
From Writing to Philosophizing: A Lesson from Platonic Hermeneutics for the Methodology of the History of Philosophy
Author(s) -
Dimitrios A. Vasilakis
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
conatus - journal of philosophy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2653-9373
pISSN - 2459-3842
DOI - 10.12681/cjp.23490
Subject(s) - dialogical self , hermeneutics , philosophy , philology , relation (database) , reading (process) , epistemology , order (exchange) , literature , philosophy and literature , linguistics , sociology , feminism , art , computer science , gender studies , finance , database , economics
In this paper, I try to exploit some lessons drawn from reading Plato in order to comment on the methodological ‘meta-level’ regarding the relation between philosophizing and writing. After all, it is due to the medium of written word that we come to know past philosophers. I do this on the occasion of the ostensible conclusion in Plato’s Meno. This example illuminates the ‘double-dialogue’ hermeneutics of Plato and helps to differentiate Plato’s dialogues from dialogical works written by other philosophers, such as Berkeley. As a result, it becomes clear that, like with Plato’s case, a historian of philosophy must not only have a philosophical training, but also a subtle philological background, when attempting to come into dialogue with dead philosophers.