"The Only True Wisdom Is in Knowing You Know Nothing." "There Is Only One Good, Knowledge, and One Evil, Ignorance."-Socrates
"The Only True Wisdom Is in Knowing You Know Nothing." "There Is Only One Good, Knowledge, and One Evil, Ignorance."-Socrates
"The Only True Wisdom Is in Knowing You Know Nothing." "There Is Only One Good, Knowledge, and One Evil, Ignorance."-Socrates
“The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing.” “There is only one good, knowledge,
and one evil, ignorance.”- Socrates
Socrates, (born c. 470 BCE, Athens [Greece]—died 399 BCE, Athens), ancient Greek
philosopher whose way of life, character, and thought exerted a profound influence on Western
philosophy.
Socrates was a widely recognized and controversial figure in his native Athens, so much so that
he was frequently mocked in the plays of comic dramatists. (The Clouds of Aristophanes,
produced in 423, is the best-known example.) Although Socrates himself wrote nothing, he is
depicted in conversation in compositions by a small circle of his admirers—Plato and Xenophon
first among them. He is portrayed in these works as a man of great
insight, integrity, self-mastery, and argumentative skill. The impact
of his life was all the greater because of the way in which it ended: at
age 70, he was brought to trial on a charge of impiety and sentenced
to death by poisoning (the poison probably being hemlock) by a jury
of his fellow citizens. Plato’s Apology of Socrates purports to be the
speech Socrates gave at his trial in response to the accusations made
against him (Greek apologia means “defense”). Its powerful
advocacy of the examined life and its condemnation of Athenian
democracy have made it one of the central documents of Western
thought and culture.
( https://www.britannica.com/biography/Socrates)
HIS TEACHINGS
Socrates professed not to teach anything (and indeed not to know anything important) but only to
seek answers to urgent human questions (e.g., “What is virtue?” and “What is justice?”) and to
help others do the same. His style of philosophizing was to engage in public conversations about
some human excellence and, through skillful questioning, to show that his interlocutors did not
know what they were talking about. Despite the negative results of these encounters, Socrates did
hold some broad positive views, including that virtue is a form of knowledge and that “care of
the soul” (the cultivation of virtue) is the most important human obligation.
Socrates wrote nothing. All that is known about him has been inferred from accounts by
members of his circle—primarily Plato and Xenophon—as well as by Plato’s student Aristotle,
who acquired his knowledge of Socrates through his teacher. The most vivid portraits of Socrates
exist in Plato’s dialogues, in most of which the principal speaker is “Socrates.” However, the
views expressed by the character are not consistent across the dialogues, and in some dialogues
the character expresses views that are clearly Plato’s own. Scholars continue to disagree about
which of the dialogues convey the views of the historical Socrates and which use the character
simply as a mouthpiece for Plato’s philosophy.
SOCRATES IN ATHENS
Socrates was widely hated in Athens, mainly because he regularly embarrassed people by
making them appear ignorant and foolish. He was also an outspoken critic of democracy, which
Athenians cherished, and he was associated with some members of the Thirty Tyrants, who
briefly overthrew Athens’s democratic government in 404–403 BCE. He was arguably guilty of
the crimes with which he was charged, impiety and corrupting the youth, because he did reject
the city’s gods and he did inspire disrespect for authority among his youthful followers (though
that was not his intention). He was accordingly convicted and sentenced to death by poison.
THE SOPHIST
Through the dialogues, Socrates wanted to discover people’s views on living a moral, just life
Socrates urged people to question what they are being told, as well as their beliefs – question
EVERYTHING
Socrates, himself, learned through this process and developed his own philosophy from this method
Socrates believed true pleasure could only be attained through living a moral life . . .