Skip to main content
Book0 • 300+ pages • 5+ hours reading time

Meno

About this book

"Meno" by Plato is a philosophical dialogue written in the late 5th century BC. The work primarily engages with the question of whether virtue can be taught and seeks to define what virtue itself is. At the center of the dialogue are Meno, a young Thessalian aristocrat, and Socrates, the famed philosopher, as they explore various propositions regarding the nature of virtue and knowledge. The opening of "Meno" begins with Meno questioning Socrates about the teachability of virtue, proposing various definitions that Socrates deftly critiques. As they discuss the concept of virtue, Meno suggests that there are many kinds of virtue corresponding to different roles (for men, women, children, etc.), but Socrates challenges him to find a unifying definition. This leads to a deeper inquiry into knowledge itself, with Socrates proposing that learning is a form of recollection due to the immortality of the soul. The dialogue illustrates a process of dialectical inquiry, revealing both characters' evolving understanding of virtue, knowledge, and the nature of teaching.
Language
English
Publisher
Project Gutenberg
Release date
Unknown
Downloads
1.3K

Explore Classical literature Books

Discover more Classical literature literature
Cover of Meno

Click "Read now" to open in our Reader with AI features.

Community Discussions

Join the conversation about this book

Discussions

0 discussions

No discussions yet

Be the first to start a discussion about this book!

AI-Powered Insights

Intelligent analysis and summaries

AI Insights Available

Get detailed AI-powered analysis for "Meno" including character insights, themes, plot analysis, and more.

Summary
Characters
Themes
Analysis

Generation typically takes 1-2 minutes

Reader Reviews

See what others are saying

Reviews

Overall Rating

4.0
425 ratings

Based on community ratings

No reviews yet

Be the first to review this book!

Readers Also Enjoyed

Discover more books similar to Meno