CONCEPT
The Socratic Method
The twenty-four-century-old pedagogical technology — guided questioning that cultivates evaluative capacity rather than transmitting information — that becomes the AI-era university's most valuable inheritance from its pre-multiversity past.
The Socratic method is the pedagogical practice of cultivating judgment through guided questioning rather than the transmission of information. Named for Socrates' interrogative dialogues in Plato's works, the method has been practiced in Western education for twenty-four centuries and remains the paradigmatic example of what the AI-era university must learn to scale. Its structure is simple and its difficulty profound: the teacher asks questions that lead the student to examine her own reasoning, identify assumptions, recognize contradictions, and refine her judgment through the experience of being wrong in a supportive environment. The method does not deliver knowledge; it develops the capacity to evaluate knowledge.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The method's persistence across twenty-four centuries — through the academies of Athens, the medieval universities, the Renaissance studia, the modern seminar — suggests that it addresses something fundamental about how evaluative capacity actually develops. Information can be transmitted through lectures, books, videos, and now AI tutors. Judgment cannot. It develops only through the friction-rich process of
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