Page 1 The Euthyphro By Plato   Page 3  

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acknowledges himself that his explanations seem to walk away or go round in
a circle, like the moving figures of Daedalus, the ancestor of Socrates,
who has communicated his art to his descendants.

Socrates, who is desirous of stimulating the indolent intelligence of
Euthyphro, raises the question in another manner:  'Is all the pious just?' 
'Yes.'  'Is all the just pious?'  'No.'  'Then what part of justice is
piety?'  Euthyphro replies that piety is that part of justice which
'attends' to the gods, as there is another part of justice which 'attends'
to men.  But what is the meaning of 'attending' to the gods?  The word
'attending,' when applied to dogs, horses, and men, implies that in some
way they are made better.  But how do pious or holy acts make the gods any
better?  Euthyphro explains that he means by pious acts, acts of service or
ministration.  Yes; but the ministrations of the husbandman, the physician,
and the builder have an end.  To what end do we serve the gods, and what do
we help them to accomplish?  Euthyphro replies, that all these difficult
questions cannot be resolved in a short time; and he would rather say
simply that piety is knowing how to please the gods in word and deed, by
prayers and sacrifices.  In other words, says Socrates, piety is 'a science
of asking and giving'--asking what we want and giving what they want; in
short, a mode of doing business between gods and men.  But although they
are the givers of all good, how can we give them any good in return?  'Nay,
but we give them honour.'  Then we give them not what is beneficial, but
what is pleasing or dear to them; and this is the point which has been
already disproved.

Socrates, although weary of the subterfuges and evasions of Euthyphro,
remains unshaken in his conviction that he must know the nature of piety,
or he would never have prosecuted his old father.  He is still hoping that
he will condescend to instruct him.  But Euthyphro is in a hurry and cannot
stay.  And Socrates' last hope of knowing the nature of piety before he is
prosecuted for impiety has disappeared.  As in the Euthydemus the irony is
carried on to the end.

The Euthyphro is manifestly designed to contrast the real nature of piety
and impiety with the popular conceptions of them.  But when the popular
conceptions of them have been overthrown, Socrates does not offer any
definition of his own:  as in the Laches and Lysis, he prepares the way for
an answer to the question which he has raised; but true to his own
character, refuses to answer himself.

Euthyphro is a religionist, and is elsewhere spoken of, if he be the same
person, as the author of a philosophy of names, by whose 'prancing steeds'
Socrates in the Cratylus is carried away.  He has the conceit and self-
confidence of a Sophist; no doubt that he is right in prosecuting his
father has ever entered into his mind.  Like a Sophist too, he is incapable
either of framing a general definition or of following the course of an
argument.  His wrong-headedness, one-sidedness, narrowness, positiveness,
are characteristic of his priestly office.  His failure to apprehend an
argument may be compared to a similar defect which is observable in the
rhapsode Ion.  But he is not a bad man, and he is friendly to Socrates,
whose familiar sign he recognizes with interest.  Though unable to follow
him he is very willing to be led by him, and eagerly catches at any
suggestion which saves him from the trouble of thinking.  Moreover he is
the enemy of Meletus, who, as he says, is availing himself of the popular
dislike to innovations in religion in order to injure Socrates; at the same
time he is amusingly confident that he has weapons in his own armoury which
would be more than a match for him.  He is quite sincere in his prosecution
of his father, who has accidentally been guilty of homicide, and is not
wholly free from blame.  To purge away the crime appears to him in the
light of a duty, whoever may be the criminal.

Thus begins the contrast between the religion of the letter, or of the
narrow and unenlightened conscience, and the higher notion of religion
which Socrates vainly endeavours to elicit from him.  'Piety is doing as I
do' is the idea of religion which first occurs to him, and to many others
who do not say what they think with equal frankness.  For men are not
easily persuaded that any other religion is better than their own; or that
other nations, e.g. the Greeks in the time of Socrates, were equally
serious in their religious beliefs and difficulties.  The chief difference
between us and them is, that they were slowly learning what we are in
process of forgetting.  Greek mythology hardly admitted of the distinction
between accidental homicide and murder:  that the pollution of blood was
the same in both cases is also the feeling of the Athenian diviner.  He had
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