As Cicero put it, Socrates was always “pretending to need information and professing admiration for the wisdom of his companion”; when Socrates? interlocutors were annoyed with him for behaving in this way they called him eiron, a vulgar term of reproach referring generally to any kind of sly deception with overtones of mockery. The fox was the symbol of the eiron.
All serious discussions of eironeia followed upon the association of the word with Socrates. —Norman D. Knox —Irony (The Autodidact Project)
Part of an interesting collection of essays that deserve some attention from me as I prepare to teach “Media Aesthetics” next term.
Similar:
Books Come Alive! Catalina Magdalena Cast (Stage Right Greensburg)
The cast for "Catalina Mag...
Books
How a Radical New Teaching Method Could Unleash a Generation of Geniuses
First of all, I'm always wary about any ...
Culture
In March 2000, I was blogging about Palm V computers for the Navy, NCAA banning online jou...
In March 2000, I was blogging about ...
Academia
Smalltalk through masks is hard; I really was glad to see so many familiar upper halves of...
If you said hello to me recently and I d...
Culture
Jane Eyre and the Invention of the Self
Those who remember Jane Eyre solely as r...
Books
The grandmaster diet: How to lose weight while barely moving
Fascinating article about how the extrem...
Culture


