PHIL331: Ancient Philosophy
Dennis Beach, OSB

Paper Topics for Plato, Laches Spring 2006
Due: Groundhog’s Day, Thursday, February 2

Follow basic format for papers: typed, double-spaced, with standard heading (name, class, date). Pages should have your initial and last name with a page number in the upper right-hand corner. Paper-clip (don’t staple!) pages together. Length: 3-5 pages (800-1500 words) although the appropriate development of your ideas is more important than arbitrary length.

  1. Laches and Nikias, unlike some of the more quarrelsome characters we meet in some of the other dialogues, seem to be good men sincerely interested in the topic they are discussing with Socrates. At the same time, their discussion seems inconclusive, or at least concludes with the admission that they have not really discovered what courage is. Write an essay in which you analyze and discuss what prevents the discussion from being successful or in which you argue that, although unsuccessful in discovering a definition of courage, it is successful by other criteria. It would be helpful to keep in mind that Socrates and Plato are always interested in moral education (education in virtue) and that often problems in discussion involve a failure to understand fully how moral understanding develops.

     
  2. Read the dialogue Charmides and do an independent analysis of what is accomplished or not accomplished in that dialogue, and why. You will find it somewhat similar to the Laches, although Socrates is quite a bit younger. The topic for discussion in that dialogue is sōphrosyne or temperance / moderation / self-control. He discusses first with Charmides, a handsome and promising young man, and then with Critias, Charmides’ older cousin and guardian. The discussion of temperance as some kind of science of sciences—critical knowledge of what we know and don’t know—can get confusing, but the play with over-confidence, critical response, then confusion and further discussion is similar to the Laches.

     
  3. If you have read one of the shorter Platonic dialogues in another class, you can critically compare the response to Socrates of Laches and Nikias with someone like Meno, Euthyphro, Lysis, or Meletus. Keep your focus one what makes them or prevents them from being good conversational partners in a moral inquiry into virtue and the care of the soul.