While focusing on the first sections of Gorgias, Gorgias himself tells Socrates that rhetoric relates “to the greatest…and the best of human things,” however, Socrates does not seem to believe Gorgias. While their conversation continues, a prominent definition is created for rhetoric: the mechanism of persuasion. Therefore, persuasion is the chief end of rhetoric.
While focusing on the first sections of Gorgias, Gorgias himself tells Socrates that rhetoric relates “to the greatest…and the best of human things,” however, Socrates does not seem to believe Gorgias. While their conversation continues, a prominent definition is created for rhetoric: the mechanism of persuasion. Therefore, persuasion is the chief end of rhetoric.