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Wrestling with the Eleatics in Plato’s Parmenides

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Chapter Title: Wrestling with the Eleatics in Plato’s Parmenides
Chapter Author(s): Lidia Palumbo and Heather L. Reid
Book Title: Athletics, Gymnastics, and Agon in Plato
Book Editor(s): Heather L. Reid, Mark Ralkowski, Coleen P. Zoller
Published by: Parnassos Press – Fonte Aretusa. (2020)
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185
Lidia Palumbo & Heather L. Reid
1
Wrestling with the Eleatics in Plato’s Parmenides
In his Lives, Diogenes Laertius classifies Platonic dialogues
into several types, including gymnastikos and agōnistikos forms of
inquiry; the latter are aimed at victory, the former at training the
mind.
2
Although he classifies the Parmenides as neither of these but
rather as one for instruction in metaphysics,
3
we believe that the
dialogue illustrates Plato’s adaptation of athletic techniques to
philosophical inquiry on several levels. To demonstrate this, we
will examine the Parmenides’s setting, its method, and its theory.
On all three levels, we find an important connection between
1
Lidia Palumbo is professor of ancient philosophy at the Università degli Studi
di Napoli Federico II. She is co-editor of the series Philosophike Skepsis, and
author of Il non essere e l’apparenza. Sul Sofista di Platone (Napoli 1996),
Mimesis: Rappresentazione, teatro e mondo nei dialoghi di Platone e nella Poetica
di Aristotle (Napoli 2008), Verba manent, su Platone e il linguaggio (Napoli
2014), and many articles on Plato and Aristotle’s Poetics. She is currently
working on the theatrical and protreptic dimensions of Platonic texts.
Heather L. Reid was introduced in the first essay of the volume. This
collaborative essay was completed during her Fulbright residence in
Napoli, which was co-sponsored by the Foundation Con il Sud.
2
Diogenes Laertius 3.49: “Of the Platonic dialogues there are two most general
types, the one adapted for instruction and the other for inquiry…The
dialogue of inquiry also has two main divisions, the one of which aims at
training the mind and the other at victory in controversy. Again, the part
which aims at training the mind has two subdivisions, the one akin to the
midwife's art, the other merely tentative. And that suited to controversy is
also subdivided into one part which raises critical objections, and another
which is subversive of the main position. Το δὴ <δια>λόγου τοῦ
Πλατωνικοῦ δύ εἰσὶν ἀνωτάτω χαρακτῆρες, τε ὑφηγητικὸς καὶ
ζητητικός… το δὲ ζητητικοῦ κα αὐτο δύο εἰσὶν οἱ πρῶτοι χαρακτῆρες,
τε γυμναστικὸς καὶ ἀγωνιστικός. καὶ το μὲν γυμναστικοῦ μαιευτικός
τε καὶ πειραστικός, τοῦ δὲ ἀγωνιστικοῦ ἐνδεικτικὸς καὶ ἀνατρεπτικός.”
For an analysis, see F. Ferrari, “La nascita del platonismo,” in Princeps
Philosophorum. Platone nell'Occidente tardo-antico, medievale e umanistico, eds.
M. Borriello and A.M.Vitale (Roma: Città Nuova, 2016), 13-29.
3
Diogenes Laertius 3.50. The fact that the Parmenides does not appear in the
category of zetetic or gymnastic dialogues in this classification (presumably
derived from Middle Platonism) demonstrates only that it was interpreted
differently than the others.
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Lidia Palumbo & Heather L. Reid
186
philosophy and agōn, a specifically gymnastic or training agōn that
is aimed not at victory or defeat of one’s opponent, but
constructively toward the achievement of a philosophical “vision,”
which is achieved by overcoming the theoretical challenges that
philosophers encounter on their path.
This essay interprets the Parmenides agonistically as a
constructive contest between Plato’s Socrates and the Eleatics of
Western Greece. Not only is the dialogue set in the agonistic
context of the Panathenaic Games, it features agonistic language,
employs an agonistic method, and may even present an agonistic
model for participation in the forms. The inspiration for this
agonistic motif may be that Parmenides and his student Zeno
represent Western Greece, which was a key rival for the mainland
at the Olympics and other Panhellenic festivals. This athletic
rivalry was complemented by a philosophical rivalry, which is
dramatized in the dialogue by pitting a very young (flyweight)
Socrates against the Eleatic (heavyweight) Parmenides. Through
dialectic, an agonistic form of philosophy attributed to the Eleatics,
Plato subjects his theory of forms to a variety of conceptual
challenges. This process is described as gymnasia (training) at 135d,
and the power of dialectic and philosophy itself are said to depend
on it.
The goal of the gymnasia (136c) is to achieve a full view (kyriōs
diopsesthai) of the truth. This philosophical “vision” corresponds to
the physical fitness achieved through athletic training, and it
distinguishes philosophers (lovers of wisdom) from philotheamones
(lovers of images) as explained at Republic 475d-476c. Just as
trained athletes are able to participate in the contest while
spectators merely watch it, philosophers are able to discern
intelligible forms through the particulars that participate in them.
In the words of the Seventh Letter 341c, it takes prolonged
communion (synousia) with a subject to ignite the philosophical
light in one’s soul. The Parmenides’s gymnasia provides an agonistic
model for this process, inviting its readers to participate in
philosophical training and develop a vison that transcends the
material in a way these Eleatic spectators were unable to do.
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Wrestling with the Eleatics in Plato’s Parmenides
187
Setting and Characters
The Parmenides has an athletic setting and its philosophical
characters are compared to athletes. We learn at 127a, that
Parmenides and his protégé, Zeno, have come to Athens εἰς
Παναθήναια τὰ μεγάλα, for the Greater Panathenaic Games.
4
The Panathenaia was a local religious festival honoring Athena
that took place annually. Every fourth year, athletic contests were
added and athletes came from all over the Hellenic world to
compete for the sacred olive oil contained in Panathenaic prize
vases, which can be seen today in museums all over the world.
Although these games, like all the “money” games that awarded
valuable prizes, were less prestigious than the “crown” games at
Olympia, Delphi, Nemea and Isthmia, they grew to become an
important Panhellenic event. And just as the Olympic Games
provided an opportunity for intellectuals to gather and exchange
ideas, the Greater Panathenaia would be a likely occasion
perhaps the only likely occasionupon which Socrates would
meet the Eleatic philosophers. Socrates rarely wandered far from
Athens, unlike Plato who travelled to Olympia and Western
Greece.
The dialogue’s narrator, Cephalus (whose name suggests the
beginning of something)
5
says that he has traveled to Athens from
Clazomenae in Asia Minorhome of the pre-Socratic philosopher
Anaxagoras.
6
It is not clear whether the Clazomenians were also in
4
See S. Campese and S. Gastaldi, Bendidie e Panatenee, in Platone, La
Repubblica, vol. I, bk. I, trans. M. Vegetti (Napoli: Bibliopolis, 1998), 109-131.
5
In this case, the beginning of the Platonic dialogues, since Socrates is younger
here than in any other dialogue. On the possibility of ordering Plato’s
dialogues according to the dramatic context of Socrates’s age, see C. H.
Zuckert, Plato's Parmenides: A dramatic Reading,” The Review of
Metaphysics, 51.4 (1998): 875-906, and C. H. Zuckert, Plato’s Philosophers. The
Coherence of the Dialogues (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2009).
See also M.L. Declos, “Instituer la philosophie: le temps de la succession
dans le Parménide de Platon,in C. Darbo-Peschanski (ed.), Constructions
du temps dans le monde grec ancien, (Paris: CNRS Éditions, 2000), 223-52.
6
On the reference to Clazomenae, see F. Forcignanò, Forme, linguaggio, sostanze. Il
dibattito sulle idee nell'Academia antica, (Milano-Udine: Mimesis: 2017), 55.
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Lidia Palumbo & Heather L. Reid
188
town for (a later edition) of the Festival, but it is well-attested by
the distribution of Panathenaic amphorae in tombs that
delegations from Asia Minor as well as Western Greece attended
the Games. In fact, athletes from Sicily and Southern Italy,
particularly the city of Croton, were so dominant that a proverb
claimed, “The last of the Crotonites is the first of the rest of the
Greeks.”
7
Croton, of course, is also the adopted home of
Pythagoras,
8
who very likely had a hand in its athletes’ success,
and certainly had a major influence on Western Greek thinkers
including Empedocles, Parmenides, and Zeno. That Plato was
aware of the athletic side of Pythagoreanism is suggested by his
decision to set up a school in the Academy gymnasium
9
upon
returning from a voyage to Syracuse and Taranto, where he met
the Pythagorean Archytas
10
who, by one account, rescued the
Athenian from slavery after a later voyage.
The point is that the athletic rivalry between Mainland and
Western Greeks was accompanied in Plato’s mind by a
philosophical rivalry. Furthermore, as a former wrestler,
11
Plato
would have understood this rivalry as a constructive one in which
good competition serves to improve the competitors. By pitting a
very young Socrates against the venerable Eleatic Parmenides in
dialectic (a form of inquiry attributed to Zeno),
12
Plato subjects his
theory of forms to a variety of conceptual challenges in the effort
to make it stronger. The dialogue’s participants are also described
in athletic terms. Parmenides compliments Socrates for his hormē
7
Strabo, Geographia 6.1.12.
8
For a discussion of Pythagorass influence on athletics see Heather L. Reid,
“Plato the Gymnasiarch,” in ΦΙΛΕΛΛΗΝ: Essays for Stephen G. Miller, eds.
D. Katsonopoulou & E. Partida, Athens: The Helike Society, 171-186, p 173.
9
Diogenes Laertius, 3.7.
10
Diogenes Laertius 3.21-22.
11
Diogenes Laertius, 3.1.4.
12
According to Diogenes Laertius 8.2.57, Aristotle in his Sophist calls Empedocles
the inventor of rhetoric and Zeno of dialectic. “φησὶ δ᾽ Ἀριστοτέλης
εὑρετὴν [Ζήνων] γενέσθαι διαλεκτικῆς, ὥσπερ Ἐμπεδοκλέα ῥητορικῆς.”
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Wrestling with the Eleatics in Plato’s Parmenides
189
toward argument
13
an athletic word that suggests the eagerness
of a runner or racehorse bursting from the starting gate. Zeno,
meanwhile, confesses to writing his book out of “competitive
spirit” (philonikia), a vice that Plato takes to be characteristic of
athletes and sophists.
14
It is worth noting, as well, that Plato
himself is engaged in the parallel act of writing a book to
competitively defend his theory of forms.
Finally, Parmenides himself is compared with the aging
racehorse in a song from the Western Greek poet, Ibycus:
I am obliged to go along with you. And yet I feel like the
horse in the poem of Ibycus. Ibycus compares himself to
a horsea champion but no longer young, on the point
of drawing a chariot in a race and trembling at what
experience tells him is about to happenand says that he
himself, old man that he is, is being forced against his will
to compete in Love’s game. I too, when I think back, feel
a good deal of anxiety as to how at my age I am to make
my way across such a vast and formidable sea of words.
ἀνάγκη, φάναι, πείθεσθαι. καίτοι δοκῶ μοι τ το
Ἰβυκείου ἵππου πεπονθέναι, κεῖνος ἀθλητῇ ὄντι καὶ
πρεσβυτέρῳ, ὑφ᾽ ἅρματι μέλλοντι ἀγωνιεῖσθαι καὶ δι
ἐμπειρίαν τρέμοντι τὸ μέλλον, ἑαυτὸν ἀπεικάζων
ἄκων ἔφη καὶ αὐτὸς οὕτω πρεσβύτης ὢν εἰς τὸν ἔρωτα
13
130b: Παρμενίδην: Σώκρατες, φάναι, ς ἄξιος εἶ ἄγασθαι τῆς ρμῆς τῆς
ἐπὶ τοὺς λόγους (“what an admirable talent for argument you have!”). Also,
135d: καλὴ μὲν οὖν καὶ θεία, εὖ ἴσθι, ρμ ν ρμς ἐπὶ τοὺς λόγους
(Your impulse towards dialectic is noble and divine).
14
128de: διὰ τοιαύτην δὴ φιλονικίαν ὑπὸ νέου ὄντος ἐμο ἐγράφη, καί τις αὐτὸ
ἔκλεψε γραφέν… ταύτῃ οὖν σε λανθάνει, ὦ Σώκρατες, ὅτι οὐχ ὑπὸ νέου
φιλονικίας οἴει αὐτὸ γεγράφθαι, λλ ὑπὸ πρεσβυτέρου φιλοτιμίας. “In
that competitive spirit, I wrote the book when I was a young man. […] So in
this respect, I think you missed the point, Socrates, you think it was written
not out of a young man’s competitiveness but out of a mature man’s
vainglory.” Both philonikia and philotimia are considered by Plato to be vices
characteristic of athletes and sophists. See M. Tabak, Plato's Parmenides
Reconsidered, (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015), 31-2.
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Lidia Palumbo & Heather L. Reid
190
ἀναγκάζεσθαι ἰέναι: κἀγώ μοι δοκῶ μεμνημένος μάλα
φοβεῖσθαι πῶς χρὴ τηλικόνδε ὄντα διανεῦσαι τοιοῦτόν
τε καὶ τοσοῦτον πέλαγος λόγων. (136e-137a
15
)
By 137b, however, Parmenides has agreed “to play the strenuous
game” (πραγματειώδη παιδιὰν παίζειν) he has been
recommending to Socrates.
16
After all, he observes, they are by
themselvesno one is watching.
Method: the “Gymnasia
At 135c, the “game” in question is actually called “gymnasia
(training) and Parmenides tells Socrates that nothing less than the
power of dialectic and the future of philosophy depend on it.
17
Dialectic, as we said, was a form of inquiry attributed by Aristotle
to Zeno of Elea.
18
The method demonstrated by Parmenides in the
dialogue is certainly an example of Eleatic dialectic.
19
But why,
apart from its affinity with athletic contest, is this dialectic called
gymnasia? The first hint comes from the aforementioned comments
about it taking place in private.
20
At 136de, Zeno says it would not
15
Unless otherwise stated, all English translations of Plato are taken from John
Cooper, ed., Plato: Complete Works (Indianapolis: Hackett, 1997).
16
It is significant that Parmenides uses the terms paidia/paizein here (to play a
game), which suggests the sophists’ abuse of philosophical tools such as
dialectic. In our interpretation, the Eleatics are presented in the Parmenides
as practitioners of a sophistical dialectic, whereas Socrates, here at the
beginning of his career, and thanks to the training that he is beginning to
undergo, is capable of authentically philosophical dialectic. On sophistry as
a game, see Plato, Sophist, 234b-235a.
17
135c: “’In this way he [who does not allow for forms] will destroy the power of
dialectic entirely. But I think you are only too well aware of that./ ‘What you
say is true,’ Socrates said./ What then will you do about philosophy? Where
will you turn, while these difficulties remain unresolved?’…κα οὕτως τὴν
το διαλέγεσθαι δύναμιν παντάπασι διαφθερεῖ. τοῦ τοιούτου μὲν οὖν
μοι δοκεῖς καὶ μᾶλλον σθῆσθαι. ἀληθῆ , φάναι. τί οὖν ποιήσεις
φιλοσοφίας πέρι; πῇ τρέψῃ ἀγνοουμένων τούτων;”
18
See n. 12 above.
19
On the Eleatic method in Plato’s Parmenides, see Samuel Scolnicov, Plato's
Parmenides (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2003).
20
The lack of spectators transforms the dialectic from a public agōn (the prefix ag-
indicates a public gathering) into a private gymnasia (training exercise).
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Wrestling with the Eleatics in Plato’s Parmenides
191
be appropriate to ask Parmenides to perform the gymnasia in
public:
…it’s not fitting, especially for a man his age, to engage in
such a discussion in front of a crowd. Ordinary people
don’t know that without this comprehensive and
circuitous treatment we cannot hit upon the truth and
gain insight.
εἰ μὲν οὖν πλείους ἦμεν, οὐκ ν ἄξιον ἦν δεῖσθαι:
πρεπ γὰρ τὰ τοιαῦτα πολλῶν ἐναντίον λέγειν
ἄλλως τε καὶ τηλικούτῳ: ἀγνοοῦσιν γὰρ οἱ πολλοὶ τι
ἄνευ ταύτης τῆς διὰ πάντων διεξόδου τε καὶ πλάνης
ἀδύνατον ἐντυχόντα τῷ ἀληθεῖ νοῦν σχεῖν.
Just as athletes train privately in the gymnasium and compete
publically in the games, philosophers need to train in private
before they perform in public.
21
And once a champion like
Parmenides is past his prime, his experience is of special value in
training younger competitors, such as Socrates.
22
By Plato’s time,
21
A similar point about training in private before performing in public is made at
Gorgias 514e: “by Heaven, Callicles, would it not in truth be ridiculous that
men should descend to such folly that, before having plenty of private
practice, sometimes with indifferent results, sometimes with success, and so
getting adequate training in the art, they should, as the saying is, try to learn
pottery by starting on a wine-jar, and start public practice themselves and
invite others of their like to do so? Do you not think it would be mere folly
to act thus? πρὸς Διός, ὦ Καλλίκλεις, οὐ καταγέλαστον ν ἦν τῇ ἀληθείᾳ,
εἰς τοσοῦτον ἀνοίας ἐλθεῖν ἀνθρώπους, ὥστε, πρὶν ἰδιωτεύοντας πολλὰ
μὲν ὅπως ἐτύχομεν ποιῆσαι, πολλὰ δὲ κατορθῶσαι καὶ γυμνάσασθαι
ἱκανῶς τὴν τέχνην, τὸ λεγόμενον δὴ τοῦτο ἐν τῷ πίθῳ τὴν κεραμείαν
ἐπιχειρεῖν μανθάνειν, καὶ αὐτούς τε δημοσιεύειν ἐπιχειρεῖν καὶ ἄλλους
τοιούτους παρακαλεῖν; οὐκ ἀνόητόν σοι δοκεῖ ἂν εἶναι οὕτω πράττειν;”
22
Parmenides, in this dialogue, plays not only the role of a critic, but also a
defender of the Theory of Forms. The two roles are unified in the figure of
the objector ( ἀμφισβητῶν, 133b8, cfr. 135a), in which he poses questions
to train Socrates, who has to respond and defend the Theory of Forms. On
the role of the respondent, see M.L. Kakkuri-Knuuttila, “The Role of the
Respondent in Plato and Aristotle,” in The Development of Dialectic from Plato
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Lidia Palumbo & Heather L. Reid
192
the training of both athletes and philosophers actually took place
in the gymnasium and only the former competed in the Games.
Parmenides, however, may well have performed his philosophical
poem competitively during his prime. Indeed, the rhetorical
contests that Plato derides may have descended from competition
among serious philosophers like Parmenides and Empedocles.
23
In any case, the gymnasia demonstrated in the Parmenides has
the flavor of a master sparring privately with his students, as we
see the mature Socrates doing in such dialogues as Charmides,
Lysis, and Theaetetusall of which are set in palaistrai or
gymnasia.
24
Indeed, the Theaetetus echoes several of the
Parmenides’s gymnastic themes. For example, Theodorus is
reluctant to enter the “contest” (helkein pros to gymnàsion) and asks
Socrates to (labe) “get a hold on” Theaetetus in the argument
(162ab); also, Theaetetus agrees to wrestle only upon the
agreement that Socrates and Theodorus will “put him upright”
(epanorthō) if he falls (146c). Helping your opponent to his feet is a
common feature of combat sports training. This atmosphere of
friendly competition is compounded in Parmenides by Zeno’s and
Parmenides’s obvious delight in Socrates’s challenge to their ideas
at 130a; if the atmosphere were one of philonikia, such criticism
might draw contempt. Although some scholars see the defeat
either of Socrates or Parmenides in the dialectic,
25
the very fact that
to Aristotle, ed. Jakob L. Fink (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
2012), 62-90.
23
See N. Benzi, Philosophy in Verse: Competition and Early Greek Philosophical
Thought, thesis, Durham University. 2016 http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/11568/,
181-186.
24
L. Coventry, “The Role of the Interlocutor in Plato’s Dialogues, Theory and
Practice,” in Characterization and Individuality in Greek Literature, ed. Ch.
Pelling (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1990), 174-196.
25
We do not believe that the Parmenides depicts a dialectical defeat of Socrates,
but rather shows how Parmenides’s objections to his theory are ultimately
inconsistent. For another interpretation of the text from this perspective, see
F. Ferrari, Platone, Parmenide (Milano: Bur, 2004); A. Graeser, “Parmenides
in Plato’s Parmenides,” in Issues in the Philosophy of Language. Past and Present
(Bern: Peter Lang Publishing, 1999), 43-56; M. Tabak, Plato’s Parmenides
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Wrestling with the Eleatics in Plato’s Parmenides
193
it is unclear who “wins” illustrates that this gymnasia is a form of
mutually-beneficial training rather than a winner-take-all
contest.
26
The Parmenides’s dialectic is called gymnasia, above all,
because it is a form of preparation. Let’s go back to where
Parmenides asks Socrates what he will do about philosophy if his
questions about the forms remain unresolved. “I don’t think I have
anything clearly in view,” replies the young Socrates, “at least not
at present(135c). Parmenides responds:
Socrates, that’s because you are trying to mark off
something beautiful, and just, and good, and each one of
the forms, too soon…[prin gymnasthēnai] before you have
been properly trained. I noticed that the other day too, as
I listened to you conversing with Aristotle here. The
impulse [hormē] you bring to argument is noble and
divine, make no mistake about it. But while you are still
young put your back into it and get more training
[gymnasai] through something people think useless
what the crowd call idle talk. Otherwise the truth will
escape you.
πρ γάρ, εἰπεῖν, πρὶν γυμνασθῆναι, Σώκρατες,
ὁρίζεσθαι ἐπιχειρεῖς καλόν τέ τι καὶ δίκαιον καὶ
ἀγαθὸν καὶ ν ἕκαστον τῶν εἰδῶν. ἐνενόησα γὰρ καὶ
Reconsidered (New York: Palgrave, 2015), 29: "Part I is clearly a satirical
display of various objections to the theory of Forms, which are invalid, non
sequitur reactions to the theory of Forms that smack of sophistry.”
26
The gymnasia benefits Socrates (or the critical reader of Socrates) by subjecting
the theory of forms to the Eleatics’ critical examination, so he can overcome
some important theoretical challenges (attributable partly to his young age).
But it also benefits Parmenides (or the critical reader of Parmenides), by
revealing certain materialistic biases in the Eleatic criticism of Socrates. On
this last point, see F. Ferrari, “Equiparazionismo ontologico e deduttivismo:
l’eredità di Parmenide nella gymnasia del Parmenide,” in Il quinto secolo. Studi
di filosofia antica in onore di Livio Rossetti, eds. S. Giombini and F. Marcacci
(Aguaplano: Officina del libro, Passignano, 2010), 357-368. On the text’s
instruction of the reader, see A.K. Cotton, Platonic Dialogue and the Education
of the Reader (Oxford/New York: Oxford University Press, 2014).
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Lidia Palumbo & Heather L. Reid
194
πρῴην σου ἀκούων διαλεγομένου ἐνθάδε Ἀριστοτέλει
τῷδε. καλὴ μὲν οὖν καὶ θεία, εὖ ἴσθι, ἡ ρμ ν ρμς
ἐπὶ τοὺς λόγους: ἕλκυσον δὲ σαυτὸν καὶ γύμνασαι
μᾶλλον διὰ τῆς δοκούσης ἀχρήστου εἶναι καὶ
καλουμένης ὑπὸ τῶν πολλῶν ἀδολεσχίας, ἕως ἔτι νέος
εἶ: εἰ δὲ μή, σὲ διαφεύξεται ἡ ἀλήθεια. (135d)
The image of truth “escaping” the hold of a wrestler is unavoidable
here. Young Socrates wants to learn the old champion’s technique.
“What matter of training is that? (τίς οὖν τρόπος…τῆς
γυμνασίας;),” he asks (135d).
The method that Parmenides describes is a special type of
dialectica kind of round-robin reductio. Reductio ad absurdum
works by hypothesizing the opposite of what you want to prove
and then showing that the consequences are absurd. Standard
dialectic envisions an objector who challenges each hypothesis
not unlike a wrestling match. What Parmenides proposes is a
comprehensive system that subjects a hypothesis and its opposite
to a series of reductio challenges, then analyzes the consequences.
27
Ancient wrestling tournaments were single elimination, with
wrestlers drawing lots to determine matches and the winners
advancing until a victor was determined.
28
Parmenides’s method
looks more like a round-robin tournament, in which each
competitor faces every other competitoras in the group play
phase of the FIFA World Cup.
29
The round-robin method is less
efficient at picking winners, but it has the advantage of revealing
each contestant’s individual strengths and weaknesses. It makes
sense, furthermore, to prepare for a competition, in which one
never knows exactly who one will be wrestling, by testing oneself
against everyone else in the gymnasium who can provide an
27
For a summary of the structure of the gymnasia, see F. Fronterotta, Guida alla
lettura del Parmenide di Platone (Roma-Bari, Laterza, 1998).
28
Michael B. Poliakoff, Combat Sports in the Ancient World (Yale University Press,
1987), 22.
29
In the gymnasia, not only does the one confront the many, and the manyeach
alone and all togetherconfront the one, but it also happens that Socrates
confronts Parmenides and Zeno, and then each of them separately.
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Wrestling with the Eleatics in Plato’s Parmenides
195
appropriate challenge. This is the kind of “comprehensive and
circuitous treatment” (διὰ πάντων διεξόδου τε καὶ πλάνης) Zeno
describes at 136e. So Parmenides’s gymnasia is private, cooperative,
comprehensive preparation, akin to that undertaken in traditional
gymnasia by athletes preparing for the Games. But what, exactly,
is the philosopher training for?
Theory: Philosophical Vision
The theory and method of the Parmenides come together in the
idea of a philosophical vision. The dialogue’s theoretical
background holds that material particulars participate in
intelligible forms without being identical to them or completely
separate. At 136c, Parmenides says to Socrates that he must
complete the gymnasia in order to “achieve a full view (kyriōs
diopsesthai) of truth.” The goal of the philosopher’s gymnasia, then,
is to develop the “vision” by which sensible objects can be
distinguished from intelligible forms, and the latter discerned
through the former’s participation in them. In other words, the
gymnastic method cultivates a capacity to see things
philosophically just as athletic exercises cultivate the capacity to
wrestle competitively. Specifically, the philosopher is able to look
beyond particulars as they show up superficially in our sense-data
and see through to the ideals in which they participate. This is
because the round-robin reductio, discussed above, forces us to
imagine and consider all of the different consequences of each
hypothesis. The challenge provided by opposing hypotheses,
which is the basic method of dialectic, pushes us to transcend the
limitations of material reality (135e) and to consider what exists
only in the intelligible realm. In addition, by forcing us to consider
what would be if things were opposite, it renders the invisible
visible, considers the possibility of the apparently impossible, and
in short evokes that sense of wonder characteristic of philosophers
(not to mention the sense of possibility characteristic of sport).
30
Such a concept of philosophical vision is illustrated in Republic
V, appropriately enough with a contrast between spectators
30
See L. Palumbo, “La meravigliosa struttura dell’ ‘altrimenti’. Una lettura del
Parmenide di Platone, Archivio di Storia della Cultura Anno XXXIII-2020.
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Lidia Palumbo & Heather L. Reid
196
(philotheamones) who love to watch festivals, and philosophers who
“love the sight of truth.” At 476b, spectators are described as those
able to see the many beautiful things but not the beautiful itself.
31
A philosopher, by contrast,
believes in the beautiful itself, can see both it and the
things that participate in it and doesn’t believe that the
participants are it or that it itself is the participants.
ἡγούμενός τέ τι αὐτὸ καλὸν καὶ δυνάμενος καθορᾶν
κα αὐτὸ κα τὰ ἐκείνου μετέχοντα, καὶ οὔτε τὰ
μετέχοντα αὐτὸ οὔτε αὐτὸ τὰ μετέχοντα ἡγούμενος.
(476cd)
What is interesting, maybe even ironic,
32
is that the heavyweight
philosopher Parmenides himself seems to lack such vision because
the mistake he makes in the dialogue is precisely to fail to
distinguish between forms and particulars,
33
immaterial and
material.
34
For example, when Socrates tries to explain the relation
31
Republic 476b: “The lovers of sights and sounds like beautiful sounds, colors,
shapes, and everything fashioned out of them, but their thought is unable
to see and embrace the nature of the beautiful itself. φιλήκοοι κα
φιλοθεάμονες τάς τε καλὰς φωνὰς ἀσπάζονται κα χρόας κα σχήματα
κα πάντα τὰ ἐκ τῶν τοιούτων δημιουργούμενα, αὐτο δὲ το καλοῦ
ἀδύνατος αὐτῶν διάνοια τὴν φύσιν δεῖν τε κα ἀσπάσασθαι. On this
passage, see F. Ferrari, “Teoria delle idee e ontologia,” in Platone, Repubblica
vol. iv, bk. 5, ed. M. Vegetti, (Napoli: Bibliopolis, 2000), 365-91.
32
G. A. Press, Plato: A Guide for the Perplexed (London-New York: Continuum,
2007), 70 writes: "If they [Plato’s dialogues] are attempts to communicate
theories, concepts and doctrines that are Plato’s own, they do not do so
directly, but only indirectly through the mediation of [...] literary and
dramatic machinery."
33
The gymnasia, the lengthy discourse proposed by Parmenides in the last part of
the dialogue, is the Platonic way of demonstrating the absurd, self-
contradictory, and therefore ridiculous conclusions arrived at by a
sophistical Eleatism, which dialectically questions the ontological difference
between forms and particulars.
34
This materialistic aspect of the Eleatic argument is crucial. It is evident in the
entire Eleatic perspective, which conceives the relationship between the
forms and particulars, or between the one and the many, in terms of a
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Wrestling with the Eleatics in Plato’s Parmenides
197
between form and particular using the metaphor of the light of
day, Parmenides counters with the materialistic example of a sail
(131bc).
35
The Eleatic is presented as hopelessly attached to the
material world.
Like several Platonic dialogues, the Parmenides not only
discusses dialectic, it attempts to engage the reader in practicing it.
On Plato’s view, philosophy requires active participation. Just as
the wrestler improves through engagement with other wrestlers,
the philosopher improves through engagement with other
philosophers, and it is through this dialectical wrestling with each
other that they both move closer to the ideal.
36
Socrates’s refusal to
write at all and Plato’s insistence on writing only dialogues are
evidence for this belief. The Seventh Letter, meanwhile, states it
specifically:
Unlike other sciences, [philosophy] can in no way be
communicated by means of words. On the contrary, it is
only through a prolonged communion (synousia) with the
subject, by living with it, that, like a light that is kindled
by a flickering flame, it begins to suddenly nourish itself
within one’s soul.
ητὸν γὰρ οὐδαμῶς στὶν ὡς ἄλλα μαθήματα, λλἐκ
πολλῆς συνουσίας γιγνομένης περ τὸ πρᾶγμα αὐτὸ
κα το συζῇν ἐξαίφνης, οἷον ἀπὸ πυρὸς πηδήσαντος
ἐξαφθὲν φῶς, ἐν τῇ ψυχῇ γενόμενον αὐτὸ ἑαυτὸ δη
τρέφει. (Seventh Letter 341cd)
37
We believe that Plato primarily imagined this communion with the
subject as the kind of private dialectic modeled on athletic training
combination of two elements in space, or in terms of a temporal conjunction
of two material entities.
35
See Ferrari, Platone, Parmenide, 212, n. 45.
36
This model can be observed in Lysis, see H. Reid, “The Art of Teaching
Philosophy in Plato’s Lysis, Skepsis XVI i-ii (2005): 278-287.
37
Translation by Jonah Radding from H. Reid and M. Ralkowski, eds. Plato at
Syracuse: Essays on Plato in Western Greece with a New Translation of the Seventh
Letter by Jonah Radding (Parnassos Press, 2019). Even if Plato is not the author
of the letter, it is widely believed to express the philosopher’s views.
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Lidia Palumbo & Heather L. Reid
198
that is called gymnasia in the Parmenides. And we argue that the
dialogue itself is set up to engage readers in that gymnasia, in
particular to get them to think beyond materialism, here
represented by Parmenides. A full analysis of the philosophical
problems presented by the dialectic must be left for another time,
however.
Conclusion
It has been our purpose to show that Plato’s Parmenides can be
interpreted agonistically as a constructive contest between Eleatic
and Athenian philosophers. By setting the dialogue at the
Panathenaic Games and using athletic language to describe its
participants, Plato uses the athletic rivalry between Mainland and
Western Greeks to highlight a parallel philosophical rivalry. As a
former wrestler, Plato would envision this rivalry as constructive,
and imagine the dialectical method, here called gymnasia, as a kind
of philosophical training. It is a private, comprehensive, and
challenging preparation designed to reveal the weaknesses in
hypotheses, but also to develop the kind of “vision” described in
Republic V, which distinguishes the philosopher from the mere
spectator. This philosophical gymnasia resembles a round-robin
training exercise in which the reader is called to participate. In
Republic III, Socrates states that gymnastikē primarily benefits the
soul (psychē, 410c), while the Parmenides offers a philosophical
gymnasium in which all souls are invited to train.
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