In this section, Socrates begins to refute Callicles’s claim (pp. 68-70) that study of philosophy makes a person unfit for public life by preoccupying him/her with trivial issues and not allowing the development of necessary skills like public speaking, or the necessary knowledge of law, custom, and public life. Socrates counters that the orator panders to the audience in order to prove whatever point s/he happens to support at the time. The philosopher, on the other hand, pursues truth and the good in public life. Socrates thus distinguishes between two types of oratory: “pandering and shameful mass oratory” and “that which aims at making the souls of the citizens as good as possible” (p. 98). Socrates’s good orator turns out to be an expert able to guide others’ souls toward the good through regulations and laws (p. 100).
Let’s accept Socrates’s distinction for a moment. What public figures today would fit the category of the bad orator, the panderer, and which ones would fit the category of the good orator, the philosopher-expert? Why?
Based on the definition of a fine political orator, I think Barack Obama participates in pandering oratory. Barack Obama's speech at the 2004 Democratic National Convention was by far filled with several of the components that Socrates suggests are in line with beneficial oratory. On pg. 98, Socrates suggests qualities such as someone who has an "eye to what is best," with an "aim for their speeches to improve their fellow citizens" and "always striving to say what is best." During a time of rumor slinging and cheaply coined elementary name calling such as "flip-flopping," it was refreshing to see someone rise to the occasion of addressing the wounds of polarization and critical political, philosophical and other drawn-out divisions among our nation at a time when we have enough people fighting us externally on top of the wars internally.