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Gorgias
[ gawr-jee-uhs ]
noun
- c483–c375 b.c., Greek philosopher.
Gorgias
/ ˈɡɔːdʒɪəs /
noun
- Gorgias?485 bc?380 bcMGreekPHILOSOPHY: sophistPHILOSOPHY: rhetorician ?485–?380 bc , Greek sophist and rhetorician, subject of a dialogue by Plato
Example Sentences
Plato’s Gorgias is a critique of rhetoric and sophistic oratory, where he makes the point that not only is it not a proper form of art, but the use of rhetoric and oratory can often be harmful and malicious.
Gorgias Sanchez, a clarinetist in the Simón Bolívar Symphony Orchestra, was Izcaray’s roommate and close friend there in the mid-’90s.
The three-part film is an adaptation of Plato’s “Gorgias,” performed in a house by two women, two iconic actresses of the modern French cinema, Aurore Clément and Bernadette Lafont.
What Corax began, Gorgias took out into the world.
A native of Leontini, a Sicilian town just up the coast from Syracuse, Gorgias was born somewhere between 480 and 490 bc and lived to the ripe old age of 109.*
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