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 330b-332a: Virtudes e sua semelhança
- Jowett: Protágoras 332a-333b: Noção de contrariedade.
- Jowett: Protágoras 333b-334c: Sabedoria e Justiça. Bom e Útil.
- Jowett: Protágoras 334c-335c: Sócrates ameaça terminar a conversa
- Jowett: Protágoras 335c-338b: Intervenções sucessivas
- Jowett: Protágoras 338b-342a: Sócrates assume o papel de respondedor
- Jowett: Protágoras 342a-347b: Comentário do poema de Simonide
- Jowett: Protágoras 342d-345d: Os Sete Sábios
- Jowett: Protágoras 345d-347b: Ninguém é mau voluntariamente
- Jowett: Protágoras 347b-360e: Segunda parte do diálogo