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Elenctic

Elenctic is an adjective referring to the elenchus, a method of critical questioning and refutation associated with Socrates. The term derives from the Greek elenkhē or elenkhos, meaning a testing, cross-examination, or refutation. In philosophy, elenctic methods involve a sequence of questions designed to challenge a claimed definition or belief, with the aim of exposing contradictions, inadequacies, or gaps in reasoning.

Historically, elenctic questioning is a hallmark of the Socratic method as portrayed in the Platonic dialogues.

The elenchus is not primarily a persuasive rhetorical tactic but a diagnostic tool for philosophical clarity.

In contemporary usage, elenctic methods appear in discussions of critical thinking, epistemology, and pedagogy, where guided

Through
careful
interrogation,
Socrates
would
probe
definitions
of
virtues,
knowledge,
or
other
concepts,
often
leading
his
interlocutors
to
realize
that
their
confident
assertions
rested
on
shaky
or
inconsistent
grounds.
The
outcome
is
frequently
aporia,
a
moment
of
puzzlement
that
invites
deeper
inquiry
rather
than
immediate
agreement.
Its
practice
emphasizes
form
(questioning
structure
and
logical
consistency)
over
content,
encouraging
continual
refinement
of
beliefs
and
definitions.
While
closely
associated
with
classical
Greek
philosophy,
the
term
elenctic
is
also
used
more
broadly
to
describe
modern
interrogative
or
refutational
approaches
in
philosophy
and
education
that
seek
to
reveal
the
limits
of
confident
claims
through
systematic
questioning.
questioning
aims
to
illuminate
what
can
be
known
and
to
challenge
unsupported
assumptions.