manner.
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95:school seems not to have been so kind.
81:Aristotle places him beside Tisias and
56:in his ironic survey of oratory in the
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211:183b22-34. Tr. Pickard-Cambridge, 1941
302:Dillon, John; Gergel, Tania (2003).
16:Greek sophist of late 5th-century BC
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296:Secondary sources and translations
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306:. Great Britain: Penguin Group.
150:, and other unspecified works.
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224:2. Tr. Dillon and Gergel, 2003
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329:. New York: Modern Library.
242:Dionysius of Halicarnassus,
220:Dionysius of Halicarnassus,
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376:5th-century BC Greek people
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325:On Sophistical Refutations
209:On Sophistical Refutations
198:Diogenes Laërtius, ii. 104
173:Tr. Harold N. Fowler, 1925
97:Dionysius of Halicarnassus
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41:of the late 5th century
222:First Letter to Ammaeus
352:. London: John Murray.
233:Dillon and Gergel, 142
52:Theodorus is noted by
189:Tr. H.E. Butler, 1920
244:De Antiq. Oratorib.
185:Institutio Oratoria
371:Ancient Byzantines
304:The Greek Sophists
275:, s.v. Theodorus.
68:Instiutio Oratoria
76:Diogenes Laërtius
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283:, 1928-1938
207:Aristotle,
140:Thrasybulus
128:quotes the
93:Peripatetic
64:Quintillian
360:Categories
346:, (1873).
291:References
45:, born in
281:Ada Adler
154:Citations
147:Andocides
47:Byzantium
20:Theodorus
366:Sophists
259:Cicero,
248:de Isaeo
169:Phaedrus
145:Against
138:Against
130:Phaedrus
109:Antiphon
105:Antiphon
59:Phaedrus
30:) was a
28:Θεόδωρος
263:, c. 12
250:, c. 19
187:3.1.11.
166:Plato,
35:sophist
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279:. Tr.
277:Θ, 149
261:Brutus
143:, and
117:Cicero
70:. The
39:orator
171:266e.
54:Plato
32:Greek
24:Greek
331:ISBN
308:ISBN
273:Suda
134:Suda
125:Suda
111:and
72:Loeb
37:and
49:.
43:BCE
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22:(
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