The Philosophy of Socrates History of Ancient and Medieval Philosophy ALAN D. CODE AND CALVIN G. NORMORE, SERIES EDITORS The Philosophy of Socrates, Thomas C. Brickhouse and Nicholas D. Smith FORTHCOMING Aristotle, Alan D, Code Maimonides and Medieval Jewish Philosophy, Daniel Frank Late Medieval Philosophy, Calvin G. Normore The Philosophy of Late Antiquity, John Bussanich Plato, Richard Kraut The Beginnings of Greek Philosophy, Allan ], Silverman and Mark Griffith THE PHILOSOPHY OF SOCRATES THOMAS C. BRICKHOUSE Lynchburg College NICHOLAS D. SMITH Lewis and Clark College —•" A Member of the Perseus Books Group History of Ancient and Medieval Philosophy All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, includ- ing photocopy/ recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permis- sion in writing from the publisher. Copyright © 2000 by Westview Press, A Member of the Perseus Books Group Published in 2000 in the United States of America by Westview Press, 5500 Central Avenue, Boulder, Colorado 80301-2877, and in the United Kingdom by Westview Press, 12 Hid's Copse Road, Cumnor Hill, Oxford OX2 9JJ Find us on the World Wide Web at www.wtjstviewpress.coni. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Brickhouse, Thomas G, 1947- The philosophy of Socrates/Thomas C. Brickhouse, Nicholas D- Smith. p. cm.—(History of ancient and medieval philosophy) Includes bibliographical references and indices. ISBN 0-8133-2084-4 (he.)—ISBN 0-8133-2085-2 (pbk.) I.Socrates. I. Smith, Nicholas D. II. Title. III. Series. B317.P68 1999 99-36572 183'.2—dc21 CIP The paper used in this publication meets the requirements of the American National Stan- dard for Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials Z39.48-1984. 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Contents Preface ix Introduction 1 1.1 Our Purpose, 1 1.2 Interpretive Principles, 3 1.3 Identifying and Solving Scholarly Problems, 6 1.4 Translations and Citations of Passages, 10 1 A Survey of Our Evidence 11 1.1 Ancient Evidence and the Socratic Problem, 11 1.2 Relatively Uncontroversial Issues and General Background, 16 1.3 Socrates' Trial, 27 1.4 Assessment of the Principal Sources, 33 Notes, 49 Suggested Readings, 52 2 What Socrates Does, And How He Does It 53 2.1 Socrates as a Teacher, 53 2.2 Socratic Doctrines and Positive Teachings, 72 2.3 Self-Knowledge and Psychological Constructivism, 89 Notes, 96 Suggested Readings, 97 3 Socrates on Knowledge and Ignorance 99 3.1 Knowing and Not Knowing, 99 3.2 The Priority of Definitional Knowledge, 113 Notes, 120" Suggested Readings, 120 v vi Contents 4 Socratic Values 123 4.1 What Is Valuable? 123 4.2 Socratic Conceptions of Happiness, 129 4.3 Is Virtue Really a Component of Happiness? 141 4.4 Does Socrates Think that Virtue Is Necessary for Happiness? 147 4.5 Goodness and Virtue, 149 4.6 A Preliminary Assessment of the Plausibility of Socrates' View, 153 Notes, 153 Suggested Readings, 154 5 Socrates on Wisdom and Motivation 157 5.1 The Socratic Paradoxes, 157 5.2 The Unity of the Virtues, 158 5.3 Socrates' Denial of Akrasia, 173 Notes, 182 Suggested Readings, 182 6 Socrates' Politics and Political Philosophy 185 6.1 Historical and Textual Problems, 185 6.2 Socrates and Political Activity, 186 6.3 Socrates' Political Affiliation? 189 6.4 Socrates on Obedience to Law, 200 6.5 Socrates on Just Punishment, 216 Notes, 226 Suggested Readings, 228 7 Socrates and Religion 231 7.1 Survey of the Problems Assessing Socrates' Religion, 231 7.2 Was Socrates Guilty? 234 7.3 Socrates' "Mission," 241 7.4 Socrates' Daimonion, 244 7.5 Socrates on Death and the Afterlife, 252 Notes, 261 Suggested Readings, 264 Contents vii Glossary 267 References 271 Names Index 277 Subject Index 280 Index of Greek Terms 287 Index of Passages 288 This page intentionally left blank Preface Just as he was about to engage in the most searching criticism of another scholar's views, the late Gregory Vlastos set the tone of his criticism with these words: "[O]nly those who are strangers to the ethos of scholarly controversy will see anything but high esteem in my critique" (Vlastos [1.991], 39 n.2). In this book—and indeed in all of our scholarly work—we share this "ethos of scholarly controversy" by engaging in disagreement, criticism, revision, further development, and sometimes the simple en- dorsement of our friends' and colleagues' views. Those who criticize our work show in their efforts the "high esteem" of treating our work as worthy of all the effort and thought it takes to consider and evaluate our arguments. In this book, our highest esteem for many of our colleagues should, therefore, be evident in each of our critical efforts. Less obvious, but equally important, is our awareness that it was almost always our own engagement with the views of others that made it even possible for us to have a view of our own to formulate. Most scholarly work is done in response to what other scholars say or write on a problem they have iden- tified—or have had identified for them, by yet other scholars. We read our colleagues' work, mull it over, worry about it, and finally something oc- curs to us as a better way of understanding a text or solving the problem— and then we write our own interpretation, which is then usually critiqued by others and eventually improved upon by those with still clearer ideas or more clever or compelling solutions. Scholars rarely find themselves giving "the final word" on a text or a problem,, and almost always, our colleagues will learn more from the process of exposing our errors than they will learn from accepting our interpretations. Accordingly, even though our "high esteem" for those from, whom, we have learned so much will be evident in every citation we make of others' works, we wish to begin by acknowledging even more directly the assis- tance and education we have derived from discussions, debates, and criti- cal exchanges with others who have taken the subject of Socrates as seri- ously as we have. The work of Gregory Vlastos has plainly kept us busy for many years now. The same can be said for all the time we have spent studying and discussing the arguments and interpretations of (in alpha- betical order) Hugh Benson, Daniel Devereux, Michael Ferejohn, Richard Kraut, Mark McPherran, Terence Penner, George Rudebusch, and Paul IX
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