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Isocrates

436-338 BC

Text Courtesy of the Perseus Encyclopedia

Considered himself a philosopher, not an orator or rhetorician. Although he was a poor speaker himself, he began his career as a logographer, writing speeches for others. He ceased this practice in about 390 and turned to writing and teaching. In several long essays he set forth his political views, which favored accommodation with Philip and a panhellenic unity, and his theory of education based on a broad concept of rhetoric. His school attracted pupils from the entire Greek world and became the main rival of Plato's celebrated Academy. Although Plato is better known and more highly regarded today, Isocrates had a much greater influence than his rival during the Hellenistic and Roman periods and down into modern times, for until the eighteenth century education in most European schools was based on his principles.

Life and Works

Isocrates came from a wealthy Athenian family. His interest in philosophical issues led him to study with the sophists Prodicus and Gorgias, and also to associate with Socrates. In Plato's Phaedrus (Plat. Phaedrus 279a) Socrates prophecies (perhaps ironically) a bright future for him. During the Peloponnesian War his father lost most of his property, and so after the democracy was restored, Isocrates turned to logography from financial need. Six speeches for a variety of private cases survive from this period, and Isocrates probably wrote many more. Later he scorned the profession of logographer and sought to disavow this period of his past.

After a decade or so as a logographer, Isocrates abandoned that career and founded a school, first in Chios and then in Athens (in c. 388 BC), to train young men in the true practice of rhetoric. The earliest work proclaiming this new educational undertaking is probably the fragmentary Against the Sophists (c. 390), in which he attacks other teachers of rhetoric and seeks to distance himself from them on the grounds that they teach only rhetoric. His education, on the other hand, combines teaching of rhetoric with ethics and politics, thereby preparing his pupils more fully for their future lives. The school was very successful. Although only six students were enrolled at any one time, they included young men from some of the best known families all over the Greek world, and they were willing to pay a high fee for tuition. Among the students were political leaders, historians and other writers, foreign nobility, and orators, including Isaeus, Lycurgus and Hyperides. (Demosthenes, it is said, could not afford the tuition fee.)

The fame of Isocrates and of his school was spread especially by the publication of several long essays expounding his views on political, philosophical and educational issues. To mention just a few of these: Panegyricus (c. 380), which he spent about ten years composing, is Isocrates' earliest call for Hellenic unity under the spiritual and political leadership of Athens; in Areopagiticus and On the Peace (both c. 355 BC), he advocates a policy of peace abroad and political reform at home; and in Panathenaicus (339), completed as he lay ill and near death, and especially in his longest essay Antidosis (354), Isocrates sets forth his views on broad philosophical and educational issues, as well as on political matter, all within the context of defending himself and his career and attacking the views and practices of his opponents. In his ninety-eighth year (338) he starved himself to death.

Educational Philosophy

Isocrates considered himself a teacher of philosophia but his concept of "philosophy" differed considerably from Plato's and resembled rather what we call "practical" or "applied philosophy" (as when philosophy professors today teach courses in "business ethics" or "contemporary moral issues"- usually abortion and the like). Philosophy, for Isocrates, helped people understand political and ethical issues more clearly, while rhetoric helped them express their views clearly and persuasively to others. Isocrates was not interested in the abstract metaphysics and his moral views were less rigorously absolute than Plato's; moreover, a degree of relativism underlies his belief that rhetoric should concern itself with what is appropriate (prepon) and comes at the right time (kairos). But like Plato Isocrates attacks "sophists" (whom he sees as rivals) for having no moral values, and he affirms his own belief in rather traditional moral values, arguing that it is the job of rhetoric to express these. Novelty is important in the expression of one's views but not in the views themselves.

Style

Isocrates is also known for a characteristic style involving long complex periodic sentences full of balanced, often antithetical subordinate clauses, reinforced by Gorgianic types of assonance. The effect of individual sentences is striking, and their underlying structures can profitably be analyzed, and indeed have been analyzed by generations of students of Greek prose style. The effect of this style over dozens, and sometimes hundreds, of pages is considerably less pleasing. Unlike Demosthenes, he does not have the ability to mix different styles and he is thus best read in small doses.

Significance

As noted above, Isocrates' significance lies primarily in his influence on later generations, who for centuries were guided by his model of education grounded in rhetoric. Since this model has little influence today, Isocrates is little read, but for the historian of rhetoric or especially of education, he cannot be ignored.

 

 

Michael Gagarin

 


Research Links

Isocrates
... of rhetoric. Isocrates' Life. Isocrates led ... inflicted
starvation (Isocrates, 1993). Isocrates' Ideas. ...

The Internet Classics Archive | Works by Isocrates
... Works by Isocrates Aegineticus Translated by George Norlin From the Perseus Project
Read discussion: No comments Antidosis Translated by George Norlin From the ...

Ethics of Isocrates, Aristotle, and Diogenes by Sanderson ...
BECK index. Isocrates, Aristotle, and Diogenes. ... Hippocrates.
Mentioned ... Isocrates. Isocrates was ...

HomeSite of Miron Isocrates, Athens
AncientSites, AncientSites, AncientSites >Athens >Members >Miron Isocrates.
join, login, help. ... Miron Isocrates, Politician Athens, Message Board. ...

Electronic Antiquities Volume III, Number 6
... FEBRUARY 1997. Volume III, Number 6. University of Tasmania,
Australia THE IDENTITY OF GORGIAS IN ISOCRATES' HELEN. ...

The Ecole Glossary
... Isocrates. Isocrates (436-338 BCE) founded a school in Athens sometime around 393
BCE that differed greatly from the already established and respected Platonic ...

Isocrates Texts
an About site, ... Do you like our sites? Wish to share them with
others - and earn money? Become an Affiliate. Isocrates. ...

Isocrates
Isocrates. 10/17/00. Click here to start. Table of Contents. Isocrates. Isocrates.
Isocrates. Isocrates. Isocrates. Isocrates. Isocrates. Isocrates. Isocrates. ...

On the Origin of Citizenship in Education: Isocrates, Rhetoric ...
On the Origin of Citizenship in Education: Isocrates,
Rhetoric, and Kairos. Lance Massey. ...

Encyclopedia.com - Results for Isocrates
... Electric Library's Free Encyclopedia Isocrates 436-338 BC, Greek orator, pupil of
SOCRATES. A great teacher, he taught every young orator of his time. His most ...
Description: (Encyclopedia.com)

Isocrates
ISOCRATES (436 - 338 BC). He was slightly older than
Plato and lived and wrote in the ...

ISOCRATES. The Columbia Encyclopedia: Sixth Edition. 2000
Select Search, ... The Columbia Encyclopedia: Sixth Edition.
2000. Isocrates ( s k r ...

The San Antonio College LitWeb Isocrates Page
The Isocrates Page ( 436-338 BC ) Surviving Works George Norlin and La Rue Van
Hook have translated the surviving works in Isocrates, Volumes I-III. Harvard ...

ISOCRATES
Communication and Theatre Arts. At Cumberland College. Some Thoughts
on the Power of Communication. by Isocrates (436 - 338 BC). ...

JAC Online: 13.1
... JAC 13.1 (1993). Guest Editor: Thomas Kent Isocrates and the Epistemic Return:
Individual and Community in Classical and Modern Rhetoric. Frank D. Walters. ...

Mirhady and Too: Isocrates I
... Isocrates I. Translated by David C. Mirhady and Yun Lee Too. This is the fourth
volume in the Oratory of Classical Greece series. Planned for publication over ...

Isocrates - Britannica.com
ENCYCLOPÆDIA BRITANNICA. Isocrates b. 436 BC, Athens
d. 338, Athens. ancient Athenian orator ...

Isocrates
... Isocrates was born in 436 in the deme Erchia. . .
. . WORK IN PROGRESS - PLEASE BE PATIENT . . . ...

Rhetoric and Philosophy in Ancient Greeece - Bibliography
... 26, ll3- l33. 13. Isocrates and Fourth Century Rhetoric;
Isocrates' "Philosophia". Benoit, WL (l99l ...

Isocrates
Isocrates. Orationes. 1618. The rhetorician Isocrates
(436-388 BC) advocated an approach ...

Person of the Day: 2000-04-06
... Isocrates [iy-SO-kruh-teez]. Among the great orators, teachers, and philosophers
of Greece during the fourth century BC, Isocrates stood out as a primary figure ...

Isocrates
Isocrates Address to Philip (346 BCE) Excerpts from the Original Electronic
Text at the web site of the Perseus Project. ...

Untitled
ISOCRATES AND RHETORICAL EDUCATION IN GREECE. More
on Isocrates from Perseus Project. Born, 436 BC ...

Research Links

Virtualology is not affiliated with the authors of these links nor responsible for each Link's content.

Isocrates
... of rhetoric. Isocrates' Life. Isocrates led ... inflicted
starvation (Isocrates, 1993). Isocrates' Ideas. ...

The Internet Classics Archive | Works by Isocrates
... Works by Isocrates Aegineticus Translated by George Norlin From the Perseus Project
Read discussion: No comments Antidosis Translated by George Norlin From the ...

Encyclopedia.com - Results for Isocrates
... Electric Library's Free Encyclopedia Isocrates 436-338 BC, Greek orator, pupil of
SOCRATES. A great teacher, he taught every young orator of his time. His most ...

Ethics of Isocrates, Aristotle, and Diogenes by Sanderson ...
BECK index. Isocrates, Aristotle, and Diogenes. ... Hippocrates.

HomeSite of Miron Isocrates, Athens
AncientSites, AncientSites, AncientSites >Athens >Members >Miron Isocrates.
join, login, help. ... Miron Isocrates, Politician Athens, Message Board. ...

Isocrates - Britannica.com
ENCYCLOPÆDIA BRITANNICA. Isocrates b. 436 BC, Athens
d. 338, Athens. ancient Athenian orator ...

Isocrates
... Isocrates was born in 436 in the deme Erchia. . .
. . WORK IN PROGRESS - PLEASE BE PATIENT . . . ...

Isocrates
Isocrates. 10/17/00. Click here to start. Table of Contents. Isocrates. Isocrates.
Isocrates. Isocrates. Isocrates. Isocrates. Isocrates. Isocrates. Isocrates. ...

Isocrates
Isocrates (436-338 BCE). To Demonicus; To Nicocles;
Nicocles or the Cyprians; Panegyricus; ...

Isocrates Texts
an About site, ... Do you like our sites? Wish to share them with others - and earn
money? Become an Affiliate. Got a question? Ask an Expert. Isocrates. ...

The San Antonio College LitWeb Isocrates Page
The Isocrates Page ( 436-338 BC ) Surviving Works George Norlin and La Rue Van
Hook have translated the surviving works in Isocrates, Volumes I-III. Harvard ...

ISOCRATES. The Columbia Encyclopedia: Sixth Edition. 2000
Select Search, ... The Columbia Encyclopedia: Sixth Edition.

Isocrates
Isocrates Address to Philip (346 BCE) Excerpts from the Original Electronic
Text at the web site of the Perseus Project. ...

On the Origin of Citizenship in Education: Isocrates, Rhetoric ...
On the Origin of Citizenship in Education: Isocrates,
Rhetoric, and Kairos. Lance Massey. ...

ISOCRATES
Communication and Theatre Arts. At Cumberland College. Some Thoughts
on the Power of Communication. by Isocrates (436 - 338 BC). ...

Isocrates
Isocrates - Bibliography Benoit, W. "Isocrates and Aristotle
on Rhetoric", RSQ 20 (1990) 251-60. ...

Isocrates
... Isocrates. 436-338 BCE ... Among Isocrates's texts, the ones that would prove most interesting
for our study of the Phaedrus and its cultural contexts would be: ...

Exploring: ISOCRATES
CIOS home page. Concepts related to: ISOCRATES in the scholarly
literature. Click on a related ...

isocrates
Cultural Rhetorics Figures. Isocrates. [436--338 bc]. RHETORICAL
PERIOD: classical. IMPORTANCE TO THE HISTORY OF RHETORIC: ...

Isocrates
Isocrates. Orationes. 1618. The rhetorician Isocrates
(436-388 BC) advocated an approach ...

Isocrates
... Topic: Isocrates We think you'll really dig what you find! Just click on search
for information on: Isocrates Search the Net. LinkExchange Member.

Rhetoric in Western Thought Isocrates and Eloquent Rhetoric
Rhetoric in Western Thought Isocrates and Eloquent Rhetoric.
2/3/2000. Click here to start. ...

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