Knowledge and Virtue: Paradox in Plato's "Meno"

Review of Metaphysics 39 (2):261 - 281 (1985)
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Abstract

THE POINT of studying ethics, so Aristotle reminds us, is to become, ourselves, actually good. But surely we must wonder--as did the Greeks--whether it is in fact through studying ethics that we become good, or whether we ought perhaps look rather to the subtler influences of role models, both public and private, and the practical context of home and school environment. The question is as persistent today as it was in classical Greece: How is it that human beings come to lead lives of genuine human quality? This is the rock-bottom question that Meno puts to Socrates in the opening exchange of the dialogue that bears his name. It is obviously a question of crucial import for all of us, and equally obviously a question of deep concern for Plato.

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On the Teaching of Virtue in Plato’s Meno and the Nature of Philosophical Authority.Abraham Stone - 2010 - New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy 10 (1):251-282.

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