This MCQ module is based on: Socrates’ Method, Why Study Political Theory & Exercises
Socrates’ Method, Why Study Political Theory & Exercises
This assessment will be based on: Socrates’ Method, Why Study Political Theory & Exercises
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Political Theory: An Introduction — Part 2: Socrates' Method, Why Study Political Theory & NCERT Exercises
How does Socrates dismantle a confident definition of justice through patient questioning? Why does political theory matter for citizens, students, voters and netizens alike? All 6 NCERT exercises with model answers, summary, glossary and Socratic dialogue analysis.
2.1 Putting Political Theory to Practice — The Concept of Equality
Political theory is not just memorising thinkers; it is learning to do a kind of careful reasoning. Take a familiar concept: equality. In mathematics, "5 = 5" has one fixed meaning. In politics, "equality" has many — and we have to learn to navigate them.
2.1.1 Three Layers of Equality from Daily Life
So our intuitive idea of equality is layered: equal-opportunity for the able, special-treatment for the disadvantaged, fair-distribution for the poor. Political theorists clarify these layers by examining how concepts are used in ordinary language and by debating diverse meanings systematically. They ask: When is equality of opportunity enough? When does it fail? How long should reservations or affirmative action continue? Should poor children get mid-day meals to keep them in school? These questions are eminently practical — they shape real policies on education, employment and welfare.
2.2 The Method of Socrates — How Reason Dismantles Bad Definitions
The most famous example of how political theory thinks comes from ancient Athens, around 400 BCE. Socrates was called the "wisest man" of his time, not because he claimed to know everything but because he questioned everyone's assumptions. He was eventually put to death for "corrupting the youth" — that is, for teaching them to think for themselves. His student Plato preserved his method in dialogues, most famously The Republic, which opens with a question: What is justice?
2.2.1 Cephalus' First Definition — and How It Falls
In The Republic, an old businessman named Cephalus first proposes that justice is "speaking the truth and paying your debts." Socrates does not reject this directly. Instead he asks a single tricky question:
Socrates: Speaking the truth and paying your debts is justice — no more than this?
Socrates: Suppose a friend, when in his right mind, deposits arms with me, and asks for them back when he is not in his right mind — ought I to return them?
Cephalus: No — I should not.
Socrates: Then "speaking the truth and paying your debts" cannot be a complete definition of justice.
The example is brilliantly chosen. A literal application of the rule (return what was deposited) would lead to the friend harming himself or others. So the rule cannot be the whole of justice. The first definition collapses.
2.2.2 Polemarchus' Second Try — "Help Friends, Harm Enemies"
Polemarchus, Cephalus' son, tries a refinement: justice is "doing good to friends and harming enemies, when the enemies are evil." Socrates again uses a chain of comparisons to undo it:
Socrates: When horses are injured, are they improved or deteriorated?
Polemarchus: Deteriorated.
Socrates: Deteriorated in the good qualities of horses, not of dogs?
Polemarchus: Yes, of horses.
Socrates: Then will not men who are injured be deteriorated in the proper virtue of man?
Polemarchus: Certainly.
Socrates: And human virtue is justice?
Polemarchus: To be sure.
Socrates: Then injuring men makes them more unjust. But can the just (the good), by acts of justice, make others unjust?
Polemarchus: Assuredly not.
Socrates: Then to injure anyone — even an enemy — cannot be the act of a just person. Polemarchus: I agree.
Re-read the Socrates–Polemarchus dialogue above. Answer:
- What is the role of analogies (horses, dogs) in Socrates' argument?
- Why is Socrates careful to never impose his answer?
- What modern situation (e.g., capital punishment, police use of force, online harassment) could you analyse using the same Socratic method?
2.3 Why Should We Study Political Theory?
"Isn't political theory only useful for politicians, bureaucrats, lawyers, judges, journalists or activists?" the textbook itself asks. Four reasons the answer is no — it is for every Class 11 student:
📚 NCERT Exercises
(a) It discusses ideas that form the basis of political institutions.
(b) It explains the relationship between different religions.
(c) It explains the meanings of concepts like equality and freedom.
(d) It predicts the performance of political parties.
(a) TRUE — political theory examines the principles that underlie governments, constitutions and institutions.
(b) FALSE — relationships between religions belong to comparative religion or sociology, not political theory. Political theory may discuss secularism (the political principle of state-religion relations), but not religion-to-religion comparison.
(c) TRUE — clarifying the meaning of equality, freedom, justice etc. is one of political theory's core jobs.
(d) FALSE — predicting election results is the work of psephology / political science / opinion polling, not political theory.
Examples:
• A residents' welfare association that lobbies the municipality for better drainage is doing politics.
• A student union that demands a fair examination schedule is doing politics.
• A farmers' protest at Delhi over MSP laws is doing politics.
• RTI activists who file information requests are doing politics.
• Even consumer choices — boycotting a product over ethical concerns — are political.
Politicians win elections and pass laws, but the larger political life of a society is sustained by ordinary citizens negotiating, organising and protesting. Mahatma Gandhi's freedom movement was politics carried out by millions who never held office.
Without vigilance, three failures occur. One, elected leaders escape accountability between elections; corruption and misuse of power expand. Two, minorities and the weak get pushed aside because no one challenges discrimination. Three, the long-term public interest (environment, education, public health) is sacrificed to short-term political expedients.
The textbook captures this with a beautiful image: citizens are like the audience at a concert. An educated, alert audience pushes musicians to perform better; an inattentive audience accepts mediocrity. So too, vigilant citizens make politicians more public-spirited and democracy more substantive. India's RTI movement, Lokpal demand and the rise of citizen-led election observation are all examples of this principle in action.
(1) Career relevance. Whether we become lawyers, civil servants, journalists, NGO workers or even businesspeople, the underlying ideas of freedom, equality and rule of law shape our work. Just as basic arithmetic helps everyone (not just engineers), political theory helps every educated citizen.
(2) Informed citizenship. At 18 we vote, at 21 we may stand for office, and throughout our lives we participate in gram sabhas, RWAs, online polls and public debates. Acting effectively in any of these requires basic grasp of the political ideas that frame public choices.
(3) Examination of our own prejudices. All of us carry prejudices about caste, gender, class or religion. Political theory invites us to examine these honestly using concepts like equality and dignity. Just looking at our prejudices carefully tends to moderate them.
(4) Skill of reasoned argument. Political theory teaches us to support our opinions with evidence and logic, anticipate counter-arguments and respect the opposing side. This is the skill of an effective debater — and an effective citizen of the global information order.
(1) Inviting attention. Reasonable arguments command respect even from those who disagree. Socrates' method works because his interlocutors find themselves drawn into the dialogue rather than dismissed.
(2) Building consensus over time. Many political ideas (universal suffrage, abolition of untouchability, women's right to property) faced fierce opposition initially but gradually won hearts through patient argument. Dr. Ambedkar's reasoned constitutional advocacy is the model.
(3) Setting the standard. Even when an argument fails to convince an opponent, it sets the standard against which weaker arguments are judged. Future debates pick up where strong arguments left off.
However, arguments rarely "compel" instantly. Listeners may carry vested interests, prejudices or fears that block reception. That is why political theory pairs argument with empathy, patience, and where necessary, civil mobilisation. A convincing argument is necessary; it is not always sufficient.
Similarities:
• Both demand careful, systematic reasoning.
• Both train the mind to identify hidden assumptions.
• Both use definitions, arguments, counter-examples and proofs (or refutations).
• Both reward precision and clarity.
Differences:
• In mathematics, "triangle" or "prime number" has one definition. In political theory, "freedom", "justice", "equality" have many defensible definitions, depending on context.
• Mathematical proofs are absolute; political-theory arguments are persuasive but always open to revision in the light of new experience.
• Mathematics deals with abstract objects; political theory deals with human relationships, where opinions, values and emotions matter.
• The "correctness" of a political-theory answer often depends on the social context (e.g., what equality requires in a famine differs from what it requires in a fair election).
So studying political theory is like mathematics in its rigour, but unlike mathematics in its sensitivity to context, history and human meaning. It is, perhaps, mathematics with a moral compass.
📑 Chapter 1 — Final Summary
What you should remember
- Politics arises from different visions of what is just and desirable, and involves the negotiations through which collective decisions are made — from gram sabha debates to international diplomacy.
- Politics is broader than what politicians do — citizens, activists, students and businesspeople are all political actors when they engage in collective action.
- Political theory studies the ideas behind politics — freedom, equality, justice, democracy, secularism — and the arguments of thinkers from Kautilya, Plato and Aristotle to Rousseau, Marx, Gandhi and Ambedkar.
- The Indian Constitution embodies many of these ideas: freedom and equality in the Preamble, abolition of untouchability in Fundamental Rights, Gandhian ideals in Directive Principles.
- Concepts like equality have multiple layers — equal opportunity, justified special treatment, fair distribution. Political theorists clarify these layers to guide policy.
- Socrates' method shows that political reasoning works by examining a definition, applying it to a hard case, and seeing whether it survives. The interlocutor discovers the inconsistency himself rather than being told.
- Why study political theory: career relevance, informed citizenship, examining our own prejudices, building skills of reasoned argument.
- Vigilant citizens — like an alert concert audience — make democracy and politicians better.
🔑 Key Terms
Pick any one political thinker mentioned in this chapter (Kautilya, Plato, Aristotle, Rousseau, Marx, Gandhi, Ambedkar). Write a 50-word note describing: who they were, the era they lived in, and one major political idea they contributed. Pin it on your class's "Wall of Thinkers".