The Sophist of Plato: A Translation and Commentary

Author: 

Dixsaut, Monique

Credentials: 

Monique Dixsaut is Professor Emerita at the University of Paris I.
Translator: Kenneth Quandt holds a Ph.D. in Classics from the University of California, Berkeley

The Greek notion of the “sophist” might seem antiquated or meaningless, until we look at the world we are living in: a world of images, counterfeits, and false appearances, starting even with our own, a world where money has become the criterion for all other values and deceptive advertisement the pinnacle of commercial astuteness, where expressing opinions has become tantamount to liberty, where all dialogue becomes debate, while debate is reduced to a mere spectator sport. Living in such a world is leading us to mistrust language and to deny its potential for truth. Plato’s Sophist is nothing less than an attempt to save language and its truth, by anchoring it in being. This recent translation and commentary by Monique Dixsaut of the Sorbonne, newly translated from the French by Kenneth Quandt, aims to show how Plato’s bold project makes his Sophist the most radical and most exciting of all the dialogues, and how it remains relevant today.

Market: 
Philosophy, Literature, Philosophy, Classics, Plato, Greek Philosophy, Practical Philosophy, World Literature, Idealism, Education, European Studies, Greece, Ancient History, Ancient Greece
Release Date: 
August 20, 2025
ISBN: 
9781680533682 hardcover
Price: 
$65
Trim Size: 
6x9
Pages: 
225
Illustrations: 
None
Publisher: 

ACADEMICA PRESS
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