Socrates
Socrates was the first of the three
great Athenian philosophers (the other two are Plato and Aristotle).
Socrates was born in Athens in 469 BC, so he lived through the time of
Pericles and the Athenian Empire, though he was too young to remember
Marathon or Salamis. He was not from a rich family. His father was
probably a stone-carver, and Socrates also worked in stone, especially
as a not-very-good sculptor. Socrates' mother was a midwife. When the
Peloponnesian War began, Socrates fought bravely for Athens. We do not
have any surviving pictures of Socrates that were made while he was
alive, or by anyone who ever saw him, but he is supposed to have been
ugly.
But when Socrates was in his forties or
so, he began to feel an urge to think about the world around him, and
try to answer some difficult questions. He asked, "What is wisdom?" and
"What is beauty?" and "What is the right thing to do?" He knew that
these questions were hard to answer, and he thought it would be better
to have a lot of people discuss the answers together, so that they might
come up with more ideas. So he began to go around Athens asking people
he met these questions, "What is wisdom?" , "What is piety?", and so
forth. Sometimes the people just said they were busy, but sometimes they
would try to answer him. Then Socrates would try to teach them to think
better by asking them more questions which showed them the problems in
their logic. Often this made people angry. Sometimes they even tried to
beat him up.
This is what is left of the Painted
Stoa, or Porch, where Socrates used to teach, in Athens.
Socrates soon had a group of young men
who listened to him and learned from him how to think. Plato was one of
these young men. Socrates never charged them any money. But in 399 BC,
some of the Athenians got mad at Socrates for what he was teaching the
young men. They charged him in court with impiety (not respecting the
gods) and corrupting the youth (teaching young men bad things). People
thought he was against democracy, and he probably was - he thought the
smartest people should make the decisions for everyone. The Athenians
couldn't charge him with being against democracy, because they had
promised not to take revenge on anyone after the Peloponnesian War. So
they had to use these vague religious charges instead.
Socrates had a big trial in front of an
Athenian jury. He was convicted of these charges and sentenced to death,
and he died soon afterwards, when the guards gave him a cup of hemlock
(a poisonous plant) to drink.
Socrates never wrote down any of his
ideas while he was alive. But after he died, his student, Plato, did
write down some of what Socrates had said.
Socrates (470 BC–399 BC), was a
Classical Greek philosopher. Considered one of the founders of Western
philosophy, he strongly influenced Plato, who was his student, and
Aristotle, whom Plato taught. His work continues to form an important
part of the study of philosophy.
Principally renowned for his
contribution to the field of ethics, Socrates also lends his name to the
concepts of Socratic irony and the Socratic Method, or elenchus. The
latter remains a commonly used tool in a wide range of discussions, and
is a type of pedagogy in which a series of questions are asked not only
to draw individual answers, but to encourage fundamental insight into
the issue at hand. Socrates also made important and lasting
contributions to the fields of epistemology and logic, and the influence
of his ideas and approach, remains strong in providing a foundation for
much western philosophy which followed.
Biography of Socrates
The 'Socratic Problem'
Forming an accurate picture of the
historical Socrates and his philosophical view points is problematic at
best. This issue is known as the
Socratic Problem.
Socrates himself did not write
philosophical texts. Our knowledge of the man, his life, and his work is
based on writings by his students and contemporaries. Foremost among
them is Plato; however, works by Xenophon, Aristotle, and Aristophanes
also provide important insights. The difficulty of finding the “real”
Socrates arises because these works are often philosophical or dramatic
texts rather than straightforward histories. Aside from Thucydides (who
makes no mention of Socrates or philosophers in general), there is in
fact no such thing as straightforward history contemporary with Plato. A
corollary of this is that these sources don't claim to be historically
accurate. Historians are therefore faced with the challenge of
reconciling the various texts that come from these men to create an
accurate and consistent account of Socrates' life and work. The result
of such an effort is not necessarily realistic, merely consistent.
In general, Plato is viewed as the most
reliable and informative source of information about Socrates' life and
philosophy. However, it is also clear from other writings, and
historical artifacts that Socrates was not simply a character, or
invention, of Plato. The testimony of Xenophon and Aristotle, alongside
some of Aristophanes' work within The Clouds, can be usefully engaged in
fleshing out our perception of Socrates beyond Plato's work.
Read more about
Socratic Problem
Life of Socrates
Details about Socrates are derived from
three contemporary sources: the dialogues of Plato and Xenophon (both
students of Socrates), and the plays of Aristophanes. He has been
depicted by some scholars, including Eric Havelock and Walter Ong, as a
champion of oral modes of communication, standing up at the dawn of
writing against its haphazard diffusion.
Aristophanes' play The Clouds portrays
Socrates as a clown who teaches his students how to bamboozle their way
out of debt. Most of Aristophanes' works, however, function as parodies.
Thus, it is presumed that this characterization was also not literal.
According to Plato, Socrates' father
was Sophroniscus and his mother Phaenarete, a midwife. Though
characterized as unattractive in appearance and short of stature,
Socrates married Xanthippe, who was much younger than him. She bore him
three sons, Lamprocles, Sophroniscus and Menexenus. His friend Crito of
Alopece criticized him for abandoning his sons when he refused to try to
escape before his execution.
It is unclear how Socrates earned a
living. According to Timon of Phlius and later sources, Socrates took
over the profession of stonemasonry from his father. There was a
tradition in antiquity, not credited by modern scholarship, that
Socrates crafted the statues of the Three Graces, which stood near the
Acropolis until the second century AD.
There is evidence that Socrates never
engaged in a profession: In Xenophon's Symposium, Socrates is reported
as saying he devotes himself only to what he regards as the most
important art or occupation: discussing philosophy. Aristophanes
portrays Socrates as accepting payment for teaching and running a
sophist school with Chaerephon, in The Clouds, while in Plato's Apology
and Symposium and in Xenophon's accounts, Socrates explicitly denies
accepting payment for teaching. More specifically, in the Apology
Socrates cites his poverty as proof that he is not a teacher.
Several of Plato's dialogues refer to
Socrates' military service. Socrates says he served in the Athenian army
during three campaigns: at Potidaea, Amphipolis, and Delium. In the
Symposium Alcibiades describes Socrates' valour in the battles of
Potidaea and Delium, recounting how Socrates saved his life in the
former battle (219e-221b). Socrates' exceptional service at Delium is
also mentioned in the Laches by the general after whom the dialogue is
named (181b). In the Apology Socrates compares his military service to
his courtroom troubles, and says that anyone on the jury who thinks he
ought to retreat from philosophy must also think that soldiers should
retreat when it looks like they will be killed in battle.
Trial and Death
Socrates lived during the time of the
transition from the height of the Athenian hegemony to its decline with
the defeat by Sparta and its allies in the Peloponnesian War. At a time
when Athens sought to stabilize and recover from its humiliating defeat,
the Athenian public may have been entertaining doubts about democracy as
an efficient form of government. Socrates appears to have been a critic
of democracy, and some scholars interpret his trial as an expression of
political infighting.
Despite claiming death-defying loyalty
to his city, Socrates' pursuit of virtue and his strict adherence to
truth clashed with the current course of Athenian politics and society.
Socrates praises Sparta, archrival to Athens, directly and indirectly in
various dialogues. But perhaps the most historically accurate of
Socrates' offenses to the city was his position as a social and moral
critic. Rather than upholding a status quo and accepting the development
of immorality within his region, Socrates worked to undermine the
collective notion of "might makes right" so common to Greece during this
period. Plato refers to Socrates as the "gadfly" of the state (as the
gadfly stings the horse into action, so Socrates stung Athens), insofar
as he irritated the establishment with considerations of justice and the
pursuit of goodness. His attempts to improve the Athenian's sense of
justice may have been the source of his execution.
According to Plato's Apology, Socrates'
life as the "gadfly" of Athens began when his friend Chaerephon asked
the oracle at Delphi if anyone was wiser than Socrates; the Oracle
responded that none was wiser. Socrates believed that what the Oracle
had said was a riddle, because he believed that he possessed no wisdom
whatsoever. He proceeded to test the riddle through approaching men who
were considered to be wise by the people of Athens, such as statesmen,
poets, and artisans, in order to refute the pronouncement of the Oracle.
But questioning them, Socrates came to the conclusion that while each
man thought he knew a great deal and was very wise, they in fact knew
very little and were not really wise at all. Socrates realized that the
Oracle was correct in that while so-called wise men thought themselves
wise and yet were not, he himself knew he was not wise at all which,
paradoxically, made him the wiser one since he was the only person aware
of his own ignorance. Socrates' paradoxical wisdom made the prominent
Athenians he publicly questioned look foolish, turning them against him
and leading to accusations of wrongdoing. Socrates defended his role as
a gadfly until the end: at his trial, when Socrates was asked to propose
his own punishment, he suggests a wage paid by the government and free
dinners for the rest of his life instead, to finance the time he spends
as Athens' benefactor.Socrates was nevertheless found guilty of
corrupting the minds of the youth of Athens and sentenced to death by
drinking a mixture containing poison hemlock.
According to Xenophon's story, Socrates
purposefully gave a defiant defense to the jury because "he believed he
would be better off dead". Xenophon goes on to describe a defense by
Socrates that explains the rigors of old age, and how Socrates would be
glad to circumvent them by being sentenced to death. It is also
understood that Socrates also wished to die because he "actually
believed the right time had come for him to die".
Xenophon and Plato agree that Socrates
had an opportunity to escape, as his followers were able to bribe the
prison guards. He chose to stay for several reasons:
He believed that such a flight would
indicate a fear of death, which he believed no true philosopher has.
If he fled Athens his teaching would fare no better in another country
as he would continue questioning all he met and undoubtedly incur their
displeasure.
Having knowingly agreed to live under the city's laws, he implicitly
subjected himself to the possibility of being accused of crimes by its
citizens and judged guilty by its jury. To do otherwise would have
caused him to break his "social contract" with the state, and so harming
the state, an act contrary to Socratic principle.
The full reasoning behind his refusal to flee is the main subject of the
Crito.
Socrates' death is described at the end
of Plato's Phaedo. Socrates turned down the pleas of Crito to attempt an
escape from prison. After drinking the poison, he was instructed to walk
around until his limbs felt heavy. After he laid down, the man who
administered the poison pinched his foot. Socrates could no longer feel
his legs. The numbness slowly crept up his body until it reached his
heart. Shortly before his death, Socrates speaks his last words to
Crito: "Crito, we owe a cock to Asclepius. Please, don't forget to pay
the debt." Asclepius was the Greek god for curing illness, and it is
likely that Socrates' last words were implied to mean that death is the
cure, and freedom, of the soul from the body. The Roman philosopher
Seneca attempted to emulate Socrates' death by hemlock when forced to
commit suicide by the Emperor Nero.
Philosophy of Socrates
Socratic method
Perhaps his most important contribution
to Western thought is his dialectic method of inquiry, known as the
Socratic Method or method of '"elenchos," which he largely applied to
the examination of key moral concepts such as the Good and Justice. It
was first described by Plato in the Socratic Dialogues. To solve a
problem, it would be broken down into a series of questions, the answers
to which gradually distill the answer you seek. The influence of this
approach is most strongly felt today in the use of the Scientific
Method, in which hypothesis is the first stage. The development and
practice of this method is one of Socrates' most enduring contributions,
and is a key factor in earning his mantle as the father of political
philosophy, ethics or moral philosophy, and as a figurehead of all the
central themes in Western philosophy.
To illustrate the use of the Socratic
method; a series of questions are posed to help a person or group to
determine their underlying beliefs and the extent of their knowledge.
The Socratic method is a negative method of hypothesis elimination, in
that better hypotheses are found by steadily identifying and eliminating
those which lead to contradictions. It was designed to force one to
examine one's own beliefs and the validity of such beliefs. In fact,
Socrates once said, "I know you won't believe me, but the highest form
of Human Excellence is to question oneself and others."
Philosophical beliefs of Socrates
The beliefs of Socrates, as distinct
from those of Plato, are difficult to discern. Little in the way of
concrete evidence exists to demarcate the two. The lengthy theories
given in most of the dialogues are those of Plato, and it is thought
that Plato so adapted the Socratic style as to make the literary
character and the philosopher himself impossible to distinguish. Others
argue that he did have his own theories and beliefs, but there is much
controversy over what these might have been, owing to the difficulty of
separating Socrates from Plato and the difficulty of interpreting even
the dramatic writings concerning Socrates. Consequently, distinguishing
the philosophical beliefs of Socrates from those of Plato and Xenophon
is not easy and it must be remembered that what is attributed to
Socrates might more closely reflect the specific concerns of these
thinkers.
If anything in general can be said
about the philosophical beliefs of Socrates, it is that he was morally,
intellectually, and politically at odds with his fellow Athenians. When
he is on trial for heresy and corrupting the minds of the youth of
Athens, he uses his method of elenchos to demonstrate to the jurors that
their moral values are wrong-headed. He tells them that they are
concerned with their families, careers, and political responsibilities
when they ought to be worried about the "welfare of their souls."
Socrates' belief in the immortality of the soul, and his conviction that
the gods had singled him out as a divine emissary seemed to provoke if
not ridicule, at least annoyance. Socrates also questioned the Sophistic
doctrine that arete (that is, virtue) can be taught. He liked to observe
that successful fathers (such as the prominent military general
Pericles) did not produce sons of their own quality. Socrates argued
that moral excellence was more a matter of divine bequest than parental
nurture. This belief may have contributed to his lack of anxiety about
the future of his own sons.
Socrates frequently says that his ideas
are not his own, but his teachers'. He mentions several influences:
Prodicus the rhetor and Anaxagoras the scientist. Perhaps surprisingly,
Socrates claims to have been deeply influenced by two women besides his
mother. He says that Diotima, a witch and priestess from Mantinea taught
him all he knows about eros, or love, and that Aspasia, the mistress of
Pericles, taught him the art of funeral orations. John Burnet argued
that his principal teacher was the Anaxagorean Archelaus but that his
ideas were as Plato described them; Eric A. Havelock, on the other hand,
considered Socrates' association with the Anaxagoreans to be evidence of
Plato's philosophical separation from Socrates.
Knowledge
Socrates often said that his wisdom was
limited to an awareness of his own ignorance. Socrates believed that
wrongdoing was a consequence of ignorance and that those who did wrong
knew no better. The one thing Socrates consistently claimed to have
knowledge of was "the art of love" which he connected with the concept
of "the love of wisdom", i.e., philosophy. He never actually claimed to
be wise, only to understand the path that a lover of wisdom must take in
pursuing it. It is debatable whether Socrates believed that humans (as
opposed to gods like Apollo) could actually become wise. On the one
hand, he drew a clear line between human ignorance and ideal knowledge;
on the other, Plato's Symposium (Diotima's Speech) and Republic
(Allegory of the Cave) describe a method for ascending to wisdom.
In Plato's Theaetetus (150a) Andre
compares himself to a monkey (προμνηστικός), as distinguished from a
panderer (προᾰγωγός). This distinction is echoed in Xenophon's Symposium
(3.20), when Socrates jokes about his certainty of being able to make a
fortune, if he chose to practice the art of pandering. For his part as a
philosophical interlocutor, he leads his respondent to a clearer
conception of wisdom, although he claims that he is not himself a
teacher (Apology). His role, he claims, is more properly to be
understood as analogous to a midwife (μαῖα). Socrates explains that he
is himself barren of theories, but knows how to bring the theories of
others to birth and determine whether they are worthy or mere "wind
eggs" (ἀνεμιαῖον). Perhaps significantly, he points out that midwives
are barren due to age, and women who have never given birth are unable
to become midwives; a truly barren woman would have no experience or
knowledge of birth and would be unable to separate the worthy infants
from those that should be left on the hillside to be exposed. To judge
this, the midwife must have experience and knowledge of what she is
judging.
Virtue
Socrates believed that the best way for
people to live was to focus on self-development rather than the pursuit
of material wealth. He always invited others to try to concentrate more
on friendships and a sense of true community, for Socrates felt that
this was the best way for people to grow together as a populace. His
actions lived up to this: in the end, Socrates accepted his death
sentence when most thought he would simply leave Athens, as he felt he
could not run away from or go against the will of his community; as
mentioned above, his reputation for valor on the battlefield was without
reproach.
The idea that humans possessed certain
virtues formed a common thread in Socrates' teachings. These virtues
represented the most important qualities for a person to have, foremost
of which were the philosophical or intellectual virtues. Socrates
stressed that "virtue was the most valuable of all possessions; the
ideal life was spent in search of the Good. Truth lies beneath the
shadows of existence, and that it is the job of the philosopher to show
the rest how little they really know." Ultimately, virtue relates to the
form of the Good; to be truly good and not just act with "right
opinion"; one must come to know the unchanging Good in itself. In the
Republic,written by Plato, Socrates described the "divided line", a
continuum of ignorance to knowledge with the Good on top of it all; only
at the top of this line do we find true good and the knowledge of such.
Politics
It is often argued that Socrates
believed "ideals belong in a world that only the wise man can
understand", making the philosopher the only type of person suitable to
govern others. According to Plato's account, Socrates was in no way
subtle about his particular beliefs on government. He openly objected to
the democracy that ran Athens during his adult life. It was not only
Athenian democracy: Socrates objected to any form of government that did
not conform to his ideal of a perfect republic led by philosophers, and
Athenian government was far from that. It is, however, possible that
Plato's account is colored here by his own views. During the last years
of Socrates' life, Athens was in continual flux due to political
upheaval. Democracy was at last overthrown by a junta known as the
Thirty Tyrants, led by Plato's relative, Critias, who had been a student
of Socrates. The Tyrants ruled for about a year before the Athenian
democracy was reinstated, at which point it declared an amnesty for all
recent events.
Socrates' opposition to democracy is
often denied, and the question is one of the biggest philosophical
debates when trying to determine what, exactly, it was that Socrates
believed. The strongest argument of those who claim that Socrates did
not actually believe in the idea of philosopher kings is Socrates'
constant refusal to enter into politics or participate in government of
any sort; he often stated that he could not look into other's matters or
tell people how to live their lives when he did not yet understand how
to live his own. He believed he was a philosopher engaged in the pursuit
of Truth, and did not claim to know it fully. Socrates' acceptance of
his death sentence, after his conviction by the Boule (Senate), can also
be seen to support this view. It is often claimed that much of the
anti-democratic leanings are from Plato, who was never able to overcome
his disgust at what was done to his teacher. In any case, it is clear
that Socrates thought that the rule of the Thirty Tyrants was at least
as objectionable as democracy; when called before them to assist in the
arrest of a fellow Athenian, Socrates refused and narrowly escaped death
before the Tyrants were overthrown. He did however fulfill his duty to
serve as prytanis when a trial of a group of generals who presided over
a disastrous naval campaign were judged; even then he maintained an
uncompromising attitude, being one of those who refused to proceed in a
manner not supported by the laws, despite intense pressure. Judging by
his actions, he considered the rule of the Thirty Tyrants less
legitimate than that of the democratic senate who sentenced him to
death.
Mysticism
In the dialogues of Plato, Socrates
often seems to support a mystical side, discussing reincarnation and the
mystery religions; however, this is generally attributed to Plato.
Regardless, this cannot be dismissed out of hand, as we cannot be sure
of the differences between the views of Plato and Socrates; in addition,
there seem to be some corollaries in the works of Xenophon. In the
culmination of the philosophic path as discussed in Plato's Symposium
and Republic, one comes to the Sea of Beauty or to the sight of the form
of the Good in an experience akin to mystical revelation; only then can
one become wise. (In the Symposium, Socrates credits his speech on the
philosophic path to his teacher, the priestess Diotima, who is not even
sure if Socrates is capable of reaching the highest mysteries.) In the
Meno, he refers to the Eleusinian Mysteries, telling Meno he would
understand Socrates' answers better if only he could stay for the
initiations next week. Further confusions result from the nature of
these sources, insofar as the Platonic dialogues are arguably the work
of an artist-philosopher, whose meaning does not volunteer itself to the
passive reader nor again the lifelong scholar. Plato himself was a
playwright before taking up the study of philosophy. His works are,
indeed, dialogues; Plato's choice of this, the medium of Sophocles,
Euripides, and the fictions of theatre, may reflect the interpretable
nature of his writings. What is more, the first word of nearly all
Plato's works is a, or the, significant term for that respective study,
and is used with the commonly approved definition in mind. Finally, the
Phaedrus and the Symposium each allude to Socrates' coy delivery of
philosophic truths in conversation; the Socrates of the Phaedrus goes so
far as to demand such dissembling and mystery in all writing. The
mysticism we often find in Plato, appearing here and there and couched
in some enigmatic tract of symbol and irony, is often at odds with the
mysticism that Plato's Socrates expounds in some other dialogue. These
mystical resolutions to thitherto rigorous inquiries and analyses fail
to satisfy caring readers, without fail. Whether they would fail to
satisfy readers who understood them is another question, and will not,
in all probability, ever be resolved.
Perhaps the most interesting facet of
this is Socrates' reliance on what the Greeks called his "daemonic
sign", an averting (ἀποτρεπτικός) inner voice that Socrates heard only
when he was about to make a mistake. It was this sign that prevented
Socrates from entering into politics. In the Phaedrus, we are told
Socrates considered this to be a form of "divine madness", the sort of
insanity that is a gift from the gods and gives us poetry, mysticism,
love, and even philosophy itself. Alternately, the sign is often taken
to be what we would call "intuition"; however, Socrates'
characterization of the phenomenon as "daemonic" suggests that its
origin is divine, mysterious, and independent of his own thoughts.
Satirical playwrights
Socrates was prominently lampooned in
Aristophanes' comedy The Clouds, produced when Socrates was in his
mid-forties; he said at his trial (according to Plato) that the laughter
of the theater was a harder task to answer than the arguments of his
accusers. Soren Kierkegaard believed this play was a more accurate
representation of Socrates than those of his students. In the play,
Socrates is ridiculed for his dirtiness, which is associated with the
Laconizing fad; also in plays by Callias, Eupolis, and Telecleides. In
all of these, Socrates and the Sophists were criticised for "the moral
dangers inherent in contemporary thought and literature."
Prose sources
Plato, Xenophon, and Aristotle are the
main sources for the historical Socrates; however, Xenophon and Plato
were direct disciples of Socrates, and presumably, they idealize him;
however, they wrote the only continuous descriptions of Socrates that
have come down to us. Aristotle refers frequently, but in passing, to
Socrates in his writings. Almost all of Plato's works center around
Socrates. However, Plato's later works appear to be more his own
philosophy put into the mouth of his mentor.
The Socratic dialogues
The Socratic dialogues are a series of
dialogues written by Plato and Xenophon in the form of discussions
between Socrates and other persons of his time, or as discussions
between Socrates' followers over his concepts. Plato's Phaedo is an
example of this latter category. Although his Apology is a monologue
delivered by Socrates, it is usually grouped with the dialogues.
The Apology professes to be a record of
the actual speech that Socrates delivered in his own defense at the
trial. In the Athenian jury system, an "apology" is composed of three
parts: a speech, followed by a counter-assessment, then some final
words. "Apology" is a transliteration, not a translation, of the Greek
apologia, meaning "defense"; in this sense it is not apologetic
according to our contemporary use of the term.
Plato generally does not place his own
ideas in the mouth of a specific speaker; he lets ideas emerge via the
Socratic method, under the guidance of Socrates. Most of the dialogues
present Socrates applying this method to some extent, but nowhere as
completely as in the Euthyphro. In this dialogue, Socrates and Euthyphro
go through several iterations of refining the answer to Socrates'
question, "...What is the pious, and what the impious?"
In Plato's dialogues, learning appears
as a process of remembering. The soul, before its incarnation in the
body, was in the realm of Ideas (very similar to the Platonic "Forms").
There, it saw things the way they truly are, rather than the pale
shadows or copies we experience on earth. By a process of questioning,
the soul can be brought to remember the ideas in their pure form, thus
bringing wisdom.
Especially for Plato's writings
referring to Socrates, it is not always clear which ideas brought
forward by Socrates (or his friends) actually belonged to Socrates and
which of these may have been new additions or elaborations by Plato —
this is known as the Socratic problem. Generally, the early works of
Plato are considered to be close to the spirit of Socrates, whereas the
later works — including Phaedo and the Republic — are considered to be
possibly products of Plato's elaborations.
Legacy
Immediate Influence
Immediately, the students of Socrates
set to work both on exercising their perceptions of his teachings in
politics and also on developing many new philosophical schools of
thought. Some of Athens' controversial and anti-democratic tyrants were
contemporary or posthumous students of Socrates including Alcibiades and
Critias. Critias' cousin, Plato would go on to found the Academy in 385
BC - which gained so much notoriety that its name Academy became the
base word for educational institutions in later European languages such
as English, French, and Italian. Plato's protege, another important
figure of the Classical era, Aristotle went on to tutor Alexander the
Great and also to found his own school in 335 BC- the Lyceum, whose name
also now means an educational institution.
While Socrates was shown to demote the
importance of institutional knowledge like mathematics or science in
relation to the human condition in his dialogues, Plato would emphasize
it with metaphysical overtones mirroring that of Pythagoras - the former
who would dominate Western thought well into the Renaissance. Aristotle
himself was as much of a philosopher as he was a scientist with
rudimentary work in the fields of biology and physics.
Socratic thought along the lines of
challenging conventions, especially in stressing a simplistic way of
living, became divorced from Plato's more detached and philosophical
pursuits but was inherited heavily by one of Socrates' older and diehard
students, Antisthenes who became another originator of a philosophy in
the years after Socrates' death - Cynicism. Antisthenes attacked Plato
and Alcibiades over what he deemed as their betrayal of Socrates' tenets
in his writings.
The idea of austerity being hand in
hand with an ethical life or one with piety, ignored by Plato and
Aristotle and somewhat dealt with by the Cynics, formed the core of
another philosophy in 281 BC - Stoicism when Zeno of Citium would
discover Socrates' works and then learn from Crates, a Cynic
philosopher. None of the schools however, would inherit his tendency to
openly associate with and respect women or the regular citizen.
Later historical effects
While some of the later contributions
of Socrates to Hellenistic Era culture and philosophy as well as the
Roman Era has been lost to time, his teachings began a resurgence in
both medieval Europe and the Islamic Middle East alongside those of
Aristotle and Stoicism. Socrates is mentioned in the dialogue Kuzari by
Jewish philosopher and rabbi Yehuda Halevi in which a Jew instructs the
Khazar king about Judaism. al-Kindi, a well-known Arabic philosopher,
introduced and tried to reconcile Socrates and Hellenistic philosophy to
an Islamic audience.
Socrates' stature in Western philosophy
returned in full force with the Renaissance and the Age of Reason in
Europe when political theory began to resurface under those like Locke
and Hobbes. Voltaire even went so far as to write a satirical play about
the Trial of Socrates. There were a number of paintings about his life
including Socrates Tears Alcibiades from the Embrace of Sensual Pleasure
by Jean-Baptiste Regnault and The Death of Socrates by Jacques-Louis
David in the later 18th Century.
To this day, the Socratic method is
still used in classrooms and law schools as a way of discussing complex
topics in order to expose the underlying issues in both the subject and
the speaker. He has been rewarded with accolades ranging from numerous
mentions in pop culture such as the movie Bill and Ted's Excellent
Adventure and a Greek rock band to numerous busts in academic
institutions in recognition of his contribution to education.
Ahmadiyya Viewpoint
Mirza Tahir Ahmad (the fourth Caliph of
the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community) argued in his book Revelation,
Rationality, Knowledge & Truth that Socrates was a prophet of the
ancient. The apparent prophetic qualities of Socrates are indeed a
subject for debate. The constant reference to the oracle and how it
performs the active function of a moral compass by preventing him from
unseemly acts could easily be taken as a reference to - or substitute
for revelation. Similarly, Socrates often refers to God in the singular
as opposed to the plural.
Criticism
Evaluation and reaction to Socrates has
been undertaken with both historical and philosophical inquiry from the
time of his death to the present day with a multitude of conclusions and
perspectives. One of the initial criticisms levied against the
philosopher was presented at his trial - that he was not the proponent
of a philosophy but an individual with a method of undermining the
fabric of Athenian society, a charge carried by the 500-man jury of
Athenians which sentenced him to death. Although he was not directly
prosecuted for his connection to Critias, leader of the Spartan-backed
Thirty Tyrants, he was seen as a controversial figure that mentored
oligarchs who became abusive tyrants and undermined Athenian democracy.
The Sophist establishment which he railed at in life survived him but
was rapidly overtaken by the many philosophical schools of thought that
Socrates influenced by the 3rd Century BC.
Socrates' death is considered iconic
and his status as a martyr of philosophy overshadowed most contemporary
and posthumous criticism at the time. However, Xenophon attempts to
explain that Socrates purposely welcomed the hemlock due to his old age
using the arguably self-destructive testimony to the jury as evidence.
Direct criticism of Socrates almost disappears at this point but there
is a noticeable preference for Plato or Aristotle over the elements of
Socratic philosophy that are distinct from those of his students even
into the Middle Ages.
Modern scholarship has held that with
so much of the philosopher obscured and possibly even altered by Plato,
it is impossible to gain a clear picture of Socrates amidst all the
seeming contradictions. That both Cynicism and Stoicism, which carried
heavy influence from Socratic thought, were unlike or even contrary to
Platonism further illustrates this. This ambiguity and lack of
reliability serves as the modern basis of criticism - that it is near
impossible to know the real Socrates. Some controversy also exists about
claims of Socrates exempting himself from the homosexual customs of
Ancient Greece and not believing in the Olympian gods to the point of
being monotheistic or if this was an attempt by later medieval scholars
to reconcile him with the morals of the era. However, it is still
commonly taught and held with little exception that Socrates is the
founder of modern Western philosophy to the point that any philosophers
before him are referred to as pre-Socratic.
References
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Socrates
http://www.historyforkids.org/learn/greeks/philosophy/socrates.htm
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