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  • Socrates is considered one of the founders of Western Philosophy, but you might not have

  • guessed that from his early life.

  • Socrates was born to a working-class family in ancient Greece, around 470 BC.

  • His father was a sculptor who cut stone for the Parthenon and taught Socrates the stone-cutting

  • trade.

  • As an adult, Socrates worked as a stonemason, as well as serving in the military during

  • three campaigns.

  • It wasn’t until he retired that Socrates took up the occupation he is best known for

  • - teaching.

  • What are the great works of Socrates everyone should read?

  • Well... there aren’t any.

  • Socrates did not write.

  • What we know of Socrates comes from the works of his students, Plato and Xenophon, as well

  • as the playwright Aristophanes, who was a contemporary of Socrates.

  • This is sometimes referred to as theSocrates Problem” - we know about Socrates only through

  • second-hand accounts.

  • The Socrates Problem is compounded by the nature of the writing from this time.

  • There is very little of what we would consider histories written during the Classic Era.

  • Rather, they are mostly dramatised works - plays and philosophical dialogues.

  • For instance, in AristophanesplayThe Clouds,” Socrates is depicted as a swindler

  • who teaches his students clever acts of deception.

  • But that was a satirical comedy, so should we believe that depiction?

  • Plato said the play was slanderous.

  • By contrast, Plato’s and Xenophon’s works presented a kinder portrayal of Socrates

  • character, but even their accounts differ in many particulars.

  • We are left to piece together what the man was like, finding common ground in the various

  • depictions.

  • Socratesreputation as a towering intellect began when one of his followers made a pilgrimage

  • to the Oracle of Delphi.

  • This was a priestess at the Temple of Apollo, who served as a medium through which the god

  • of Apollo spoke.

  • People traveled from all over Europe to hear her prophecies.

  • The Oracle proclaimed no one was wiser than Socrates.

  • When Socrates heard this statement, he took it to be a puzzle.

  • He set out to find who WAS the wisest man.

  • He interviewed the people of Athens who were most admired for their wisdom - teachers,

  • politicians, artists - but he concluded that they all had a fatal flaw.

  • These men all believed they knew a great deal, but were ignorant of what they did NOT know.

  • Socrates said that he was as ignorant as any other man, with the very slight advantage

  • that he at least KNEW he was ignorant - and in that way, he was the wisest of an entire

  • population of ignorant people.

  • Socrates said, “What I do not know I do not THINK I know."

  • This is referred to as theSocratic Paradox.”

  • It may surprise you that Socrates, “the wisest man in Athens,” was not known for

  • expounding and making speeches.

  • Rather, he would ask questions; question after question, to pin down what did someone actually

  • know.

  • Often, logical inconsistencies in the answers would point out faulty lines of reason.

  • In this way, both the teacher and student were led to knowledge.

  • This was a new form of discourse that came to be known asThe Socratic Method.”

  • It is still used to this day as one of the most successful teaching methods ever found.

  • Sadly, this habit of pointing out people’s mistakes in reasoning may have won Socrates

  • few friends in Athens.

  • It didn’t help matters that he was also unappealing in appearance.

  • In Plato’s “Symposium,” Socrates is described as quite unattractive - short and

  • stocky, with bulging, staring eyes.

  • He was said to have odd religious views, as well.

  • What might have been the final straw was AristophanesplayThe Clouds,” which suggested that

  • Socrates was associated with the Sophists.

  • This was a group of teachers whom older generations feared were teaching the youth to be wild

  • and disrespectful.

  • In the end, his list of offenses grew too long.

  • Socrates was charged with being an atheist and corrupting the youth of Athens.

  • Socrates represented himself in the trial.

  • As described in Plato’s “Apology,” and Xenophon’s “Apology of Socrates to the

  • Jury,” Socrates denied being a Sophist, and gave evidence of his attempts to encourage

  • virtue and elevated behavior from Athenians.

  • But in true Socratic fashion, he did not try to win over the jury, but rather point out

  • how poor their thinking was.

  • The jury found him guilty and sentenced him to death.

  • In Athens at this time, convicted criminals could propose an alternative to their punishments.

  • Socrates jokingly suggested that he instead be given free meals at the Prytaneum, an honour

  • reserved for the most admired citizens of Athens.

  • The jury was not amused.

  • Socratesfollowers wept, and encouraged him to flee (which was not an unusual occurrence

  • at these sorts of trials).

  • But, as if to dramatically win his argument that he always obeyed the rule of law, Socrates

  • went to his death with no outward appearance of fear.

  • He willingly drank the cup of deadly hemlock that was the means of his execution.

  • He was 70 years old.

  • Athens had put to death the man Plato calledthe wisest and most just of all men.”

  • Socrates the man may have died, but his ideas lived on through his disciples.

  • The writings of Plato and Xenophon brought their teacher back to the world.

  • Socratesphilosophy continued to be studied through the Middle Ages, and reached a new

  • peak during the Renaissance.

  • To this day, the Socratic Method is used by teachers everywhere to find out what you know,

  • and what you DON’T know.

  • For our part, we strive to honour his memory at Socratica.

Socrates is considered one of the founders of Western Philosophy, but you might not have

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ソクラテス偉大な思想家の伝記 (Socrates: Biography of a Great Thinker)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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