THE SOCRATIC METHOD
(with thanks to an important mentor: Ray Linn, LAUSD)
The key
teaching method used in this class is called the “dialectic” or “the
Socratic method.” This approach consists of a continual dialogue
including questions, answers, and criticisms/clarifications of answers.
It is one way of pursuing truth, and it can be used directly in
conversation or indirectly in discussing literature that has been read
in class. The method is so simple that at first it doesn’t seem like
much of a “method” at all. It is, however, and I think it is the best
method for pursuing truths about human beings and their assumptions
about reality and abstractions such as values, culture, and the social
foundations of education. The dialogue which follows illustrates how the
Socratic method was used in a high school class to explore the topic of
status as a possible goal of human existence. The dialogue is
rearranged and idealized, but it provides an idea of how the Socratic
method works and where it took participants in their discussion of a
widely held value of modern society. As you read it, consider your own
private desire to be held in high esteem by others and, by imagining
yourself in the role of Student, ask yourself how you would answer the
questions in the dialectic.
Teacher: Is there anyone in this room who is not greatly concerned with achieving high status? Is it worth living for?
Student: What else am I to live for? I sure don’t want to be a loser, and I know that when I make it I’ll be happy.
Teacher:
Don’t all desires make you unhappy with your present situation in the
world? If you want to be big, you must now feel small, and thus you
aren’t happy.
Student: Perhaps, but when I make it...
Teacher:
Make what? Just what are you going to “make,” and how will it make you
happy? Society might give you some sort of symbolic prize for your
efforts, but you are essentially a body with desires. How can a symbol
satisfy a desiring body?
Student: But after I’m rich and famous, I’ll have lots of fine bodies to choose from!
Teacher:
Perhaps, but as Philip Slater says, you’ll do without them while
striving for that carrot, and how long will it take? And even if you’re
right about what will happen after you hit the big time, what makes you
think you’ll be loved for who you are? If it’s money that brings you to
her attention, perhaps it’s money that she loves.Besides, the problem
with status-lovers is that they’re always trying to show that they are
superior to the people around them. To have status is to act superior.
Do you truly love people who think they’re superior to you? Do
status-conscious people produce the impulse of love, or the desire to
tear them down?
Student: So? (NOTE: This student is not “superior.”)
Teacher:
Isn’t it inevitable that status-seeking separates you from other human
beings? Since status is a self-centered goal, it focuses your attention
on what’s going to happen to you—which automatically separates you from
the people around you. Do you prefer the feeling of loneliness?
Student: No, but nobody wants to be close to a loser either.
Teacher:
Why not try to meet the Other as an equal? And if you persist in
defining yourself as the “superior,” are you different from the slime
that joins the Klan in order to establish a sense of superiority in the
world? As long as the desire to be high dominates your consciousness,
don’t you have to look down on the Other? Isn’t it logically impossible
to define yourself as superior without defining someone else as
inferior? And isn’t this what you, just like the Klansman, are doing all
the time?
Student: Maybe so, but I’m not a loser.
Teacher: What are you, essentially?
Student:
As Descartes said, “I am a thing that thinks.” To be presently aware of
these thoughts, I must exist as an unchanging mental thing.
Teacher:
Are you such a “thing?” As Hume says, look again: can you find an
unchanging thing, in addition to your changing thoughts and feelings?
When I introspect all I find is a bunch of changing thoughts and
feelings and impulses—are you so different?
Student: OK, I can only be certain of the changing thoughts and feelings.
Teacher:
But is this the reality you pay attention to when you try to rise up
and be the best thing around? Or do you ignore this changing internal
reality when you act like you’re the top rat in the rat race? Is Tolstoy
right when he says that the great thing that you want to be is merely a
pretense, and that in attempting to become it you must ignore the real
life that is within you? Since society only gives status to fixed
positions like “judge” or “executive,” doesn’t the status-seeker have to
ignore the real, changing feelings and impulses that are within? If so,
is Tolstoy right in saying that status-seeking leads to death?
Student: What else should I do with my life?
Teacher:
Why not return to the “living” by ignoring your desire to be superior,
and instead focusing your consciousness on the reality of human needs
and feelings? Why not focus on meeting the needs of people around you?
Student: I don’t care what you say, achieving a high position is important to me.
Teacher:
Look around the room. Would your status with your peers still be as
important if you knew you were going to die tomorrow?
The actual
classroom dialogue went way beyond this brief and condensed version, and
it contained twists and turns not mentioned here, but these are some of
the questions, answers, and criticisms of answers which were expressed
in class. In analyzing the Socratic method of pursuing truth, several
things may be stated: first, it is essentially a negative method. People
using it are often trying to tear down the ideas they hear; they listen
to others’ propositions, usually with one ear turned toward what is
wrong with it. If they don’t listen in this critical way, if they aren’t
willing to think negatively, the method cannot exist.
The
Socratic method works best when its practitioners have developed a
sensitivity to logic and semantics—specifically, to what makes a good
argument and what doesn’t (logistical fallacies), and to language that
is vague, misleading or meaningless. Asking clarifying questions such
as, “What do you mean?” is essential to the Socratic method. In Preface
to Plato Havelock argues that this question marks beginning of this
particular approach to the search for truth. Questioning the meaning of
the key terms in an argument is especially important in using this
method. So is an awareness of the vague clichés of the day, e.g., “He’s
making it…” “This idea sucks…” “That’s sick…” “It’s awesome…” etc.
Again, for the Socratic method to work practitioners must be willing to
think negatively, to look for and identify instances of insufficient
evidence, and for sloppy use of language.
In attempting to
justify this negative approach to education, we can begin by noting that
the Socratic method first grew out of a particular way of thinking
about knowledge that surfaced in 5th century Greece. For Socrates, a
great many knowledge claims and value claims seemed empty, meaningless,
and even destructive. The traditional Homeric view of things was still a
major part of Greek education in the 5th century, even though it had
little to offer the world in Socrates’ day. In addition, the Sophists
had revealed the apparent relativity of all answers about what is real
and what is good—so that what might be true in Athens wouldn’t
necessarily be true somewhere else. Given this social situation, it was
difficult to accept the traditional idea that knowledge was simply the
collective memory of the community. In other words, knowledge was no
longer thought of as a set of established truths which an older person
knows and simply pours into the head of a younger person. In an era of
competing answers, cultural relativism, and skepticism, the “lecture
method” no longer seemed adequate. When one way of seeing things gives
rise to many, it’s difficult to believe that memory alone produces
knowledge. Thus Socrates began to think of knowledge in a different way:
as something achieved by individuals actively searching for the truth
through constant questioning and criticism. Active, critical
questioning, rather than the acceptance of secondhand opinion, became
the key to knowledge. Thus Socrates tells us that, “The life without
criticism is meaningless.” Since we too live in an era of competing
answers, cultural relativism, and skepticism, Socrates’ method seems
well-suited to today’s classroom. When there are many competing answers
about what human beings are like and what they should do, all answers
become questionable, and at this point so does a straight lecture
approach to education. It seems more sensible to survey the competing
answers with a critical mind, actively investigating for ourselves what
has meaning for us and what does not.
In addition to providing an
ideal method for this skeptical era, there are other advantages to the
Socratic method: first, it takes the subject off the page and places it
in the student’s life. One problem with a straight lecture/reading
approach to education is that it often fails to bring the abstractions
into the student’s experience. For example, in some epistemology classes
students are simply asked to read and listen to lectures on Descartes,
Locke, and Hume; they are asked to get the issues straight, to think
about the problem of skepticism, etc.—but they are not asked to relate
the issues to their own lives. The problem is that when this relation is
ignored education becomes a meaningless, formal exercise. The value of
Socratic questions like, “What do you actually observe when you think
one event causes another?” and “Do you know more than my dog Brewster?”
is that they force students to consider how epistemological issues
relate to their own lives. Thinking about this relation is important
even when studying something as removed from students’ lives as
epistemology; for example, one of the great values of skeptical
arguments such as Hume’s is that they tend to discourage rashness
(“because I know I might be wrong”) and encourage tolerance/appreciation
(“because I know that even foreigners might be right”). But this kind
of influence is possible only if the student relates the abstract issue
to his own situation in the world.
In connection with this point,
it seems that nothing enters a student’s life as much as the concept of
“no.” A nonchallenging comment like, “That’s an interesting answer’’
encourages complacency rather than critical thought. “No, you’re wrong”
or “Your sentence is meaningless” or “You have no evidence for that,” on
the other hand, are challenges to the mind that demand action. “No” is
something that must be dealt with, something that must be taken into
account rather than ignored. If a teacher referred to your self-centered
love of status as “interesting” or as “one of the many things that
human beings live for,” would you have thought much about it? Such tepid
niceness might allow an extremely self-centered student to feel good
about himself, but it evokes little serious thought about what the
student is living for. Pragmatists are basically right in asserting that
we don’t reflect on our experience until we have a problem. “No”
presents the problem in clear relief.
Another advantage of the
Socratic method is that it fosters critical thinking skills—skills that
remain long after the particular subject matter is forgotten. By
“critical thinking skills” I mean the ability to separate what is valid
and true and significant from what is nonsense. After prolonged exposure
to the Socratic method, students tend to internalize it—so that even in
their private thinking when they run a proposition through their mind
they simultaneously search for its weakness, e.g., “The teacher’s
statement might be right, but where is the evidence?... And what does he
mean by…?” This critical way of thinking about one’s private thoughts
is not natural, and it is one of the main consequences of exposure to
the Socratic method. In an era dominated by the media, modern politics
and so much nonsense, developing critical thinking abilities is
important. One problem with the lecture approach to education is that it
doesn’t encourage the student to constantly think critically, but when
he leaves the lecture and faces the modern world he will be better off
if he does.
The Socratic method has great value for another
reason: it sharpens the teacher’s mind, and leads her to constantly
delve deeper into her subject. This is because it forces her to
constantly think of the key questions and issues related to the subject
she is teaching. The most important questions, key terms, and relations
within a particular subject area are not obvious, and more than a few
teachers have trouble writing up essay questions because they haven’t
thought out the general questions which relate to their subject. If they
use the Socratic method, they have no choice: they must search for the
key assumptions, terms and issues in order to raise the right questions.
The
Socratic method forces the teacher to pay close attention to students.
One problem with a lecture/reading-based course is that allows the
teacher to ignore student feedback until exam time (and in many
college/graduate courses, not even then). In using the Socratic method
teachers are forced to consider student responses daily. Specifically,
student feedback provides a formative assessment that identifies
intellectual blind spots, false reasoning, clichés and unexamined
language, inane values, and other needs for improved reasoning. Of
course such intimate intellectual contact can be repulsive, but it does
enable teachers to think more realistically about how to communicate and
relate the lesson to individual students.
Granted: the Socratic
method sometimes evokes too much disrespect for authority, particularly
in misguided or dimwitted students, because the method tends to assume
that authority is meaningless. Granted: the method sometimes evokes such
strong emotions that defenses impair or prevent learning. Granted: the
method can often be bruising to a student’s ego. However, without
bruising the childhood ego would never be left behind, and the typical
delusions of ego about one’s self-importance constitute baggage far too
heavy to carry in the search for truth. The Socratic method, by
subjecting the ego to constant criticism, is helpful in eliminating the
ego from discussions of truth. In evaluating this method, consider the
alternatives: would students learn more that is important in their lives
during the same limited time period if teachers relied on lecture and
reading, or Descartes’ introspection (searching within one’s own
consciousness for ideas that are clear and certain), or on Buddhist
meditation? Would these or any other approach to the search for truth
cause you to think as deeply about your own desire to be top rat?
Please come to class prepared to defend your answer.
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