- Peritrope
The Peritrope is
Socrates ' argument againstProtagoras ' view of relativetruth , as presented inPlato 's book known as "Theatetus " (169–171e). The name comes from the ancient Greek for "turning around".Sextus Empiricus is attributed with coining theappellation in a commentary on the passage. The name has been in continuous use ever since, as Socrates' argument provides the foundation for classicalpropositional logic and hence much of traditional western philosophy (oranalytic philosophy ). Well-known attestations of "Peritrope" includeAvicenna andThomas Aquinas , and in modern timesMyles Burnyeat and many others. The word is occasionally used to describe argument forms similar in nature to that of Socrates' overturning of Protagoras.For many centuries the Peritrope was used primarily as a tool for refuting
skepticism . Skepticism proposes that "There is no truth", which can be challenged by responding with the Peritrope — the rhetorical question, "Well, then, isn't "that" true?" Skepticism and similar views are considered to be "self-refuting." In other words, a philosopher has retained what he has disavowed in and by the disavowal itself. In general, versions of the Peritrope can be used to challenge many kinds of assertion that universality is impossibile.In "What Plato Said", Paul Shorey notes: "The first argument advanced by Socrates is the so-called "peritrope", to use the later technical term, that the opinion of Protagoras destroys itself, for, if truth is what each man troweth, and the majority of mankind in fact repudiates Protagoras' definition of truth, it is on Protagoras' own pragmatic showing more often false than true".
ee also
Self-refuting idea External links
*Myles Fredric Burnyeat, [http://www.jstor.org/pss/2183729 'Protagoras and Self-Refutation in Plato's Theaetetus',] "The Philosophical Review", 85 (1976): 172-195.
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