Kierkegaard and the concurrence of Socratic “irony” and “learned ignorance”

Authors

  • Jennifer Hincapié Sánchez Universidad Iberoamericana de México Autor/a

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.61497/77dv3d89

Keywords:

Plato, Kierkegaard, irony, “learned ignorance", learned ignorance, early dialogues

Abstract

This essay enunciates what might give signs of Socratic irony properly said, which is, the use that historical figure Socrates gave said term and its relationship with the well-known formula of “learned ignorance”. Following this purpose, one must recur to the treatment that Danish philosopher Søren Kierkegaard gave Socratic irony. Putting on a significant level of relevance the heterogeneity that occurs in all of Plato’s dialogues, the first of which made an approach to Socrates and its dual challenge of “irony” and “learned ignorance,” which is necessary to scrutinize and discuss.

|Abstract
= 94 veces | PDF (SPANISH)
= 45 veces|

Author Biography

  • Jennifer Hincapié Sánchez, Universidad Iberoamericana de México

    Doctora en Filosofía de la Universidad Iberoamericana de México.

Downloads

Published

2016-12-10

How to Cite

Hincapié Sánchez, J. (2016). Kierkegaard and the concurrence of Socratic “irony” and “learned ignorance”. Ciencias Y Humanidades Journal, 3(3), 115-128. https://doi.org/10.61497/77dv3d89

Similar Articles

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.