Euthydème
See also: Euthydème (homonymy)
Euthydème or Euthydemos or Euthydemus is the transcriptions of the same Greek name . There are two occurrences of this name in socratic work.
In book IV of the Memorable , Xénophon tells the passion of Critias for the Euthydemos young person and how Socrate criticized on this occasion publicly Critias to want, in its relation with Euthydème, to satisfy only its sexual appetites.
Critias, sophist of Athens and politician, were the chief of the " Thirty Tyrants " who after the Peloponnesian War briefly reigned on Athens (-404).
Another Euthydemos is a character in one of the dialogs of Plato. It is a treaty on the logical logic and errors (sophisms). The characters of Euthydemus and its brother are sophists questioned by Socrate for a confrontation between eristic the euthydemienne and the socratic elenchos (?).
According to Aristote, he would have been the creator of the eristic .
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