The Socratic Problem

#problem #communication


Socrates never wrote anything down. Everything we know about his philosophy comes through his student Plato's writings.

This creates what historians call =="the Socratic problem": How do we know what Socrates actually believed versus what Plato put in his mouth?==

The philosopher David Deutsch points out that we habitually underestimate how difficult communication really is. "The communication of new ideas—even mundane ones like directions—depends on guesswork on the part of both the recipient and the communicator, and is inherently fallible," he writes.

Intelligence doesn't protect against misunderstanding. Neither does devotion. "The default assumption should be that misunderstandings are ubiquitous and that neither intelligence nor the intention to be accurate is any guarantee against them." The young Plato, despite being brilliant and worshipping Socrates, may have gotten everything wrong. Or perhaps the older Plato gradually understood better. Or maybe he slipped further into error over time. "Evidence, argument and explanation are needed to distinguish between these and many other possibilities," Deutsch writes. "Objective knowledge, though attainable, is hard to attain."

The problem doesn't disappear with written words. There's a Socratic problem with Plato himself, and even with living philosophers. What did they mean? What problem were they solving? These aren't philosophical questions—they're historical ones. Yet philosophers spend enormous time on them, reading original texts and commentaries, trying to understand what was actually in someone else's mind.