2012 - Nicholas Smith - Plato On The Power of Ignorance
2012 - Nicholas Smith - Plato On The Power of Ignorance
2012 - Nicholas Smith - Plato On The Power of Ignorance
OXFO R D S T U D I E S
IN A NC I E N T
PHILO S O P H Y
EDIT O R: B RAD IN W O O D
S U P P L E M EN TA RY VOLUME
V IRTUE AN D HAPPINESS:
ESSAYS IN HONOUR
OF JU LIA AN NAS
E D I T E D B Y R AC H AN A KAMTEKAR
3
P L A T O ON THE POWER
OF I G NORA NCE
NI CH O LAS D . S M I T H
. Introduction
ling and W. C. Scott (trans.), Plato: The Republic (New York, )). Aristotle later
famously uses this same Greek word for ‘potentiality’. As far as I can tell, nothing
important hangs on the choice of translation here, though my argument will make it
clear that we should not understand Plato’s δυνάμεις as cognitive states.
Scholars have been very troubled by the fact that Plato provides two differen-
tiae. See e.g. Annas, Introduction, ; M. Stokes, ‘Plato and the Sightlovers of the
Republic’ [‘Sightlovers’], in A. Barker and M. Warner (eds.), The Language of the
Cave (Edmonton, ), – at –. I propose to explain their various roles
herein. Annas, Introduction.
In saying this about her discussion of this passage, I do not intend to assume
some interpretative ‘higher ground’—after all, in my own earlier work on this very
passage (N. D. Smith, ‘Knowledge by Acquaintance and “Knowing What” in
Plato’s Republic’ [‘Acquaintance’], Dialogue: Canadian Philosophical Review,
(), –) I provide an excellent example of shrugging off ignorance as not
likely to admit of analysis parallel to the other two cognitive powers (see especially
the closing words of the article at ). At least Annas never made such an absurd
claim! I am not, however, the only one to have made this mistake: a very recent
example may be found in F. Fronterotta, ‘Plato’s Republic in the Recent Debate’
‘[Recent’], Journal of the History of Philosophy, (), – at : ‘Now, if
we recognize the fact that what is not, in that it is conceived as what does not exist
at all, or as pure nothing, really is not—and so does not constitute an autonomous
“existential” and still less “object” level to which we can opine or think anything—
this hierarchy ends up distinguishing just two degrees of existence and so are and
exist in two different ways.’ Fronterotta derives this result from his assumption of
an existential rendering of Plato’s being, about which see sect. below.
Plato on the Power of Ignorance
Like Annas, most scholars who have studied this passage have fo-
cused almost exclusively on the distinction between knowledge and
belief. Their focus is not entirely unreasonable, for it is clear that the
distinction between knowledge and belief is the primary one that
Plato wishes to explicate here, as it is in terms of this distinction
that the important difference between the philosopher-rulers and
ordinary rulers will be drawn. The distinctions between knowledge
and ignorance, and belief and ignorance, are only very briefly men-
tioned, and ignorance itself remains almost wholly unexplained. In-
deed, all that we are told directly about ignorance is that it is re-
lated to what is not ( ; ; ), which, again, Plato
tells us is ‘nothing at all’ ( ). Otherwise, all Plato manages to
have Socrates say about ignorance is by way of distinguishing belief
from ignorance: belief is neither knowledge nor ignorance ( ),
because belief is neither clearer than knowledge nor more obscure
than ignorance ( ), but rather darker than knowledge and
brighter than ignorance ( ) and so between the two (
). Therefore, the power related to what is between being and not
being would be neither knowledge nor ignorance, but between them
( ).
Despite the extreme terseness of Plato’s remarks about ignor-
ance, however, I believe that careful thought about what little the
text does provide on the subject can help us to avoid errors scho-
lars have made in attempting to understand the other two cognitive
powers—knowledge and belief—which all agree are of more obvi-
ous importance to Plato’s goals at this stage of the dialogue. In this
sense, although my official topic is Plato’s treatment of ignorance,
my more general focus is the same as that of other scholars. We will
be able to understand the two more important cognitive powers, I
claim, if we manage to recognize well precisely how they are dis-
tinguished from ignorance, and how the ways in which Plato draws
these distinctions limit the ways in which we can understand his
epistemology more generally in this section of the Republic. Care-
ful attention to these distinctions, moreover, will allow us to re-
move entirely the apparent contradiction between Plato’s analysis
of the cognitive powers and their relata and accomplishments, and
the truisms about ignorance with which I began.
Nicholas D. Smith
G. Fine, ‘Knowledge and Belief in Republic V–VII’ [‘Knowledge’], in S. Ever-
son (ed.), Epistemology (Companions to Ancient Thought, ; Cambridge, ),
– passim, esp. –. See also Annas, Introduction, – passim; Cross
and Woozley, Commentary, passim; L. Gerson, Knowing Persons: A Study in Plato
[Persons] (Oxford, ), – passim; D. Sedley, ‘Philosophy, the Forms, and the
Art of Ruling’ [‘Art’], in G. R. F. Ferrari (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Plato’s
Republic (Cambridge, ), –, esp. ; N. P. White, A Companion to Plato’s
Republic (Indianapolis, ), . These examples are merely representative. In
fact, nearly every scholar who has worked on the epistemology of Republic has
made this same assimilation.
See e.g. Annas, Introduction, , who explicitly makes this connection.
I owe this point to Rebecca Copenhaver.
Plato on the Power of Ignorance
the sense in which ignorance is the absence of cognition. The ab-
sence of cognition seems more like the effect of not doing anything,
rather than a power by which we achieve some accomplishment. I
will later return to the specific requirements Plato applies to ignor-
ance, but for now it is enough to note that the universal range of
the subject-matter of ignorance seems enough for us to doubt that
Plato’s cognitive power-epi-object relation is the relation of cogni-
tion to subject-matter.
The error of the subject-matter interpretation probably derives
from the anachronistic application of modern epistemology’s focus
on what is often called either ‘propositional’ or ‘informational’
knowledge, where knowledge is understood as a cognitive state
that is of or about some proposition or information, or where the
proposition or information is counted as the content of the cog-
nitive state. In such analyses, knowledge is counted as a species
of belief—more particularly, warranted (which is usually taken
as justified or reliable) true belief. But again, the inapplicability
of this approach to what Plato is doing in Republic should be
obvious from the outset: after all, Plato’s epistēmē is very obviously
not a species of belief (doxa), but an entirely distinct cognitive
power—indeed, that is the whole point of the discussion!
Cognitive states represent information, and so when we say that
knowledge, belief, and ignorance are about their subject-matter, it
is the information represented that we have in mind. Since, how-
ever, Plato did not have this intentional relation in mind in assign-
ing distinct ranges of objects to the cognitive powers, we should not
make the mistake of supposing that Plato’s cognitive powers are the
same as the cognitive states we typically discuss in contemporary
epistemology.
See e.g. N. Gulley, Plato’s Theory of Knowledge [Theory] (London, ), –:
‘just as . . . Plato implies that knowledge is “propositional”, so by what he says about
doxa and the “images” with which it deals he implies that doxa is propositional’. See
also Fine, ‘Knowledge’, who also treats Plato’s epistemology as propositional.
For a comprehensive recent discussion of different theories of warrant in con-
temporary epistemology see A. Plantinga, Warrant: The Current Debate (New York,
).
In the Meno Plato does seem to make knowledge a species of belief, which is one
of many reasons why I am sceptical about scholars’ attempts to assimilate the view
presented in the Republic to that given in the Meno (as, for example, Fine does). It is
not my purpose here, however, to discuss the epistemology in dialogues other than
the Republic.
I first insisted on the differences between powers and states in Smith, ‘Acquain-
Nicholas D. Smith
Now, Plato’s own analyses do not at all invite the anachronism
just described. For one thing, the analogy he explicitly provides, by
which we are supposed to understand what he is doing with the cog-
nitive powers in this passage, is between cognitive and perceptual
powers: the first two examples of powers Plato explicitly mentions
as examples of the sort of thing he has in mind are sight (opsis) and
hearing (akoē) ( ). So when Plato says that he distinguishes
powers by what they are related to and what they accomplish, it is
easy enough to see (at least in general terms) how to apply these dif-
ferentiae to these models: sight is related to things that can be seen
and produces visual states, whereas hearing is related to things that
can be heard and produces auditory states.
So even if Plato’s model cases—sight and hearing—do not make
it simply obvious how we are supposed to apply the relata condi-
tion, the cases would seem to indicate that the intentional relations
inherent in what representations are ‘of’ or ‘about’ do not apply
to the powers themselves. Sight is not of or about things that can
be seen. Instead, when the power is working rightly, it is by sight
that we see them. So, too, hearing is not of or about things that
can be heard; rather, it is by this power that we hear such things.
But when we do see or hear things that can be seen or heard, the
result (which would seem to go into Plato’s accomplishment condi-
tion) generally is a representation (or a misrepresentation): I use my
power of sight to look into the tree, and see a red-winged blackbird.
tance’. In continuing to insist on this distinction, I diverge from the account of this
passage given in J. Szaif, ‘Doxa and Epistēmē as Modes of Acquaintance in Repub-
lic V’ [‘Doxa’], Études platoniciennes, (), –, which in other ways presents
a view similar to the one I advance herein. See also nn. , , , and below.
The significance of this analogy is noted in Stokes, ‘Sightlovers’, , but
then dismissed as a dialectical assumption, intended to secure the agreement of the
sightlovers to the rest of the argument. See also next note. A far more plausible
understanding of the analogies to sight and hearing is offered in F. J. Gonzalez,
‘Propositions or Objects? A Critique of Gail Fine on Knowledge and Belief in Re-
public V’ [‘Propositions’], Phronesis, (), –. Szaif, ‘Doxa’, rightly em-
phasizes the element of acquaintance in Plato’s analysis, on which see also Smith,
‘Acquaintance’.
It has been suggested to me that, following the echoes of Parmenides more
evident in this passage than perhaps anywhere else in Plato, we should understand
Plato’s ἐπί as operating more or less directionally, as in Parmenides’ different ‘ways’.
By this analysis, then, sight goes out to things that can be seen and hearing goes out to
things that can be heard. It is not just a matter of aiming, because one can aim and
miss; in the cases of the powers, it is about the causal interaction between the power
and what it goes to. I am grateful to A. A. Long and Brad Inwood for calling my
attention to this issue.
Plato on the Power of Ignorance
My power of sight is not of or about the red-winged blackbird; but
my visual experience is, because it is a visual representation of the
bird in the tree. As I said, it could also be a misrepresentation: Py-
thagoras thought he heard the voice of a deceased friend in the cries
of a dog being beaten (D.L. . ). There is intentionality in both
perception and cognition, then, obviously—but the intentionality
may be found in the representational states produced by the per-
ceptual or cognitive powers, and not in the causal relation between
the powers and their relata.
Several important results flow from these simple observations.
For one thing, we may now understand that it cannot be a correct
formulation of whatever it is that Plato is trying to tell us, here at
the end of book , that there can never be knowledge, belief, and
ignorance of or about the same subject-matter. If Plato were telling
us that, we would have good reasons for finding his claims deeply
paradoxical, at best. Instead, we will get this result only if the ana-
lysis Plato provides actually entails that the cognitive products of
the various powers at work cannot have the same subject-matter
or be cognitions that are of or about the same subjects. And we
already have at least some reason to think that this will not turn out
to be the case.
discussion] tells us that this is an example of something which and , because
it is and is not beautiful—or because it is both true and false to say of it that it is beau-
tiful’ (Szaif, ‘Doxa’, , emphases original). I will later argue that the ambiguities
of what is and is not, in Plato’s sense, do not extend to their sentential truth (and
hence, would not require Plato to have in mind anything other than a two-valued
sentential logic).
Fine ‘Knowledge’, . Gerson, Persons, .
Smith, ‘Power’. It now seems to me that, on this issue, I was closer to the truth
in Smith, ‘Acquaintance’.
Nicholas D. Smith
be given in a proposition, what is known. In standard analyses of
knowledge, the content appears as the variable identifying the pro-
position: the ‘p’ in ‘S knows that p’. I now think my earlier ana-
lysis is mistaken on this point. Instead, I think the accomplish-
ments of the cognitive powers are something like what we now call
‘conceptions’. So, for example, with regard to F-ness, knowledge
produces a very vivid, clear, and accurate conception of F-ness; be-
lief produces a much less clear, vaguer, and less accurate conception
of F-ness.
Again, the case of ignorance is helpful here. What goes wrong in
the case of ignorance may not simply be assent to falsehood—after
all, this sometimes occurs with belief as well. There are other ways
that cognition can fail than just by affirmation of falsehood. One
might, instead, suffer from misconception. Although at the heart
of misconception is some error, misconception might serve as the
ground for some other true belief: one who has a misconception
about lions (supposing they were native to Australia) would not go
wrong in thinking that lions are carnivores. In my earlier work I
supposed that Plato conceived of the accomplishments of the power
of ignorance as cognitive states whose propositional content was al-
ways false. I now think that the products of the power of ignorance
are not propositional states at all.
Now cognitive states are of or about things: my belief that
Coriolanus is the same person as Gaius Marcius is a belief about
Coriolanus. Moreover, if I know that Coriolanus is the same person
as Gaius Marcius, then this is knowledge of Coriolanus, know-
On this point I take it that I agree entirely with Szaif, ‘Doxa’ (but see also n.
above, and nn. , , and below).
This is not the place to review the complications of de dicto and de re senses
of ‘belief’, according to which the misconceiver’s thought, ‘lions are carnivores’, is
belief in the de dicto sense, whereas the de re sense of that belief is that the mis-
conceiver is believing that tigers are carnivores. Whether or not Plato had a way to
make precisely this sort of distinction, he could certainly distinguish cases in which
one might express a thought in a way with which others who knew what they were
talking about might agree, but whose expression of that thought was the product of
confusion or misconception. Socrates’ interlocutors, for example, often said things
that were true; but even when they managed to get things right, Socrates’ interro-
gations eventually revealed the gross confusions and misconceptions grounding the
interlocutor’s claims. Even the Thrasymachus who speaks in book , for example,
might affirm that Plato’s philosopher-rulers were just, if they could be shown to go-
vern in such a way as to maximize their self-interest, relative to the options available
to them. I think a proper reading of the Republic would support such a claim, in fact,
but that reading would not square with Thrasymachus’s own conceptions of either
self-interest or justice.
Plato on the Power of Ignorance
ledge about him. Others—those who have not read Plutarch or
Shakespeare—may be ignorant of this identity. To say, accord-
ingly, that knowledge, belief, and ignorance can all be of or about
the same objects is one of epistemology’s obvious truisms. In
the case of knowledge and belief, the truism is actually one of
analyticity—it follows directly from the fact that knowledge (as a
cognitive state) has belief (as a cognitive state) as one of its neces-
sary conditions. So, strictly speaking, every case of knowledge will
be a case in which there is both knowledge and belief about the
same object. This, to put it rather bluntly, is Epistemology .
Another of the basic claims one learns in Epistemology is
that knowledge does—and belief does not—have truth as a neces-
sary condition. But as we have seen, when Plato says that knowledge
is infallible, it cannot simply mean only this. We can, however, re-
cognize that nothing in what Plato says in book requires any de-
viation from what we learn in Epistemology in understanding
the intentional relations between cognitions and the objects repre-
sented in them (between, for example, my belief about Coriolanus
and Coriolanus as the object the belief is about), or in understand-
ing that one cannot have false knowledge, though one can have false
belief.
But for the reasons I have already given, these truisms—though
entirely consistent with and even entailed by Plato’s discussion at
the end of book —should not be confused with what Plato has in
mind when he relates the cognitive powers to different sets of ob-
jects, nor do they explain at all how Plato would suppose that in
achieving the relevant cognitive relation to the appropriate set of
objects, there will also be differences in what the cognitive powers
produce in us. To see how all of this works, we need to return to
the question of what the relata are for each power. Once we have
understood this adequately, we can then ask how the relationships
between the powers and their relata have different cognitive effects.
rulers’ error in judging the birth number. Presumably, then, an account of this error
must involve some reliance, by the rulers, on perceptual or cognitive powers other
than knowledge.
This is obviously not the place to engage the notorious problem of the philoso-
phers’ reluctance to rule. I give my own assessment of this problem in N. D. Smith,
‘Return to the Cave’, in M. McPherran (ed.), Plato’s Republic: A Critical Guide
(Cambridge, ), –.
Plato on the Power of Ignorance
In this paper I have tried to explain how and why the epistemology
of Republic can accommodate the ordinary truisms about what we
can and cannot be ignorant of, have beliefs about, or know. These
truisms, I have claimed, all apply (in Plato, as well as in contempor-
ary epistemology) to cognitive states. In the account Plato provides,
cognitive states are generated when people apply in judgement the
conceptions they have come to have as a result of the activities of
their distinct cognitive powers, whose relata are also distinct. The
relative quality of the concepts produced by the powers is what ex-
plains differences in fallibility. Plato regards the judgements made
by those who apply concepts produced by knowledge as infallible,
on the ground that cognitive connection to perfect entities prevents
the possibility of error in judgements made in the light of such en-
tities. The judgements made as a result of conceptions produced
by belief are fallible because the objects to which belief naturally
relates provide contradictory appearances, and so the conceptions
produced as a result of cognitive connection with such objects may
suffer defects that derive from the contradictory appearances, and
thus be only more or less accurate, as conceptions. Hence, appli-
cation of such conceptions in the formation of judgements will be
fallible—it may result in misjudgement. The power of ignorance
produces misconceptions that are the product of no appropriate
connection at all to what the conception is supposed to be a con-
ception of. The application of misconception in a judgement, ob-
viously, will be worse than simple fallibility. Instead, whatever the
ignoramus judges to be true is simply the product of a misconcep-
tion.
In achieving these results, then, I hope I have attributed a view
to Plato that avoids the ‘scandalous’ errors Annas reported others
finding in the epistemology of book . I would also argue that
the account provided herein satisfies what Fine has called the ‘dia-
lectical requirement’. It does so because it so readily accounts for
what I have called the epistemological truisms, which even the least
sophisticated interlocutor would accept. Even so, the way in which
Plato can derive what I have called the epistemological truisms may
Annas, Introduction, .
Fine, ‘Knowledge’, .
Nicholas D. Smith
rightly be admired for its considerable sophistication. In this way,
then, Plato deftly explains how it is that ignorance relates to nothing
at all, but can take absolutely everything as its subject-matter. Here
again we find, I think, an epistemological truism that is the para-
doxical nature of ignorance, whose subject-matter is everything but
whose competence is nil.
Lewis & Clark College
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Plato on the Power of Ignorance
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