Hellenistic Philosophy Introductory

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
Logic and Theory of Knowledge 115
omicron, upsilon, omega; and six mutes: beta, gamma, delta, kappa, pi,
tau. Utterance and speech differ in that utterance also includes echoes,
while only what is articulate [counts as] speech. And speech differs from
rational discourse in that rational discourse is always significant, and
speech [can] also [be] meaningless, like the 'word' blituri, while rational
discourse cannot be. There is a difference between saying and verbalizing.
For utterances are verbalized, while what is said are facts (which [is why
they] are also 'things said' [lekta]).
There are five parts of rational discourse, as Diogenes says in On
Utterance and also Chrysippus: name, noun, verb, conjunction, article.
And Anti pater also adds the participle in his On Speech and Things Which
are Said.


  1. According to Diogenes, a noun is a part of rational discourse which
    signifies a common quality, for example 'man', 'horse'; a name is a part
    of rational discourse which reveals an individual quality, for example
    'Diogenes', 'Socrates'; a verb as Diogenes says, is a part of rational
    discourse which signifies an incomposite predicate, or as others [say], it
    is an undeclined element of rational discourse which signifies something
    put together with [lit. of] some thing or things, for example 'write',
    'speak'; a conjunction is an undeclined part of rational discourse which
    joins together the parts of rational discourse; an article is a declined
    element of rational discourse which distinguishes the genders and num-
    bers of names, for example ho, he, to, hoi, hai, ta.^7

  2. There are five virtues of rational discourse: good Greek, clarity,
    brevity, propriety, elaboration. Good Greek, then, is diction which is in
    conformity not with any common usage but one sanctioned by the art
    [of grammar]; clarity is speech which presents what is thought in a
    recognizable fashion; brevity is speech which includes exactly what is
    necessary for the revelation of its object; propriety is speech which is
    appropriate to its object; elaboration is speech which has transcended
    ordinariness. Of the vices, barbarism is a [form of] speech which violates
    the normal usage of reputable Greeks; solecism is rational discourse which
    is put together incongruently.

  3. According to Posidonius in his Introduction to Speech, a poem is
    metrical speech, or rhythmical speech together with elaboration which
    escapes being prosaic. The rhythmical is:^8


Greatest Earth and Zeus' sky.


  1. The six nominative forms of the Greek article 'the', given in singular and plural numbers
    and masculine, feminine and neuter genders.

  2. The metre of the Greek (fr. 839 ofEuripides inNauck) cannot be reproduced in translation.

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