Socrates Apology Essay

891 Words2 Pages

When reading the dialogs of Socrates, it is easy to ready each as an individual story. It is more difficult to take into consideration every word that Socrates has said up to that point and allow that to influence the validity of Socrates current position or argument. Though this may be more difficult we must take everything that Socrates has claimed to hold in every dialog. While doing this brings up a potential contradiction between Socrates Apology and in his dialog with Crito. Though this contradiction is clearly visible when focusing on just the idea of these claims, there is background beliefs of the Gods that allows both Socrates claim in his apology and his argument in the Crito dialogs.

In his dialogs with Crito , Socrates argues …show more content…

With application of his logic in the Crito dialogs, if the Athenian Laws ordered Socrates to stop practicing philosophy and Socrates disobeyed he would be preforming a wrong against the Athenian Laws. This contradiction poses a few questions. The most interning may be, does Socrates value the practice of philosophy over his own life? Why would it be a ok to wrong the Athenian Laws and continue practicing philosophy while it would not be ok to wrong the Athenian Laws and save yourself from an untimely …show more content…

Therefore, to keep all of Socrates claims and arguments from contradicting, we must look at the agreements of Socrates accepting the punishment of death and the intent of Socrates to disobey the order to stop practicing philosophy separately. In both cases Socrates, as a citizen of Athens has agreed to do one of the three things listed earlier, stayed in Athens, and failed to persuade the Athenian Laws. Therefore, the only option left to avoid wronging the Athenian Laws would be to obey their orders. However, in the case in which Socrates was ordered by the Laws to stop practicing philosophy, he is willing to disobey. This allows two options, either Socrates is going against his own moral standards of not wronging another, or this agreement is somehow an unjust agreement. Assuming that Socrates is true to all his claims he would not wrong another under any circumstances. This leaves the agreement to obey the orders of the Athenian Laws to stop practicing philosophy as an unjust agreement.

In the days of Socrates, the worshiping of the Gods the accepted norm. People gave thanks to the Gods, and made sacrifices in their honor. These citizens also listen to Oracles, who claimed to speck on the behalf of the Gods. In a society that see a virtue in finding favor with the Gods, it is logical to assume that to disobey the Gods would be a terrible thing to do. Additionally, since all citizens

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