Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Gorgias

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Region
  
Western philosophy

Schools of thought
  
Sophism

Died
  
Larissa, Greece

Name
  
Gorgias Gorgias

Role
  
Philosopher

Notable ideas
  
Paradoxologia


Gorgias Gorgias Biography Philosophy and Facts

Born
  
485 BC
Leontini

Areas of interest
  
Ontology, Rhetoric, Moral relativism, Epistemology

Influenced
  
Influenced by
  
Empedocles, Parmenides, Zeno of Elea

Similar People
  
Protagoras, Prodicus, Hippias, Callicles, Socrates

Plato's Gorgias Part 1


Gorgias (; Greek: Γοργίας [ɡorɡíaːs]; c. 485 – c. 380 BC) was a Greek sophist, Siceliote, pre-Socratic philosopher and rhetorician who was a native of Leontini in Sicily. Along with Protagoras, he forms the first generation of Sophists. Several doxographers report that he was a pupil of Empedocles, although he would only have been a few years younger. "Like other Sophists he was an itinerant, practicing in various cities and giving public exhibitions of his skill at the great pan-Hellenic centers of Olympia and Delphi, and charged fees for his instruction and performances. A special feature of his displays was to invite miscellaneous questions from the audience and give impromptu replies." He has been called "Gorgias the Nihilist" although the degree to which this epithet adequately describes his philosophy is controversial.

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His chief claim to recognition is that he transplanted rhetoric from his native Sicily to Attica, and contributed to the diffusion of the Attic dialect as the language of literary prose.