Abstract
Plato’s Apology opens with a distinction. By opposing his accusers’ deceitfulness
to his own blunt truthfulness, Socrates distinguishes a philosophical
manner of speech from its politico-forensic counterpart. This can be said to
culminate at 17d3, where Socrates claims to be a stranger (xenos) to the manner
of speech—the lexis (17d3)—of the court. He asks to be allowed to talk
with his own voice (phônh), in his own way (tropos, cf. 17d5–18a3) and without
making fine speeches (“kekalliepêmenous ge logous,” 17b9). In contrast
to the accusers’ claim that he is a clever or dangerous speaker (17b1: “deinou
ontos legein”) Socrates asks to be excused for talking at random (eikê,
17c2). But wouldn’t this be exactly what a clever speaker should say? The
question is as urgent as it is old. In recent research, there are two tendencies.
Either Socrates is taken to be just like the clever speakers whose strategies he
renounces or he is taken to be honest and truthful. In this paper, I shall call
the defenders of these two tendencies Liars and Fanatics, and argue that the
Apology’s treatment of the ideals of human discursivity shows that both, to a
certain extent, have it right.