![]() In this dialog, Socrates is concerned with distinguishing knowledge known through art from knowledge known through inspiration. Socrates concludes that Ion's ability comes not from an art, but from divine inspiration, much as the poets whom he interprets were inspired. Socrates then begins his investigation into whether Ion's proficiency in reciting Homer is an art by comparing Ion's knowledge to the knowledge of others who certainly possess arts, such as religious prophets or charioteers. ![]() Socrates expresses his admiration of Ion's skill and notes that only a person who understands Homer's meaning could possibly be a good reciter, which statement Ion immediately agrees. He has just returned from a recital contest and placed first out of all the competitors. ![]() Socrates meets Ion, an Ephesian man who is renowned for his ability to interpret and recite the poetry of Homer. The Ion, like the other earlier Platonic Dialogues, is a mixture of jest and earnest, in which no definite result is obtained, but some Socratic or Platonic. ![]()
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