Adam Glantz

26%
Flag icon
Socrates gradually realizes what the oracle at Delphi meant: he is the wisest of men not because he is so wise, but because he at least knows that he is not wise. His condition is something we have come to call “Socratic ignorance.” This ignorance is, paradoxically, a kind of knowledge: it is knowing that one does not know.
Classical Philosophy (A History of Philosophy Without Any Gaps #1)
Rate this book
Clear rating
Open Preview