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Socrates on Self-Improvement

Socrates on Self-Improvement

Socrates on Self-Improvement

Knowledge, Virtue, and Happiness
Nicholas D. Smith, Lewis and Clark College, Portland
July 2021
Hardback
9781316515532
Hardback
Paperback

    What model of knowledge does Plato's Socrates use? In this book, Nicholas D. Smith argues that it is akin to knowledge of a craft which is acquired by degrees, rather than straightforward knowledge of facts. He contends that a failure to recognize and identify this model, and attempts to ground ethical success in contemporary accounts of propositional or informational knowledge, have led to distortions of Socrates' philosophical mission to improve himself and others in the domain of practical ethics. He shows that the model of craft-knowledge makes sense of a number of issues scholars have struggled to understand, and makes a case for attributing to Socrates a very sophisticated and plausible view of the improvability of the human condition.

    • Provides careful analyses of famous and controversial texts
    • Offers a new epistemological basis for Socratic ethical theory
    • Gives a cogent and unusual view of ethical life

    Product details

    July 2021
    Hardback
    9781316515532
    216 pages
    235 × 158 × 15 mm
    0.44kg
    Not yet published - available from February 2025

    Table of Contents

    • Preface
    • 1. Socrates as exemplar
    • 2. Socrates as apprentice at virtue
    • 3. Socratic motivational intellectualism
    • 4. Socratic ignorance
    • 5. Is virtue sufficient for happiness
    • 6. The necessity of virtue for happiness
    • Afterword. Review and assessment.
      Author
    • Nicholas D. Smith , Lewis and Clark College, Portland

      Nicholas D. Smith is James F. Miller Professor of Humanities and Professor of Philosophy at Lewis & Clark College. He has written and edited many books on ancient Greek philosophy and contemporary epistemology, including Plato's Socrates (with T.C. Brickhouse, 1994), Socratic Moral Psychology (with T. C. Brickhouse, Cambridge, 2010), and Summoning Knowledge in Plato's Republic (2019).