CONCEPT
The Elenchus
The Socratic method of cross-examination—testing belief through sustained questioning that exposes contradictions and produces aporia.
The elenchus was Socrates' signature practice: a structured dialogue in which he questioned an interlocutor's confident claims to reveal hidden contradictions and unjustified assumptions. The method had a specific architecture—Socrates claimed ignorance, took the interlocutor's thesis seriously, explored its logical implications, and located the point where it contradicted itself or obvious reality. The conversation continued through rounds of definition, objection, and revision until the interlocutor arrived at aporia—the recognition that he did not know what he thought he knew. The elenchus was not a debate (two positions competing) or a lecture (one-way transmission); it was a collaborative investigation whose outcome was unpredictable and whose goal was the exposure of ignorance rather than the delivery of answers.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The structure of the elenchus distinguishes it from every other form of intellectual exchange. In a debate, each party defends a position and tries to defeat the other's. The elenchus had no positions to defend—at least not on Socrates' side. He claimed ignorance and made that ignorance the foundation of the method. He was not trying to prove a