Socrates Part Two— The Socratic Method — How to Win a Soul, Not an Argument.
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Socrates Part Two— The Socratic Method — How to Win a Soul, Not an Argument.
Welcome to our second step in our four-part journey through the life and legacy of Socrates.
Last time, we met the man himself: the barefoot stonemason who wandered Athens like a holy irritant, waking people up from their moral sleep. We heard about his courage in battle, the simplicity of his life, his strange inner voice, and his relentless devotion to understanding the soul.
But today, we turn to the thing that made Socrates truly unforgettable. — His method.
Because Socrates didn’t teach the way anyone expected. He didn’t write books, he didn’t give lectures and he didn’t stand on a platform and deliver speeches. He didn’t even claim to have answers. Instead, he asked questions. And those questions had a way of slipping under any layer of pride, exposing contradictions, revealing hidden assumptions, and gently dismantling the illusions some people lived by.
His method was not about cleverness; it was about clarity. And that is why the Sophists feared him, but it is also why the young adored him, and it is why the powerful would eventually condemn him.
In this episode, we explore the heart of that method, the art of questioning that changed Western thought forever.
We’ll look at:
- The Elenchus, the name for Socrates’ gentle but relentless cross‑examination.
- Socratic irony, his habit of pretending ignorance to reveal ignorance.
- His midwife metaphor, where he says he tries to help other people “give birth” to ideas
Socrates believed that the examined life is the only life worth living. He believed that the soul is shaped through honest questioning. He believed that exposing ignorance is an act of love. He believed that wisdom begins with humility.
So today, we step into the marketplace of Athens, where Socrates stands barefoot, smiling gently, ready to ask the kind of questions that make even the most confident citizen suddenly unsure of his own shoe size.
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