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Socrates' Criteria - A Libertarian Interpretation (Paperback)
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Socrates' Criteria - A Libertarian Interpretation (Paperback)
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The philosophical puzzle about the position of Socrates in the
early Platonic dialogues is the reason why Socrates demands that
terms be defined. Many have said recently that knowledge and
meaning do not demand definitions, for there is know-how besides
intellectual knowledge and the successful use of symbols is often
unreflective. This book's argument is that for Socrates, freedom,
or rational agency, requires definitions. Socrates is freedom's
advocate; he is not an early epistemologist or semanticist. Due to
this, he is still relevant to current philosophy. Certain recursive
or performative acts of definition are free in being fully
conscious, deliberate, or self-sufficient. They are
self-predicating Forms. The search for them is free in a different
sense, namely in relating to everything beyond itself. Moreover,
that search is moral. For being self-relational, the Forms are not
identifiable from without. They could be anywhere and so must be
sought everywhere. Anyone could turn out to be one's liberator, so
one must respect each of one's interlocutors, as Socrates does when
asking questions.
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