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English
Etymology
Learned borrowing from Latin sophista, also sophistes, itself borrowed from Ancient Greek σοφιστής (sophistḗs, “pursuer of wisdom”), from σοφίζομαι (sophízomai, “to become wise”).
Pronunciation
Noun
sophist (plural sophists)
- One of a class of teachers of rhetoric, philosophy, and politics in ancient Greece.
- (figurative) A teacher who uses plausible but fallacious reasoning.
- (figurative, by extension) One who is captious, fallacious, or deceptive in argument.
- Synonym: logic chopper
1699, Richard Bentley, “The Preface”, in A Dissertation upon the Epistles of Phalaris. With an Answer to the Objections of the Honourable Charles Boyle, Esquire, London: J H for Henry Mortlock , and John Hartley , →OCLC, page iii:[T]hey have acted in this Calumny both the injuſtice of the Tyrant, and the forgery of the Sophiſt.
- (dated) Alternative form of sophister (“university student who has completed at least one year”)
Usage notes
- The meaning of "sophist" can vary depending on the time period to which one is referring. A sophist of the earliest period was a master in his art or craft who demonstrated (taught by example) his practical skill/learning in exchange for pay. Later sophists were providers of a well-rounded education intended to give pupils arete – "virtue, human excellence". By late antiquity, sophistḗs / sophistes tended to denote exclusively a skilled public speaker and/or teacher of rhetoric.[1][2]
Translations
ancient teacher of rhetoric, etc.
one who is captious, fallacious, or deceptive in argument
References