Socratic method
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Socratic method, a form of logical argumentation originated by the ancient Greek philosopher Socrates (c. 470–399 bce). Although the term is now generally used as a name for any educational strategy that involves the cross-examination of students by their teacher, the method used by Socrates in the conversations re-created by his student Plato (428/427–348/347 bce) follows a more specific pattern: Socrates describes himself not as a teacher but as an ignorant inquirer, and the series of questions he asks are designed to show that the principal question he raises (for example, “What is piety?”) is one to which his interlocutor has no adequate answer. Typically, the interlocutor is led, by a series of supplementary questions, to see that he must withdraw the answer he at first gave to Socrates’ principal question, because that answer falls afoul of the other answers he has given. The method employed by Socrates, in other words, is a strategy for showing that the interlocutor’s several answers do not fit together as a group, thus revealing to the interlocutor his own poor grasp of the concepts under discussion.
In Plato’s Socratic dialogue Euthyphro, for example, the character after whom the dialogue is named, having been asked what piety is, replies that it is whatever is “dear to the gods.” Socrates continues to probe, and the ensuing give-and-take can be summarized as follows:
- Socrates: Are piety and impiety opposites?
- Euthyphro: Yes.
- Socrates: Are the gods in disagreement with each other about what is good, what is just, and so on?
- Euthyphro: Yes.
- Socrates: So the very same actions are loved by some gods and hated by others?
- Euthyphro: Yes.
- Socrates: So those same actions are both pious and impious?
- Euthyphro: Yes.
The interlocutor, having been refuted by means of premises he himself has agreed to, is free to propose a new answer to Socrates’ principal question, or another conversational partner, who has been listening to the preceding dialogue, is allowed to take his place. But although the new answers proposed to Socrates’ principal question avoid the errors revealed in the preceding cross-examination, fresh difficulties are uncovered, and, in the end, the “ignorance” of Socrates is revealed as a kind of wisdom, whereas the interlocutors are implicitly criticized for failing to realize their own ignorance.
It would be a mistake, however, to suppose that, because Socrates professes ignorance about certain questions, he suspends judgment about all matters whatsoever. On the contrary, he has some ethical convictions about which he is completely confident. As he tells his judges in his defense speech during his trial for impiety and corrupting the young (as rendered in Plato’s dialogue Apology): human wisdom begins with the recognition of one’s own ignorance; the unexamined life is not worth living; ethical virtue is the only thing that matters; and truly good human beings cannot be harmed (because no matter what misfortune they may suffer—including poverty, physical injury, and even death—their virtue will remain intact). But Socrates is painfully aware that his insights into these matters leave many of the most important ethical questions unanswered. It is left to his student Plato, using the Socratic method as a starting point and ranging over subjects that Socrates neglected, to offer positive answers to these questions.