Virtue In Plato's Crito

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In Plato’s Crito, Socrates’s commitment to virtue is illustrated. Socrates is imprisoned and has been sentenced to death. Socrates will most likely be put to death the next day. One of Socrates’ friends and supporters, Crito, comes in and tells Socrates that he has paid off the guard and that they must move quickly and escape. Socrates says it would be unjust for him to escape, as Crito pleads for him to leave. Socrates acts according to his definition of virtue when ignoring Crito’s reasonings, and therefore is acting virtuously in his insistence on staying. Socrates believes that virtue is the ability to know justice from injustice. In his belief, people act unjustly because they are ignorant of the right decision. Socrates believes people …show more content…

Therefore, socrates does not believe his life to be worth living if he does not live in accordance with the good life, which he asserts is the just life (48b), which Crito also agrees to. Furthermore, Socrates argued that no one should ever willingly do wrong, even when one is done wrong to, which Crito agrees to as well (49d). Socrates argues since the law is just, as he had lived under them, been protected by them, and he did not try to change it, while he had the chance. Therefore, Socrates believed that he could not break the law, after he had benefited from them. The laws create order, and undermining them for a single citizen would be a crime against his country (51a). Country, Socrates says, is honored by the gods and more important that honoring one’s mother and father (51b). Socrates, then, should not break the law because he would be willingly committing injustice against the state. A state that has been good to him, that he was a citizen in, and raised sons in (52d). Also, by escaping, he would be proving his accusers right, because one that did not obey the law and escaped his punishment would be seen as a criminal, which is what his accusers want him to be seen as. …show more content…

They will live a hard life as orphans, and Socrates would be taking the easy way out, not raising them and paying for their education and other needs. Crito argues that Socrates is taking the easy way out on life, and a courageous man would escape from jail (45d).
Socrates argues further that if he escapes to a well-governed city, like Thebes or Megara, he would surely be recognized and brought back (53b). He would then have to go to a disordered place, which Socrates does not even find life worth living in one of these places. His sons would either accompany him on his run away life style, or stay in Athens. His sons would be living in one of these places with him, and not experiencing Athens, which Socrates loves so much. If they stayed in Athens they would be seen as the father of a convict. Socrates wants his sons to stay in

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