After him, as Homer says, “I lifted up my eyes and saw” Hippias the Elean sitting in the opposite cloister on a chair of state, and around him were seated on benches Eryximachus, the son of Acumenus, and Phaedrus the Myrrhinusian, and Andron the son of Androtion, and there were strangers whom he had brought with him from his native city of Elis, and some others : they were putting to Hippias certain physical and astronomical questions, and he, ex cathedra, was determining their several questions to them, and discoursing of them.
Jowett: Protágoras 315b-315c: Hípias
- Jowett: Protágoras 314e-315b: Protágoras
- Jowett: Protágoras 315b-315c: Hípias
- Jowett: Protágoras 315c-316a: Pródicos
- Jowett: Protágoras 316a-317d: Profissão de fé de Protágoras
- Jowett: Protágoras 317d-334c: Sobre o que trata o ensinamento dado por Protágoras
- Jowett: Protágoras 319b-320c: Sócrates contesta que o que ensina Protágoras possa se ensinar
- Jowett: Protágoras 320c-322d: Protágoras responde a Sócrates por um mito
- Jowett: Protágoras 322d-324c: As lições do mito
- Jowett: Protágoras 324c-328d: Sobre a educação
- Jowett: Protágoras 328d-330b: Réplica de Sócrates: e a virtude?