Socrates has inspired many people throughout the years, especially philosophers. He had a unique way of understanding and teaching morality. Most people would think that learning by example is easier than learning by definition, but everyone learns differently. Socrates learned by definition and not example. That is written about in Plato’s early dialogues. Plato was one of Socrates best students. He admired how Socrates questioned everything and how he was so intellectual about different subjects. Throughout the dialogues that he wrote Plato mentioned how Socrates had different methods of teaching. He preferred to have a discussion about the topic. That is the Socratic Method. He also used craft analogy. These methods were different from how anyone was thinking during that time period. Socrates had many different ways of teaching his students. Socrates’ methods proved to be quite affective and they are still being used today to teach and to learn.
One method that Socrates used often was the question and answer method. The method usually consisted of Socrates starting a conversation with someone and asking them questions so that Socrates can develop a better understanding of the subject. This is called the Socratic Method. Using this method does not guarantee an answer, but it does raise even more questions. When someone uses the Socratic Method they are using their critical thinking skills. It makes a person think and it gives them a different way of looking at the
Socrates was a Western Ancient Athenian Greek philosopher who lived from 469 BCE until his death in 399 BCE. He was a student to another philosopher, Sophists, Socrates was different from most Greek philosophers he wanted to get at the truth and find out how one can truly be ‘good’ and moral in life. “To Socrates the soul is identified with the mind; it is the seat of reason and capable of finding the ethical truths, which will restore meaning and value of life” (ADD IN-TEXT CITATION SEMINAR). We continue to use many of Socrates teachings today, such as, ‘The Socratic method’, which is known as asking a question and within these questions you lead it to the answer you wanted to hear, many uses this as a teaching technique and is shown to be highly effective. A great number of Athenians looked up to Socrates and considered him the wise man of Athens, he had many followers whom would ask questions and seek answers. As popularity and following of Socrates grew so did accusations. The charges laid on Socrates by the Athenians were unjust and therefore his death was highly wrong in the eyes of true democracy that Athens was apparently known for. In this paper, I will discuss how Socrates was wrongfully convicted for the corruption of the youth despite having many young followers, introducing new Gods while still being considered an Atheist, and the main reason he was seen as a threat to Athens was that he brought change to the city.
Being great at discussion does not facilitate an effective method to teaching. As a philosopher Socrates would have been an ineffective teacher. Socrates' teaching are mostly involves through him questioning an individual. In the Euthyphro Socrates wanted to teach about the general meaning of piety he started philosophizing in the hope of finding an answer which did not happened. For instance Socrates questions Euthyphro about “what kind of thing do you say that godliness and ungodliness are, both as regards murder and other things;" (5). This action illustrates that as a teacher Socrates would only instruct by asking students question. In "The Inferno" when Dante lost hope after seeing the three beast he cried "Have pity on me" and Virgil told him to "follow me and I will be your guide" (canto1.
Socrates was a great thinker and debater dedicated to truth. He spent his golden years walking the streets of Athens in pursuit of wisdom. Socrates lived the destiny that was revealed to him in the Oracle. He created and perfected his own cross-examination technique; we today know it as the Socratic Method. He was thorough and unrelenting. His subjects were often humiliated. Socrates would methodically disprove anyone he thought was wrong. In his eyes, most of the people he interviewed were blind. It did not matter if one was wealthy and influential or if they were young and impressionable. Socrates could question anyone and turn him or her inside out. Unfortunately, he did so without regard to the
Socrates put one’s quest for wisdom and the instruction of others above everything else in life. A simple man both in the way he talked and the wealth he owned, he believed that simplicity in whatever one did was the best way of acquiring knowledge and passing it unto others. He is famous for saying that “the unexplained life is not worth living.” He endeavored therefore to break down the arguments of those who talked with a flowery language and boasted of being experts in given subjects (Rhees 30). His aim was to show that the person making a claim on wisdom and knowledge was in fact a confused one whose clarity about a given subject was far from what they claimed. Socrates, in all his simplicity never advanced any theories of his own
The Socratic Method was used in ancient Greece by Socrates. His emphasis in building students to learn the process of finding the right path instead of eliciting a simple correct response created a revolution in purposeful learning. The Socratic Method works by continually asking question after question until proving an ultimate answer for
Socrates was a man that was on a mission is search of the truth about wisdom. As a philosopher he would never settle for one simple answer, he would take every angel of an argument therefore even a simple idea would be argued until his opponent would be frustrated enough to quit.
In 469 B.C. a man by the name of Socrates was born. Socrates was a very wise man that cared about doing the right thing. He believed that the best ways to develop ideas was in the give and take of conversation, and that the best way to educate people was to ask them a series of questions leading in a particular direction (now named “Socrates method). Socrates had been quick to identify the drawbacks of democracy, and he had also been the teacher of two men who in different ways harmed Athens: Alcibiades and Critias. Which made the parents of the children that Socrates had taught very upset and angry. Granting all this, it lead to the Trial of Socrates 399 B.C. During this trial Socrates expressed his view of death by using his question-and-answer method, for which he was famous for and what seemed to have gotten him in trouble. Socrates did not write so we have to depend on on what others wrote, and by doing that we now get to see the diverse ways people read and understand what was written about his speech. My chosen primary source, Socrates View on Death, is important, because it gives one view of Socrates speech while my outside source, Ancient Greece, gives a slightly more in depth view.
To add context to my response, I shall give a brief description of the Socratic method. According to the textbook, the Socratic method is “ a conversational method that proceeds by means of a series of questions and answers…” (Text). The goal of this method is to force the person being questioned to evaluate their originally inadequate responses and to work toward clearer answers brought on by thinking more deeply about what is being asked. This method allows a person to grow not by being given the answers, but by
The most famous gift of Socrates to Western civilization is that of the Socratic Method. Socrates believed in deductive reasoning, or the need to reason about specific facts from principles. The Socratic Method involves the student in the learning process through questioning, and even when the teacher wishes the student to arrive at a specific answer, it is the student who is encouraged to draw the conclusion. The teacher does not lecture or impose the lesson upon the student. "Socratic questioning is a systematic process for examining the ideas, questions, and answers that form the basis of human belief. It involves recognizing that all new understanding is linked to prior understanding, that thought itself is a continuous thread woven throughout lives rather than isolated sets of questions and answers" ("The Socratic Method," Learn NC, 2012). In one famous dialogue of Socrates called Meno, Socrates was able to teach an ignorant slave-boy basic principles of geometry, simply through questioning the boy and showing him how to arrive at a deductive conclusion.
Gorgias invites Socrate to the party of an unknown person’s house to show off his knowledge and sees how much Socrate knows as Gorgias brags about how rhetoric is something he have a good knowledge of. Socrate may be prepared to battle against the rhetoric and finds a way to defeat Gorgias in the competition. Socrates first arrives late the competition in front of the crowd of people in the party to show his opponent his disrespect. Socrate blames his friend Chaerephon of being late to the party because he didn’t want others to know that he is doing it purposely. Before Gorgias shows up Socrates has a conversation with Gorgias’ student Callicles. Callicles claims that Gorgias can answer any questions are being asked. As Socrate finds a way
As an Athenian philosopher, Socrates spent his life in constant pursuit of insight. He loved engaging in conversations that helped him derive philosophical views on a number of different issues. The birth of ideas through critical reasoning can be credited back to his method of teaching, which is now known as the Socratic Method. Although widely respected today, many of his teachings were found controversial in Athenian times. Socrates was placed on trial and put to death soon after because of the disapproval of his ideas.
Isn’t that the case, Meletos, both with horses and with all other animals?” (Plato, 512). In a nutshell, the Socratic Approach initiates with an allegory or question, expecting an answer which will lead Socrates to another question, and another, until finally any argument to the initial question is squashed and disproven,without finding an actual solution to the original question. This leaves listeners with an open ended question to find an answer for themselves based on personal knowledge and beliefs. “Socrates’ teaching method does not treat students as empty vessels to be filled with knowledge of facts, formulae and theorems. Rather, the teacher and students embark on a voyage of discovery. The teacher does not so much impart knowledge as elicit knowledge,” (Masud). Overall, his teaching method was a very introspective method that keeps great minds challenged to this day.
Most of the information that we learn about Socrates comes from the work and writings of one of his students, Plato. It has been alleged that the great Philosopher wrote nothing down for others to read, and as such, the knowledge and the teachings from Socrates that is relied upon to convey his philosophy and the epic story of his life comes not from himself, but his students who attempt to provide and accurate picture of the methods and philosophical beliefs held by their mentor and teacher.
The technique of simply asking questions rather than preaching answers was certainly a useful strategy for Socrates though because it was the reason for his death sentence, it clearly wasn't an accepted strategy. This quote proves the latter in that most people sharing answers whether in the marketplace or the temple, were not sentenced to death, but his techniques were brilliant and got a lot of attention but because of so much attention, people began to question Socrates and his true purpose. His questions exploded in Athens and caused much controversy and an outpour of opinions. The world could use this as a world of advice in most hot button issues, such as the Ferguson case, Baltimore riots, and gay rights. This quote
The problem with Socrates concerns the problem with the role of value and reason. Nietzsche believes that the bulk of philosophers claim that life is a corrupt grievance for mankind. Nietzsche reasoned that these life deniers were decadents of Hellenism, as a symptom of some underlying melancholy. For someone to paint life in such a negative light they must have suffered a great deal through the course of their own life. Furthermore, these no-sayers agreed in various physiological ways and thus adopted the same pessimistic attitudes towards life. Socrates was ugly, alike decadent criminals and by ways of these similarities was decadent as well. Nietzsche also claims ugliness as a physiological symptom of life in its decline supported by studies in phenology.