Plato's Protagoras, Part 1: Can Virtue Be Taught?
Plato's Pod: Dialogues on the works of Plato
English - March 10, 2023 03:45 - 1 hour - 104 MB - ★★★★★ - 5 ratingsPhilosophy Society & Culture Science Mathematics Homepage Download Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Overcast Castro Pocket Casts RSS feed
Plato’s dialogue Protagoras revolves around the question of whether virtue can be taught. If it can, then how do we define virtue? Is there a universal form for virtue, one thing alone that defines virtue regardless of our cultural, religious, or family circumstances? If virtue is not taught, how would anyone acquire the essential attributes that are needed to govern societies such as ours? Whether the sophist Protagoras has a valid justification for his selling of knowledge or not, Socrates’ position that virtue cannot be taught came under fire during the discussion of members of the Toronto, Calgary, and Chicago Philosophy Meetup groups on February 26, 2023. We will reconvene on March 12 for the second part of the Protagoras, where the title character and Socrates continue their battle of words, each with a fierce dedication to his differing views. Socrates is on the ropes more than once, and we begin to wonder if he has met his match in a roomful of sophists.