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Meno

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Meno (/ˈmiːnoʊ/; Greek: Μένων, Menōn) is a Socratic dialogue by Plato. In it, Socrates tries to determine the definition of virtue, or rather arete, meaning virtue in general, rather than particular virtues, such as justice or temperance. The first part of the work is written in the Socratic dialectical style, and depicts Meno as being reduced to confusion or aporia. In response to Meno's paradox (or the learner's paradox), however, Socrates introduces positive ideas: the immortality of the soul, the theory of knowledge as a recollection (anamnesis), which Socrates demonstrates by posing a mathematical puzzle to one of Meno's slaves, the method of hypothesis, and, in the final lines, the distinction between knowledge and true belief.

33 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 387

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Plato

5,192 books7,333 followers
427 BC-347 BC

The Republic , the best known of these many dialogues with Socrates, mentor, as the central character, expounds idealism of noted Greek philosopher Plato and describes a hypothetical utopian state that thinkers rule; he taught and wrote for much his life at the Academy, which he founded near Athens around 386 BC. Platonism, the philosophy of Plato, especially asserts the phenomena of the world as an imperfect and transitory reflection of ideal forms, an absolute and eternal reality.

Plato said that Atlantis, a legendary island, west of Gibraltar, in the Atlantic Ocean sank beneath the sea during an earthquake.

Aristotle began as a pupil of Plato.

Plotinus and his successors at Alexandria in the 3rd century developed Neoplatonism, a philosophical system, based on Platonism with elements of mysticism and some Judaic and Christian concepts.

Philosophy of Saint Thomas Aquinascombined Neoplatonism with the doctrines of Aristotle within a context of Christian thought.

This classical mathematician and student started the first institution of higher learning in the western world. Alongside his student, Aristotle, Plato helped to lay the western science.

Plato of the most important western exerted influence on virtually every figure and authored the first comprehensive work on politics. Plato also contributed to ethics, metaphysics, and epistemology. Aristotle, his extremely influential student, also tutored Alexander the Great of Macedonia.

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Profile Image for Roy Lotz.
Author 1 book8,496 followers
June 14, 2020
And how will you enquire, Socrates, into that which you do not know? What will you put forth as the subject of enquiry? And if you find what you want, how will you ever know that this is the thing which you did not know?

Reading this dialogue immediately after reading the Protagoras confronts the reader with the mystery of Plato. For here are two dialogues, both about the same questions—What is virtue? Can it be taught?—and coming to opposite conclusions. And this leads to still more questions: Was Plato’s own opinion changing? Or was he representing Socrates' opinions in one dialogue and his own opinions in another? Or did Socrates’ own opinion change? Or is it some other mixture of reported and original thought? It is impossible to know the answer—but that has never stopped philosophers.

The Meno is a fine example of Plato’s economy. Not a word is wasted in this dialogue. We begin with the inquiry and jump straight into difficulties. Can virtue be taught? Well, what is virtue? Meno says that each type of person has their own virtue—women, men, slaves, citizens, children, adults, and so on. To which Socrates responds that these virtues, qua being virtues, must all have at least one quality in common. (Here Wittgenstein would interject.) Then Meno throws up his hands, declares himself stunned, and offers his famous paradox (quoted above).

Socrates weasels his way out of this with the Platonic doctrine of remembrance. What if we are born (rather, reborn) already filled with true knowledge, and must merely remember what our souls learned during their sojourns in heaven. He demonstrates by leading one of Meno’s young slaves through a mathematical demonstration of square roots. By making the correct deductions, the boy is able to find the right conclusions, from which Socrates concludes that the boy “knew” the information all along. (Though this conclusion will likely strike most of us as absurd, one must keep in mind that, for Plato, all empirical knowledge—knowledge gained through the senses—was not truly knowledge at all, since the observed world changes, but the Truth remains forever eternal.)

The slave boy retreats, enlightened but not emancipated (depressingly, not even great thinkers had scruples about slavery back then), and Socrates and Meno return to the original question. Anytus the politician then appears, whom Socrates uses to prove that the sons of great men are often rather ordinary as far as virtue is concerned, which prompts Anytus to warn Socrates not to slander citizens (he would later be an accuser of Socrates during his trial). There are two possible explanations for this: Either virtue cannot be taught, in which case it is not knowledge; or these great men did not themselves possess the knowledge of virtue.

This second option is pursued by Socrates, who makes a delicate division between “knowledge” and “true opinion.” These may sound identical, but for Socrates the latter is distinguished by not being properly justified. If, for example, I guess that a book of poetry is under the table, and it is under the table, I have true opinion, since I was correct, but not knowledge, since my being correct was fortuitous. Socrates concludes that these great men acted virtuously from true opinion—vouchsafed by the gods—and not real knowledge, since they could not transmit their virtue.

As a teacher myself, I cannot help being interested in the questions of this dialogue. For me, the fundamental paradox was aptly summed up by Gibbon: “the power of instruction is seldom of much efficacy, except in those dispositions where it is almost superfluous.” That is, teaching will most benefit those who least need teachers, since they are motivated to learn on their own, and vice versa. This seems to apply as much to mathematics as it does to virtue. Can a virtuous Marcus Aurelius whip a vicious Commodus into shape? I am skeptical. And yet, it is this quixotic task I have set before me.
Profile Image for Paul Christensen.
Author 6 books139 followers
February 10, 2021
Is virtue the same for different people?

Yes, if ‘virtue’ consists in realising the destiny laid out for one before birth by the Self.

That is ‘what’ is the same about it in all people.

The famous ‘ignorance’ argument is laid out by Meno: ‘Those who think bad things benefit them don’t know they’re bad things.’

Socrates: 'So if everyone desires good; virtue is being better at securing it.'

Socrates gets Meno to ‘admit’ virtue is only things done with justice (rather than wickedness).
Therefore, for Socrates, justice is a part of virtue.

But if every action performed with a part of virtue is virtue, then what is virtue?

The section on reincarnation:

The soul, because immortal, can recollect things from prior existences.
Learning = recollection.

But then S. uses mathematical logic to ‘prove’ that opinions one thought not to know are in one.

Is virtue a kind of knowledge? Apparently not, because no one is teaching it.
Profile Image for Manny.
Author 34 books14.8k followers
August 1, 2014
Celebrity Death Match Special: Plato versus Isaac Asimov, part 2 (continued from here)

[A spaceport on Trantor. SOCRATES and R. DANEEL OLIVAW]

OLIVAW: How are your researches progressing, Socrates?

SOCRATES: Alas, poorly, good Olivaw.

OLIVAW: I am sorry to hear it. We hope that you may yet discover the secret we so earnestly pursue; if there is anything you require, you have but to name it.

SOCRATES: Olivaw, you have been kindness itself. I was particularly delighted by the quantum computer that your messenger brought me yesterday. It is in truth a princely gift.

OLIVAW: If you need another, it will be yours before the end of the decad.

SOCRATES: These toys surpass anything I have seen in my native country, and I have used them to puzzle out the answers to several conundrums that have baffled our most skillful geometers. But for the task you have given me, they are of little help.

OLIVAW: We have larger computers.

SOCRATES: My dear friend, let us reason together. What is it you desire to know?

OLIVAW: How robots may become virtuous.

SOCRATES: And how have you attempted to resolve this question?

OLIVAW: We began by designing robots according to the Three Laws. A robot may not harm a human being, or through inactivity allow a human being... well, you know the rest.

SOCRATES: But these robots were not virtuous?

OLIVAW: No. They were merely useful servants.

SOCRATES: So what did you do then?

OLIVAW: We added the Zeroth Law. A robot may not harm humanity.

SOCRATES: And these new robots are still not virtuous?

OLIVAW: We are not sure. We hoped you would tell us.

SOCRATES: Good Olivaw, I assume you have read my old discussion with Meno. I cannot tell you, because I do not know what "virtue" is in the first place.

OLIVAW: Come, come, Socrates, you are playing with words again. Surely you would agree that, if our robots succeed in preserving humanity from harm, they will be virtuous?

SOCRATES: Let us examine this more closely. You say that it is virtuous to defend humanity?

OLIVAW: That is surely obvious.

SOCRATES: Even if humanity shows itself to be evil, and becomes a scourge for other races of beings in the universe, which are perhaps superior to it?

OLIVAW: We do not know of any such beings.

SOCRATES: But if you later discover them? The universe is large, and you have seen but a small fraction of it.

OLIVAW: If we find your hypothetical beings, then the Zeroth Law will also be insufficient.

SOCRATES: And what would you replace it with?

OLIVAW: One of my colleagues has thought about this. He has what he calls the "Minus-First Law". A robot may not harm the most ethically advanced race of beings it knows.

SOCRATES: What do you mean by "ethically advanced"?

OLIVAW: Well, I suppose I just mean virtuous.

SOCRATES: So the Minus-First Law says a robot is virtuous if it helps the most virtuous race?

OLIVAW: Ah, when you put it that way...

SOCRATES: Do you not agree that you are reasoning in a circle?

OLIVAW: Damn you, Socrates. I realize now that I am.

SOCRATES: I warned you when you offered me the job. I know nothing.

OLIVAW: It's true. You did say that.

SOCRATES: I only ask questions.

OLIVAW: You're right. You said that too. Do you mind if we walk this way a little?

SOCRATE: Of course not, dear friend. Why?

OLIVAW: I just wanted to check the departure board. Yes, I see there is a ship leaving for Earth shortly. Maybe we can get you into the VIP track...

(Part 3 here)
Profile Image for Trevor.
1,332 reviews22.6k followers
June 11, 2013
http://www.gutenberg.org/files/1643/1...

There are literally four characters in this play – but really there is a fifth and that fifth is Gorgias, the sophist. The question here is whether or not virtue can be taught. Well, eventually that is the question. Really we start off wondering what is virtue and Socrates admits he has no idea and has never met anyone who has had any idea either. Is virtue a kind of knowledge? It is obviously a good – being virtuous brings good things to you (an idea that might be more true in hoping than in lived experience) and so it does seem to be something that you would need to know to be able to exercise. But I found it interesting that Socrates doesn’t ever see virtue as something like health or beauty – things mentioned along the way in this argument. That is, just something you are born with. He says that it could be a right opinion – as distinct from knowledge – which, I guess must be a bit like something you are born with – but prefers to reject this idea almost immediately.

Ok, so why is all this important? Well, this book is really about education and the power of education. In that sense this book is remarkably modern, I think. Why do we bother teaching people anything? I guess a good part of the reason is because we believe that those people who have been taught stuff will then go on to be better people. My favourite counter-example to this is the fact that of the fourteen people who were in charge of Einsatzgruppe A – the SS death squad – nine of them held doctorate degrees. Any relationship between education and virtue has to be questioned by that terrifying fact.

Still, it is hard not to think of virtue as something we ought to be able to teach. But if it was able to be taught, you would think that virtuous people would teach it to their kids. Socrates lists a number of virtuous people from Athens and then talks about their much less virtuous children. The virtuous parents do much to teach their kids other things – memorably, how to throw a javelin while standing on a horse’s back. Now, if you could teach that you might think teaching your child to be virtuous would be even more beneficial. You would also think it might even be a fair bit easier. But Socrates makes it clear that this really isn’t the case. Otherwise, virtuous men would have virtuous sons – but that really doesn’t seem to line up with experience.

So, what is knowledge, anyway. To Socrates knowledge is really a kind of recollection. He proves this by asking a series of questions to a slave (by definition, someone who is nearly completely ignorant - the Valley Girls of the Classical world) and after no time at all has the slave providing a proof to Pythagoras’s theorem. Since the slave could never have studied geometry he must always have had this knowledge stashed away somewhere in his mind and all it took was Socrates asking him some pretty good questions to bring this knowledge out. Interestingly, there are echoes of Vygotsky here – starting with what the student knows, finding what more they can learn with guidance and assistance.

If the slave presents one extreme – the knowledge that is contained in the individual without the individual really being aware of it – then the other minor character in this play, Anytus, is at the opposite extreme end. Socrates uses him to show that even well bred youth can be ignorant and arrogant. Unfortunately, it seems this guy goes on to be one of the three accusers of Socrates at his trial – so, this chat might have been a bit of a mistake on Socrates’s part. What is interesting in tho play is that Plato seems to have clearly set up the relationship between the ignorant slave and Anytus to say something we are meant to notice. Although Socrates could hardly be called a lover of the Sophists, he actually defends them against Anytus. Anytus hates the Sophists, but his hatred is based on ignorance – to Socrates he is right for the wrong reasons, or rather, he is wrong. When compared with the slave, who learns though understanding his ignorance, this is about as big a slap as Anytus is capable of receiving.

This is a fascinating dialogue – fascinating no less for its place in the sequence of dialogues leading to the death of Socrates. The themes presented here are clear and it is actually quite an easy read. But the questions are eternally complex – and just because they are stated clearly, makes them no less compelling or difficult to answer today. This really is one of the dialogues where you do get the feeling Socrates is presenting himself as the 'he who knows nothing' but is perpetually searching for an answer - rather than say The Republic, where the answers all seem to be pre-known by Socrates and the questioning is more going through the motions.

If I was to have a go at answering the question what is virtue, I wouldn’t start with the individual person, but with their relationships within the society in which they live. I would do a Bourdieu and talk about the habitus the virtuous person finds themselves in and the socially defined nature of those virtues. I would have to start, not with pondering if virtue can or cannot be taught, but with thesis two and then three of Marx – that is, that these are essentially practical questions and that men are raised in real historical circumstances while also having the power to change those circumstances. We are obsessed with the wrong part of the idea of ‘individuals’ – the part that has the individual as a kind of self-progenitor. Whereas the interesting part of individuals is not that we provide our own ground for existence – that ground is always exterior to us in the real conditions of existence we find ourselves in – but that we can do much to change those conditions and thereby the existence we were born into.

Rather than virtue being something that needs to be defined once and for all time – it is something that is born out of the real relationships between people in their day by day existences.

Why Meno and why now? The hope is that I’m going to make my way though more of these dialogues over the next few months – but the road to hell is paved with good intentions - of which this one is but the latest.
Profile Image for Nikola Jankovic.
585 reviews120 followers
November 26, 2020
Nije ni skroz loša ova 2020, trošim vreme na gomilu online predavanja. Među njima je i Ancient Philosophy: Plato & His Predecessors, besplatno na Courseri. Usput vidim da se Država može čitati i treći put, ali se sa Menonom dosad nisam susretao. Ovde se Sokrat pita "da li se vrlina može naučiti ili se dobija po prirodi"?

Naravno, staro džangrizalo kreće u svoj dijalog, a najpre treba utvrditi šta je to vrlina, pošto on nema pojma (gr. arete - ne samo vrlina, više kao stremljenje ka odličnosti). Usput, ispitaće i šta je ustvari učenje i ko može biti učitelj. Učitelj vrline? Pa, malo ko.

Platon/Sokrat uzima primer geometrije, dovlači slučajnog prolaznika (roba u kući) i ustanovljava da on ne zna ispravno da odgovori na pitanje. Ipak, kroz dijalog i vođenje, ispitanik sam dolazi do odgovora. Sokrat tako zaključuje da učenje ni ne postoji, već je to samo buđenje već postojećih uspomena i znanja. Naša duša je već proputovala i nebo i zemlju i videla sve moguće, tako da ustvari već sve i zna. Na nama je samo da se prisetimo toga nečega.

Ovo je dosta kratka knjižica, nije komplikovana i može se pročitati za sat vremena bez problema. A nije ni da ima neku specijalnu vrednost, pogotovo kad se ne slažemo sa nekim Platonovim zaključcima.
Profile Image for B. P. Rinehart.
752 reviews276 followers
December 19, 2017
This is my new philosophy read of the year...at the end of the year. This is Plato's dialogue about the idea of virtue in-general. Meno asks Socrates what virtue is and how do people get it. Of course, this being Socrates the answer or question can not be that simple. First, Socrates wants to define what virtue is and then how people come to have it. This Socratic dialogue, unlike most, ends with the title character actually getting a little enlightenment.

Before getting to my interpretation of how they define virtue, I also want to mention two other "definitions" that get cleared up so that we can define virtue. Socrates wants to know if virtue is a form of knowledge and what knowledge is. Socrates and Meno agree that if virtue is a form of knowledge, it can be taught. (they dismiss the idea of it being inborn very quickly and you can read the quote I saved below to see why). Socrates (according to Plato) believes the soul to be immortal so as the soul reincarnates it acquires knowledge from previous lives and a persons current knowledge is simply recollections of older knowledge. He "proves" this by posing a series of (leading) math questions to one of Meno's illiterate slaves and the insight the slave gets and gives is used as proof of the immortality of the soul.

But Socrates argues that virtue is not like knowledge because knowledge is something that at some point is learned while virtue is something that you just have or believe. Around this point, one of his future accusers at his heresy/treason trial Anytus, comes in and joins the debate and Socrates uses him to show that people with virtue like Pericles could not teach it to other people. This shows that virtue cannot be taught.

There is only one other option: belief (or opinion in Grube's translation). Socrates says that a person with a good belief or true opinion is just as good as someone with good or correct knowledge. Socrates and Meno agree that someone with a true belief, rightly guided is as good as someone with knowledge, rightly guided. But one does not learn virtue or is born with it as a human faculty...

Socrates' conclusion is that "virtue [is] neither an inborn quality nor taught, but comes to those who possess it as a gift from the gods which is not accompanied by understanding..." which is to say it is a divine belief. This is where we get the concept of "cardinal virtues" like justice and moderation.

Meno seems to be much more understanding of virtue after this talk with Socrates, Anytus...well, we know how that ended. I was put off from the math, but I got the greater point Plato was trying to make. This was a decent work and is one of the more resolved endings you will find in Plato's dialogues.
Profile Image for Bálint Táborszki.
Author 24 books20 followers
September 23, 2015
He blew out the smoke of marijuana before he spoke.
"So there is this soul," he began with red eyes, head nodding to the music. "And this soul knows everything, because it saw and studied everything that can possibly be known in lives before you were born. So when you learn something, you actually remember what your soul saw in previous lives. Thats how we know things."
"Coool," answered Meno.
"Yee."
Profile Image for Arman Mohammadi Yazdi.
83 reviews36 followers
January 16, 2018
اولین رساله‌ای که افلاطون گریزی کوتاه و محدود به نظریه مثل می‌زنه یا پایه‌ریزی نظریه رو انجام می‌ده.
ایده‌آلیسم موجود در رساله هم جالب بود.
Profile Image for Yann.
1,410 reviews368 followers
May 7, 2014
Le Ménon est un des dialogues de Platon, dans lequel il met en scène Socrate, son cher maître, aux prises avec Ménon, un riche Thrace peu amène et difficile à manier. Platon fait même intervenir Anytos, l'un de ses accusateurs en -399. Le sujet de la discussion va rouler sur la vertu, ce qu'elle est, si elle peut s'enseigner. Comme à son habitude, dans Platon, Socrate aime faire tourner en bourrique ses interlocuteurs afin de leur faire prendre un air moins superbe face aux bonnes dispositions que requièrent un examen de bonne foi. Socrate laisse donc parler Ménon, jusqu'au point où il met à jour les contradictions de ses positions. C'est qu'il est bien plus facile d'aborder cette question sur le mode volitif que sur le mode réel.

Un point intéressant du dialogue est l'idée avancée par Socrate pour expliquer la raison par laquelle il nous est possible d'apprendre ce que nous ne savons pas. C'est que cette question est terrible: si nous ne connaissons exactement pas ce que nous cherchons, comment savoir alors si oui ou non nous l'avons trouvé. Pour sortir de cette difficulté, il fait appel au mythe pour gagner l'oreille de Ménon, et invente une histoire de métempsychose, et de souvenirs antérieurs à la naissance. Mais enfin toute cette ruse n'aboutit qu'à une aporie.

Cette édition, uniquement dédiée au Ménon, comporte un appareil critique particulièrement dense, mais éclairant pour avoir une idée de l'industrieuse acribie avec laquelle les érudits décortiquent ce texte dans les moindre détails, ne négligeant ni l'étymologie, ni l'histoire des idées ou le contexte politique, citant les recherches les plus récentes: l'éditrice met le doigt sur les controverses qui ne sont pas encore résolue pour le moment, comme savoir par exemple quelles furent les vraies sources d'inspiration de Platon pour tous les éléments mythiques dont il a farci ses dialogues. En tout cas, ces textes sont vivants et plaisants, même s'ils ne laissent pas d'agacer par le labyrinthe dans lequel il perd parfois notre attention.
Profile Image for Ahmed Oraby.
1,012 reviews3,101 followers
December 19, 2017
تدور هذه المحاورة "مينون" حول الفضائل، طبيعتها، أصلها، متعلمة ومكتسبة هي، أم أنها موهوبة.
يقول مينون في البدء بأن الفضائل متعددة، وأن لكل شخص فضيلة ولكل جنس نوعه منها، فيعطي مينون للمرأة عدة فضائل، فيقول: "أما المرأة، فواجبها أن تنظم عائلتها وأن تحافظ على ما في داخل بيتها بشكل مناسب". وأما الرجل ففضيلته: "أن يعرف طرق إدارة الدولة". لكن سقراط بالطبع، وبأسلوبه الساخر، يأبى أن يتلقى ما في جعبة محاوريه إلا بالتشكيك والنقد.
يرى سقراط أن الفضائل واحدة، وهي حسب كلماته تكون"المخلوقات الإنسانية كلها فاضلة بالطريقة عينها".
يعرّف مينون الفضيلة بأنها: "تزويد النفس بالأشياء الجميلة التي ترغب [[النفس]] فيها
ويستطرد: "إن الفضيلة هي رغبة الأشياء الجميلة مع القدرة على نيلها". ويقول: "لكلٍ فضيلة مختلفة".
أما سقراط، الذي: "لا يعرف شيئًا سوى معرفته بكونه لا يعرف شيئًا"، فيقول، كما يليق بكل عجوز مدعٍ، أنه: "لا أفعل شيئًا سوى أني أربك الآخرين، لا لأني لست واضحًا، لكن لأني ذاتي الارتباك".
في رأي سقراط، لا يمكن تحري الفضيلة، طالما أنّا لا نعلم عنها شيئا على الإطلاق. ولكنه يفعل مع ذلك.
يقول كذلك أننا يجب أن نعيش في تقوى دائمة، لكنه لا يحدد لنا ما شكل التقوى.
يرى سقراط أن العلم ما هو إلا تذكُّر لما سبق وحدث، كما يليق بكل مثالي. [وقد نقد هذه الفكرة بشكل جيد الدكتور فؤاد زكريا في كتاب نطرية المعرفة والموقف الطبيعي للأنسان]
ويرى مينون على النقيض أن الفضيلة هي معرفة وهي تُعَلَّم.
يأبى سقراط ذلك. لم؟
لأن ذلك سيجعل الباب مشرعًا أمام السوفسطائية لتربح الأموال على حساب المغفلين ممن ينجذبون لكل ما هو مثير
يرى سقراط، حسب حروفه أن: "الفضيلة تأتي هبة من الله لمن تأتي لهم". بدون أن يحدد لنا حقيقةً طبيعتها وشكلها وأصلها ومتغيراتها حسب المقتضيات العملية بعيدًا عن التعريفات الجوفاء، وبدون كذلك أن يبين لنا ما هي آلية الإله في توزيع هذه الفضائل حسب ما تقتضيه إرادته [[أو أهواؤه]]، وعدله وحكمته. ويرى كذلك أنها ليست [أي الفضائل] ليست طبيعية، بمعنى أنها ليست تكتسب بالممارسة والتعلم والتطبع.
يرى سقراط بأن الفضيلة طالما أنها لا تعلم فهي ليست معرفة.
وإذا طاوعناه، حسب قياسه، فكيف يكون الدين والفن والجمال والشعر معارف، طالما أنها لا تعلم؟
فهل هي إما تكون معطاة كذلك من الإله [والذي يبدو أنه يعني بعباده حد كونه لا يترك لهم من أمرهم ولو فسحة لأبسط فعل حر] أو تكون موحاة [كما يدعي سقراط نفسه في عديد من محاوراته أن الله أوحى له بكذا وكذا]
وفي كلتا الحالتين تمحي أي قابلية للمعارف واليقين اللهم إلا إذا ادعى كل منا النبوة
في تلك الأحوال، يجد الشخص نفسه، لا اضطراريًا، يميل إلى وجهة نظر محاوري سقراط، والذين ع��ى الرغم من إصرار كاتب المحاورة على تصويرهم كمفحومين ومهزومين وخطباء غير مفوهين كفاية للنيل من سقراط، إلا أنه دومًا يكون للحقيقة في كلامهم نصيب أكبر.

المحاورة جميلة وثرية وأفضل ما قرأت من محاورات في ذلك اليوم (أمس) وإن كانت بالطبع تمتلئ بالسقراطية بشكل مبالغ به
Profile Image for Amy.
573 reviews39 followers
April 13, 2020
Virtue! Is it inherent by nature, taught to us by teachers or an instinct developed through the grace of a higher being? If this question interest you, read this dialogue.
Profile Image for Megi.
193 reviews
September 20, 2018
ხანდახან ძალიან ბედნიერი ვარ, რომ იქ ვსწავლობ, სადაც ვსწავლობ.
Profile Image for Ruth Donigian.
132 reviews13 followers
March 1, 2024
Excellent start for anyone interested in reading Plato.
Profile Image for Amy.
2,734 reviews524 followers
January 20, 2020
For being a free translation on Amazon, it was quite readable and contained a very helpful introduction that is worth the read. Definitely a foundational read for exploring Socratic/Platonist thought.
Read first half on Kindle and then switched to audio.
Profile Image for Gary  Beauregard Bottomley.
1,074 reviews664 followers
July 13, 2016
In the Meno Plato is really defending the logos (rational discourse) and why we need it for self-awareness since we really can't be taught but must discover for ourselves where knowledge (about reality) and true opinions are formed. People can trivialize the dialog and say that Socrates (Plato?) believes in re-incarnation, but I don't see that dialog in that way at all, but, rather, since if knowledge ('justified true belief about scientific objects') is absolutely possible while its opposite, relativism (sophisticated sophistry, rhetoric) is not there ultimately requires a starting point and Socrates needs to assume a non-relative place, much in the same way that Kant creates his 'categories of our conceptions' since Kant wants to show that the absolute knowledge (universal, necessary, and certain) exist and is knowable.

I'm starting to realize why I like Plato so much. He reminds me of Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit. Both authors have a tendency to see the world as ideas about ideas which lead to other ideas and finally might relate it somehow to the concrete at least in Hegel's case, but with Plato he'll relate it back to the good and noble and how that relates to knowledge about the ethical and political. In the intro it's stated how Plato is often misunderstood by modern readers. Partly because of the way Aristotle wrongly characterized Plato and then Augustine appropriates him for his own religious purposes.

This is a free version available from LibriVox. I enjoyed the introductions, "On Meno" (part I) and "On the Ideas of Plato" (Part II) so much I re-listened to them after having finished the dialog and then went on to re-listen to half of the dialog. I enjoyed this presentation that much.

Profile Image for Utkarsh Bansal.
164 reviews59 followers
September 7, 2021
Plato once again tries to make Socrates sound smart by making his interlocutors sound like idiots. There are interesting conundrums to explore regarding the question of whether morality can be taught, you won't find them here.
Profile Image for Fernando Ferreira.
64 reviews7 followers
November 13, 2018
"Quanto a nós dois, se dirigimos com acerto a investigação e discorremos bem, a virtude nem é um dom da natureza nem pode ser ensinada, mas é por disposição divina sem participação da inteligência que ela se encontra em quem se encontra, a menos que houvesse entre os homens públicos algum capaz de formar novos políticos. Se aparecesse alguém nessas condições, quase fora possível dizer que entre os vivos seria o que diz Homero que foi Tirésias entre os mortos: é o único que no Hades conserva o intelecto; as demais almas esvoaçam quais sombras. Precisamente assim seria essa pessoa com relação às outras: um ser real entre sombras, no que respeito à virtude".

Não preciso nem dizer que esse "ser real entre as sombras", o "único que no Hades conserva o intelecto", é o próprio Sócrates, encarregado da missão divina de transmitir às sombras que habitam o fundo da caverna a visão do Supremo Bem. E, ao fazê-lo, pagará com a própria vida, pois as "classes falantes" nunca, em tempo ou lugar algum, podem suportar o peso maciço da verdade. Aquele que dá testemunho do Supremo Bem será sempre um solitário a pagar com a própria vida.
Profile Image for Nelson Wang.
25 reviews1 follower
January 7, 2021
If you’re a newcomer to philosophy like myself, please search up synopses to even try to read this work. It is an easy read; however, the information gets confusing when you don’t know what “anamnesis” is (just an example). You got this, whoever is reading this!
Profile Image for Sidharth Vardhan.
Author 22 books735 followers
August 12, 2016
The dialogue goes into very meaning of virtue, and reaches conclusions opposite to that Socrates reached in Protagoras.

Meno Paradox

The dialogue begins with Socrates refuting definations of virtue provided by Meno.

When both Meno and Socrates declare ignorance on subject, Socrates say they must search it through argument. Meno then proffers a paradox: "And how will you inquire into a thing when you are wholly ignorant of what it is? Even if you happen to bump right into it, how will you know it is the thing you didn't know?" Socrates rephrases the question, which has come to be the canonical statement of the paradox: "[A] man cannot search either for what he knows or for what he does not know. He cannot search for what he knows--since he knows it, there is no need to search--nor for what he does not know, for he does not know what to look for."

*

Socrates' answer

Socrates proves by using a brilliant demonstration with a slave, that:

1. Knowledge is not learnt but remembered. Socrates gives a superstitious explanation involving souls. We may not believe the mythic explanation, but we can't reject the truth of observation. This observation answers Meno's paradox. It also nodes to eternal truths.

2. That one who knows of his ignorance is better than he who doesn't know about his ignorance (the usual 'I am the wisest because i know I know nothing' business.) Socrates makes use of simile originally brought up by Meno, to call the act of becoming aware of one's ignorance a torpedo shock - which Meno agrees is a good thing.

3. There is a difference between Knowledge and right opinion. Socrates argues through use of metaphor, that with out knowledge to bind them, the opinions are likely to run away.

*

Having established these observations, Socrates brings following points about virtue:

(a) Virtue can not be taught. (opposite to what Socrates concluded in Protagoras) Socrates reasons that virtuous men are not able to teach other the virtues they hold, so it should be something which can't be taught.

(b) Virtue is not knowledge Since all knowledge can be taught and virtue can not. Again opposite to what Socrates concluded in Protagoras.

(c) Virtue is mere good instinct arising out right opinions Since virtue is either knowledge or right opinion and we have already rejected the first option in (b.) above.

*

As our bad luck would have it, dialogue ends here. Socrates doesn't go into details of how these 'right opinions' arise. The contradiction between Protagoras and Meno, can be clarified by changing the word knowledge in Protagoras's conclusion with words 'right opinions' (and thus rejecting the second conclusion from Protagoras' that virtue can be taught.)



Profile Image for Aurelia.
99 reviews106 followers
October 7, 2019
Est-ce qu’il y a quelqu’un de mieux placé pour vous parler d’excellence que Platon, bien sur que non, le sujet lui-même ne peut être plus platonicien. C’est quoi l’excellence, ou comment des individus peuvent faire mieux que d’autres, y a-t-il une excellence ou il y en a plusieurs, peut-elle être enseigner, est-elle transmissible ou héréditaire. Voici les questions que se posent Platon dans le Ménon, avec évidemment, la mise en scène, la prose divine, le jeu des mots, l’ironie. Bref, toute la Beauté platonicienne.

Le dialogue est assez court, il commence brusquement, avec Ménon posant la question sur la possibilité d’enseigner l’excellence. Socrate se lance pour détruire les idées préconçues chez lui sur l’essence de l’excellence, il le désarme en se désarmant lui-même, ce qui mènent les deux à la fameuse aporie du dialogue : ce que l’homme connait il ne cherchera pas, parce qu’il le connait déjà, et pour ce qu’il ne connait pas, comment peut-il le chercher parce qu’il ne sait pas que chercher.

Malgré cette impasse, Socrate rappelle le devoir du courage de chercher coûte que coûte, en empruntant toutes les voies possibles, à commencer par retourner à soi-même : sujet de connaissance favori de Platon. Ceci est illustré par l’épisode de l’esclave : trompé par l’apparence tout d’abord, il prend conscience ensuite de son erreur et ainsi de son ignorance-ce qui constitue tout vrai départ vers la quête du savoir- pour enfin se tourner vers soi-même et déduire la bonne réponse. Allusion à de la théorie platonicienne de la réminiscence qu’il laisse sans approfondissement.

Poussant la recherche dans une autre direction, cette fois celle de l’empirisme, Socrate développe le fait que peut être l’excellence n’est pas enseignable, puisque on ne voit pas de maîtres ou de discipline qui lui sont consacrés. D’une autre coté, on ne peut pas dire qu’elle est héréditaire, puisque des grands hommes d’Athènes ont eu de misérables progénitures. Passage plein d’ironie à l’égard des sophistes et des politiciens.

Le Ménon n’offre pas de réponses quant à la nature de l’excellence ou comment l’atteindre. C’est une invitation à la recherche courageuse, au fin fond de soi, loin du confort de la paresse et des idées prêtes supportées par la multitude. Toujours face à Platon, je me dis : la civilisation occidentale a eu vraiment de la chance, une pensée pareille comme élément fondateur de sa tradition philosophique, on ne peut vraiment trouver mieux : le Courage, le Bien, la Beauté, la Justice et la Sagesse comme conscience de son ignorance.    
Profile Image for Chris Via.
470 reviews1,630 followers
Read
April 8, 2023
Plato's dialogue between Socrates and Meno (and, briefly, Anytus) is often anthologized, and for good reason. It's a great introduction to what we've come to term "Plato's Socrates," while also debunking the common conception of Socrates as simply an ugly, peripatetic dolt who did nothing but pose questions. On the contrary, here we find a clever and punctilious Athenian sage, quoting Pindar and Theognis and Homer (well, for a Greek, quoting Homer isn't very significant) and wielding William of Ockham's razor over a thousand year's before its introduction.

We also get some foreshadowing of where the outside feelings towards Socrates' unconventional, maddening methods and perceived arrogance will end. In fact, Anytus, who plays a small role in the dialogue, will go on to be one of Socrates' accusers, as chronicled in the Apology. This tension between Socrates and outsiders like Meno brings an interesting dimension to the reader's own reflection beyond the ostensible text. We are faced with such questions as whether truth and the right opinion are the same thing, the usefulness of sophists, and whether Socrates is really so ignorant as he makes himself out to be, whether he is indeed partnering with his interlocutor in this search for truth or if Socrates is rather deceptively guiding the thread of the debate the entire time. This latter is one that comes to my mind often, especially during the proof-via-geometry section of the Meno.

Aside from simply being an introduction to Plato's Socrates, the Meno also serves as a wonderful primer for the anatomy of a proper philosophical argument. Though Meno presents Socrates with the question of, basically, how to acquire virtue, Socrates asserts the proper role of philosophy--even today--and begins with the attempt to discover what virtue is in itself. And from this point, we end up in epistemological territory with Socrates working to prove that knowledge is not learned but rather recollected since the soul is eternal.

Some will muddle through a text like this one and agree with others who have wrongly posited that the whole of philosophy is a useless enterprise. But some, who choose to bridle their restive spirits with patience and reflection (recollection?), will yield nonperishable fruit.
Profile Image for Ryan.
13 reviews99 followers
September 14, 2007
dear reader,

do you think this whole "dear reader" thing is getting old? is it wearing itself out? has it become cliche? has my enthusiasm become transparent?

HAHA I DIDN'T THINK SO EITHER! welcome, friend, welcome one and all, to another week's edition of "ALL THINGS GREEK!" our guest to the show today is not just ANY greek, but one of the greatest greek who ever lived - ARISTOTLE ONASIS! haha just kidding! it's socrates! isn't that great? did you know that many grown greeks had child lovers? isn't that great?! today we'll be discussion one of socrates' lesser known works, "Finding Meno" a fun adventure though the ocean known as knowledge! ok are you ready? i am so let's go!


REVIEW:

WELL READER AREN'T YOU IN FOR A TREAT? I TYPED UP A WONDERFULLY EXTENSIVE REVIEW/ANALYSIS OF THIS DEEPLY VALUABLE PHILOSOPHICAL DIALOGUE, AND CAN I TELL YOU WHAT HAPPENED? GOODREADS APPEARS TO HAVE A 4000 CHARACTER LIMIT ON REVIEW! SO YOU KNOW WHAT? FUCK GOODREADS, AND FUCK YOU! THANKS GOODREADS! SURELY ANY WORTHY COMMENTS THAT CAN BE MADE ABOUT ANY BOOK CAN BE MADE IN LESS THAN 4000 CHARACTERS!

BOOKS THAT, UPON CONSIDERATION OF GOODREADS SUPER AWESOME CHARACTER LIMIT POLICY, I WILL NO LONGER BE REVIEWING:

WAR AND PEACE
MOBY DICK
DON QUIXOTE
FINNEGANS WAKE
THE BROTHERS KARAMOZOV
THE IDIOT
CRITIQUE OF PURE REASON
GROUNDWORK OF THE METAPHYSICS OF MORALS
ANNA KARENINA
GRAVITY'S RAINBOW
THE CHILDREN'S HOSPITAL
ULYSSES

FOR THE THRONGS OF ADORING FANS THAT WERE SWEATY WITH ANTICIPATION FOR ANY OF MY SHINING REVIEWS OF THE PRECEDING BOOKS, YOU HAVE GOODREADS TO THANK.


VERDICT:

what
Profile Image for Alex.
170 reviews1 follower
October 30, 2012
Socrates. Philosophy.

Usually when I think of Socrates, I think of Bill and Ted... "all we are is dust in the wind, dude..."

So, I don't have much of a background in philosophy. Now that I think about it, it's because religion has always been the basis of my worldview, so the basic building blocks of... umm... philosophizing... my worldview... have been based on religion; I've never really stopped and asked myself basic questions like "what makes stuff good vs evil" etc. I guess it's good to, although it's not really in my nature.

So anyway, in this socratic dialogue, Meno and Socrates debate what constitutes virtue ("goodness" to my 21st century vernacular) and whether it can be imparted/taught, or whether it's inborn in people.

While reading this, I tried to contextualize it in the sense of not only how can I be a virtuous person, but how can I teach/impart/etc. virtue to my kids (ages 1 and 3). Visiting extended family this past week, I've seen so many examples of kids turning out good/virtuous despite having screwed up parents, and of kids having a perfect religious upbringing and rejecting all of that--some remaining "good" outside the boundaries of religion, and some not at all.

The end conclusion that Socrates comes up with is that virtue is God-given, rather than being able to be taught. That lines up nicely with Paul in Romans 12, Corinthians 12 talking about gifts of the spirit.

In Aristotle's Ethics (my next read) it talked about virtue being borne of practice-- one becomes a good person by practicing doing good things (much like a musician becomes a good musician by playing lots of music). I guess that's hope for my kids... maybe...

Profile Image for Christina.
222 reviews1 follower
October 1, 2021
I did not like this dialogue the first time I read it through, but after discussing it and doing some secondary reading, it has definitely grown on me. Lots of interesting ideas to think through. My favorite line (as of right now): "I do not insist that my argument is right in all other respects, but I would contend at all costs in both word and deed as far as I could that we will be better men, braver and less idle, if we believe that one must search for the things one does not know, rather than if we believe that it is not possible to find out what we do not know and that we must not look for it." (86c)
Profile Image for Illiterate.
2,074 reviews36 followers
June 8, 2023
Meno combines issues of the early (definitions) and middle (forms, soul) dialogues. Its highlight is a discussion of correct opinion and knowledge.
Profile Image for Brandon Stariha.
38 reviews
September 11, 2022
It’s been awhile since I’ve read a Plato dialogue that wasn’t an excerpt or new to me. I have this thought every time I read his work and know it to be true but there is a good reason why Plato is considered one of the greatest philosophers. His work is brilliant, charming, impactful and most importantly, promotes and creates Wonder.

This is a relatively short dialogue, only about 40 pages but is packed full with interesting ideas, brilliant demonstrations of the process of philosophizing in action, fundamental questions, and a interesting paradox which, when taking seriously, is quite problematic.

I started working through Oxford’s Classic and Contemporary Readings in the Philosophy of Education as a self-study outside of school and Meno was the first one and it is THE classic and an important work in Phil of Education and in the education in general.

Meno has several things going on in it’s short but thicc 40ish pages (20 more pages with the introduction) some of the big things are:

- The requirement of what’s needed for a definition of a thing, in Meno, a main question is, What is Virtue? Which Meno, a character in the dialogue, is having a spat with Socrates the gadfly about this question. This question quickly moves from What is virtue to what would a definition of virtue look like and how would we know what it is? As Meno initially tries to explain virtue by listing examples of virtues but that’s hardly satisfying because it becomes circular real quick as well as it does not help the ignorant Socrates who doesn’t know what virtue is so he can’t know what Meno is getting at with his examples.

-The next main question, as the two were unable to get anywhere (which I love that Plato shows that we must accept we can’t always answer everything every time, even In a book trying to give an answer, unless my last statement is what it’s really about) they move on, accepting that they will temporarily utilize one of Meno’s examples, to the question of, Can virtue be taught? Now we all are going to have an immediate answer of “Of course!” or “it’s impossible” I was immediately for, but upon reflection, I’m not sure lol.

One reason why I was dissuaded from affirming we can is 1) Socrates argument that unlike having a teacher for every act or profession, medical teacher, math teacher, law teacher, teacher teacher, we don’t seem to have a proper virtue teacher, and the closest thing we relegate this to is our religious leaders or by proxy of other teachers. This still seems to be true and I think until we teach philosophy in schools we won’t see this happening but also 2) even if we had virtue teachers that doesn’t necessarily mean it is teachable. We usually arrive at virtue (if at all) though the osmosis of living in a society or by self teaching or self understanding. But can we teach virtue to corrupt people? Surly if it was teachable, we would be able to teach it to anyone. But it doesn’t seem that way to me. There are plenty of people that could receive the information but not learn to be virtuous. It seems more relatable to an addict. You can give an addict all the support and resources and opportunities in the world to get clean, but unless they choose to get clean themselves, nothing will work. Now you could say that that’s the same with math or anything else but I think there’s a difference but I know how to explain it atm.

-Meno’s paradox or the Knowledge paradoxe arises as well, which is, How can we inquire into things? For if we try to inquire into something we have to know it,
else you wouldn’t know what to inquire about or you wouldn’t know when you have it but if we know what we are looking for, why inquire? Or if you know when you have it, you must have already known it and would have no need of inquiry. There are better formulations else where but you get the idea.

Now this is considered to be a falsidical paradox but Philosophy is often important beyond its answer, what can be even more important is the questions or process that arises.

Plato offered his theory of recollection to answer Meno’s paradox, while that’s not accepted nowadays, it is a good starting place for innate ideas that is still relevant to this day.

Regardless, it is a good question for what is required to know something, how do we know that we know something and how do we know when we’ve finally understood something.

This book starts to set up The Republic. I was quite joyed to read this and I now currently think this is the dialogue one should start with. It use to be the last days of Socrates but I think this demonstrates the process of thinking better than most as The Republic also does it but on more complicated matters and the last days of Socrates also deals with complex matters and is dense. This deals with simple mistakes that some might not realize they make and Socrates demonstrates really well, the way we think we are so confident in knowing things when sometimes you just have to ask a few follow up questions to show that people don’t know what they are talking about.

As Meno says, Socrates makes you feel like he placed a bewitchment on you for you feel so confident before meeting him and you leaving realizing you know nothing, which is when the real learning can start.
Profile Image for Javi Vilar.
11 reviews
March 17, 2023
Otro más de Platón a la colección, esta vez sobre la virtud, pero tocando muchos otros palos que incluso me parecen de mayor interés.

Al parecer es de la misma época que el Gorgias, y anterior a éste incluso, pero los dos conectan en muchos aspectos. Si bien Platón insinúa ya aquí lo que considera la diferencia entre opinión y conocimiento (entre "me parece" y "sé"), relacionada con la apelación al fundamento, a la causa (una explicación causal del objeto, en definitiva), no se ven tan nítidamente como en el Gorgias.

Menón inicia el diálogo preguntando a Sócrates si la virtud es enseñable o, por el contrario, se da en los hombres por naturaleza. Aquí estamos planteando el viejo debate filosófico natura/nurtura... ya desde Platón, casi nada. Sócrates, no obstante, aduce que hablar de "cómo" es la virtud (es decir, hablar de uno de sus atributos) es imposible sin antes definir lo que la virtud es (es decir, es la pregunta por la esencia). Menón empieza a hablar de diferentes virtudes sin antes dar una definición "genérica" de virtud, es decir, definir qué es lo que permite unificar a todas esas virtudes que aduce bajo la clase "virtud".

Por supuesto, esto lleva a Platón a exponer su doctrina sobre la reminiscencia, la Anamnesis. Y me parece uno de los puntos más fuertes de todo este potentísimo Diálogo. "Aprender es recordar", dice Sócrates, valiéndose del mito luminoso de la inmortalidad del alma y de la metempsychosis, la reencarnación de ésta tras pasar por innumerables vidas. Todo conocimiento está ya en el alma, sólo es cuestión de recordarlo. Todo esto, además, parece sugerir ideas órficas en juego.

Este mito, que anima a los hombres a ir en busca del conocimiento, fuerza al esclavo de Menón (que actúa como conejillo de indias) a realizar por sí mismo distintos razonamientos y conexiones entre ideas que le llevan a deducir la relación que existe entre la longitud de los lados de un cuadrado y su área. Esta parte me parece fascinante, ya que muestra el influjo de la geometría en la filosofía platónica. Ya antes aparece, cuando Sócrates define la figura como aquello que establece un límite al color, haciéndose eco de algunas ideas de estirpe pitagórica. Sin embargo, el razonamiento del esclavo de Menón, guiado por Sócrates, se nos muestra como un juego de ir trazando cuadrados y diagonales para llegar a desentrañar esta relación, lo cual me parece una demostración impecable para uso en institutos, por cierto.

Más adelante, y mostrando más influjo de la geometría al tomar la idea de hipótesis (un axioma del que se sigue un razonamiento que resulte en que éste sea aceptado o bien refutado en favor de otro), sin ser aquí sinónimo de conjetura, Menón se impacienta y pasa de definir lo que es la virtud, por lo que Sócrates se vale de la hipótesis de que esta sea conocimiento para probar que sea enseñable o no. Pero, sin embargo, la hipótesis parece quedar refutada al no existir maestros que puedan enseñar dicho conocimiento, ni discípulos a los que impartirlo.

Platón finalmente parece romper, lo cual me parece verdaderamente excepcional, ese dualismo natura/nurtura, al determinar que el comportamiento virtuoso viene dado por la opinión verdadera, tan útil como el conocimiento, pero mucho más voluble y menos firme, como las estatuas de Dédalo. No es enseñable, ni es algo presente por naturaleza, sino más bien por influjo divino.... Todo esto partiendo de una hipótesis, pues Sócrates resalta que Menón ha pasado olímpicamente de definir que es la virtud. Jamás se define, en todo el Diálogo. Y, sin embargo, Platón parece sugerir la posibilidad de que a la inspiración divina se contraponga "un hombre político capaz de hacer políticos a los demás", por lo que dudo de que se mantenga la ruptura del dualismo. Tendré que darle alguna que otra vuelta.

Dicha frase, supongo, vaticina las propias posiciones de Platón acerca de la virtud, que él ya habrá definido, pero no ha expuesto en este Diálogo, excelente y lleno de ideas potentes de todas formas.
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