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Sisyphus (dialogue) : ウィキペディア英語版 | Sisyphus (dialogue)
The ''Sisyphus'' ((ギリシア語:Σίσυφος)) is purported to be one of the dialogues of Plato. The dialogue is extant and was included in the Stephanus edition published in Geneva in 1578. It is now generally acknowledged to be spurious. The work probably dates from the fourth century BCE, and the author was presumably a pupil of Plato.〔D.S. Hutchinson, introduction to "Sisyphus," in John M. Cooper and D. S. Hutchinson (eds.), ''Plato, Complete works'', Indianapolis: Hackett, 1997, pp. 1707-8.〕 ==Contents== It is a dialogue between Socrates and Sisyphus. Sisyphus believes that deliberation allows one to find the best course of action, but Socrates is puzzled by what deliberation is, and why it is supposed to be different from guesswork. By the end of the dialogue, it becomes clear that Sisyphus does not know what deliberation is.〔 The dialogue seems to engage with an idea of good deliberation (''euboulia'') for which Isocrates was a noted exponent.〔〔Carl Werner Müller, ''Die Kurzdialoge der Appendix Platonica'', Munich: Wilhelm Fink, 1975, pp. 79-82.〕 The author uses the term ''dialegesthai''〔Pseudo-Plato, ''Sisyphus'', 338d8, 390b6〕 in an un-Platonic fashion to refer, not to dialectic, but to what Plato considered eristic.〔Müller 1975, p. 104〕
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