Not To Be Trusted With Knives: Socratic Irony
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Raul · 1 year agoYou read the dictionary. For fun. Weird ;)
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Demonweed · 1 year agoIt seems to me that Socratic irony refers to a specific subset of feigned ignorance where the affectation takes the form of questioning that leads others toward learning. Typically, the Socratic method comes with a sagacious tone. When instead it takes the form of humble curiosity, it is innately ironic since it is not possible to embark on a course of deliberately leading questions without already having some sense of the destination.
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Jan Karlsbjerg · 1 year agoYeah, thanks Demonweed for making me look up another word in the dictionary. Jeez.
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Beth · 1 year ago@Demonweed - The dictionary I was look at clearly needs a better definition. I can see how Socratic irony would relate, as you say, to the Socratic method and that the questions by the instructor using the Socratic method would be Socratically ironic (because, of course, they know the answer to the question when they ask it)... but stupid dictionary.com has only that vague four word definition. My kingdom for an Oxford English dictionary!