Quote by John Lachs, Interview with Pat S
It does not really avail us much to get clear definitions. I am for clarity, by all means, but to think that you can reduce a concept to a relatively simple definition, and that you can somehow go somewhere that will be interesting and fruitful, just does not seem to me to be very plausible at the present time. And that is exactly what I used to strive for. I took old Socrates seriously; you search for the definition. You get the essence of the thing, and once you get the essence and the definition that somehow captures that essence, you are home free. That is how you do philosophy. When you read Hegel, you realize how incredibly flexible and supple concepts are, how they take you for a fool when you take them too literally and too tightly, how they are interconnected with one another, how they interplay in ways you really do not understand, how in other words, strangely enough, you really do not understand any part unless, or until, you understand the whole. That is what I learned from these folks. I really think that stress on context is terribly important and enriches one's philosophical approach significantly.http://www.vanderbilt.edu/AnS/philosophy/faculty/lachs_interview.html
Summary
This quote by philosopher John Lachs emphasizes the limitation of defining concepts in narrow and simplistic terms. Lachs argues that while clarity is important, attempting to reduce complex ideas to simple definitions may not yield interesting or fruitful results. He criticizes the idea that philosophy is about finding the essence or defining concepts, instead highlighting how concepts are fluid, interconnected, and their true understanding requires grasping their context and their relationship with the whole. Lachs stresses the significance of context in enriching one's philosophical approach and the importance of understanding the interplay between concepts rather than taking them too literally or narrowly.