Kevin Crotty offers a salutary correction to the current scholarly view of Socratic ignorance. Far from being a merely negative absence of knowledge, he argues, Socratic ignorance – awareness of one’s ignorance of the most important things – is dynamic, visionary, and endlessly productive of philosophical insight. And, he persuasively shows, this view of ignorance is not confined to the so-called Socratic dialogues, but characterizes Platonic thought from start to finish. Crotty gives insightful readings of key dialogues in clear, accessible, and engaging prose. The book is an important contribution to Platonic scholarship and, by implication, a brief for the contemporary renewal of an attitude of Socratic ignorance that is currently in short supply.
— Thomas Tuozzo, University of Kansas
Beautifully written and insightful, Ignorance, Irony, and Knowledge in Plato offers compelling evidence to rethink readings of Plato as a dogmatic thinker. Challenging the simplistic, dichotomous model of knowledge and ignorance that generations of interpreters have attributed to Platonic thought, Kevin Crotty powerfully brings forth the vital role of ignorance in the endless philosophical quest for wisdom. Along the way, he demonstrates how even the most seemingly definitive of Plato’s dialogues create rich occasions for enhancing one’s awareness and appreciation of the perplexingly unfathomable depths of the world around us, others, and even ourselves.
— Rebecca LeMoine, Florida Atlantic University