The Apology of Socrates: A Response
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.11575/jet.v4i1.43540Abstract
Professor Perkinson's thesis - that by submitting to death Socrates demonstrates that a free and open society must have its critics - rests upon three closely related assumptions, one explicitly stated, another obvious throughout the paper, and a third implied although not stated. The first is that Socrates has no knowledge, at least of virtue or excellence. His only knowledge is a recognition of his and others' ignorance when it comes to matters of signal import in conducting one's life. The second assumption is that the Socratic method is simply a critical attitude toward men's opinions and nothing more. Since Socrates has no knowledge, his characteristic practice of questioning persons does not result in knowledge but in elenchus. Hence the method he uses is negative and critical, not positive in the sense of resulting in knowledge. The third assumption is that the Socrates of Plato's dialogues is easily distinguishable from Plato himself, and that the demarcation between them is defined precisely by the two earlier assumptions.
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