Everything about Statesman Dialogue totally explained
The Statesman, or
Politikos in
Greek and
Politicus in
Latin, is a four part dialogue
contained within the work of
Plato.
The text is a dialogue between
Socrates and his student Theodorus, another student named Socrates (referred to as Young Socrates), and an unknown philosopher expounding the ideas of the
statesman. This unknown philosopher from
Elea is referred to in the text as the "visitor".
The text is a continuation of the dialogue preceding it, named
Sophist , which is a dialogue between
Socrates,
Theaetetus and the visitor.
According to John M. Cooper
, the dialogue's intention was to clarify that to rule or have political power called for a specialized knowledge.
The statesman was one who possesses this special knowledge of how to rule justly and well and to have the best interests of the citizens at heart. It is presented that
politics should be run by this knowledge, or
gnosis. This claim runs counter to those who, the visitor points out, actually did rule. Those that rule merely give the appearance of such knowledge, but in the end are really
sophists or imitators.
For, as the visitor points out, a sophist is one who doesn't know the right thing to do, but only appears to others as someone who does. The visitor's ideal of how one arrives at this knowledge of power is through social divisions. The visitor takes great pains to be very specific about where and why the divisions are needed in order to properly rule the citizenry.
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