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Philosophy

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Philosophy Socrates - The Greatest Greek Philosophers Socrates: 470 B.C. - 399 B.C. Plato: 427 B.C. - 347 B.C. Aristotle: 384 B.C. - 322 B.C. (dates are ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Philosophy


1
Philosophy Socrates -
2
The Greatest Greek Philosophers
  • Socrates 470 B.C. - 399 B.C.
  • Plato 427 B.C. - 347 B.C.
  • Aristotle 384 B.C. - 322 B.C.
  • (dates are approximate)

3
Charges against Socrates
  • Informal charges
  • "Socrates is an evil-doer, and a curious person,
    who searches into things under the earth and in
    heaven, and he makes the worse appear the better
    cause and he teaches the aforesaid doctrines to
    others." (P 7b)
  • Formal charges
  • "Socrates in guilty of corrupting the young and
    of not believing in the gods in whom the city
    believes, but in other new divinities." (Apology
    24b)

4
Oracle
  • An oracle is a person or agency considered to be
    a source of wise counsel or prophetic opinion. It
    may also be a revealed prediction or precognition
    of the future, from deities, that is spoken
    through another object or life-form

5
  • The oracle was associated with the cults of
    deities derived from the great goddess of nature
    and fertility, the preeminent ancient oraclethe
    Delphic Oracleoperated at the Temple of Apollo
    at Delphi. Oracles were thought to be portals
    through which the gods spoke to man.

6
  • The Delphic Oracle exerted considerable influence
    throughout Hellenic culture. Distinctively, this
    female was essentially the highest authority both
    civilly and religiously in male-dominated ancient
    Greece. She responded to the questions of
    citizens, foreigners, kings, and philosophers on
    issues of political impact, war, duty, crime,
    laws, even personal issues.3

7
Socrates and Wisdom
  • Oracle No man is wiser than Socrates. (P 8b)
  • Socrates tries to prove the oracle wrong.
  • He searches for someone wiser than he.
    (Politicians, poets, artisans) He finds others
    aren't as wise as they appear.
  • He concludes He has a wisdom that they don't
    have
  • Socrates "I am better off than he is--for he
    knows nothing, and thinks that he knows I
    neither know nor think that I know. In this
    latter particular, then, I seem to have slightly
    the advantage of him." (P 9a)
  • Neither he nor they know anything (important),
    but they think they do and Socrates knows that he
    doesn't know.

8
Interpretations of the Delphic Oracle
  • Oracle No man is wiser than Socrates. (P 8b)
  • Socrates tries to prove the oracle wrong.
  • Perhaps Socrates intends to show the oracle
    (which he believed to be divine) to be right
    ("vindicate" (P 9b)) by trying hard to prove it
    wrong (by finding a counterexample) and failing?
  • Socrates' initial interpretation
  • "I am the wisest of men." ( P 8b) Another
    interpretation of oracle No person is wise (not
    that Socrates is wiser than others). Socrates
    seems to accept this. "By his answer he intends
    to show that the wisdom of men is worth little or
    nothing he is not speaking of Socrates, he is
    only using my name by way of illustration ..." (P
    9b) A feminist interpretation
  • Only women are wise!

9
Socratic Method
  • (Illustrated by Socrates questioning of Meletus)
  • Someone claims to know something.
  • Socrates questions the person.
  • Through questioning Socrates gets the person to
    make claims.
  • Socrates himself avoids making claims, but simply
    focuses claims the other person makes.
  • Socrates uses logic to deduce other claims from
    these, but still only proceeds if and when the
    other person accepts these further claims.
  • Socrates shows that these claims are
    self-contradictory.
  • Socrates concludes that the person does not know
    (and is not wise).

10
Some other topics in the Apology
  • Socrates defense against charges of corrupting
    the youth
  • Socrates defense against charges of atheism
  • Socrates "voice"
  • Socrates political career
  • The result of the trial
  • Socrates proposal for punishment
  • Socrates attitude toward death
  • The "death is a blessing" argument

11
The Death of Socrates
12
  • When he was 70, he was accused of corrupting the
    youth of Athens as well as being a threat to the
    state and authority.
  • They brought this upon him in the hopes of
    humiliating him by making him grovel beg for
    mercy.
  • Instead he lectured the jury of 500 about their
    ignorance.

13
  • When he was found guilty and was asked to suggest
    his own punishment he recommended that they build
    a statue in his honour and place it in the main
    square in Athens.
  • They condemned him to death but were prepared to
    look the other way if he were to bribe the prison
    guard and escape.
  • Despite his friends pleas, Socrates refused to
    break the law.

14
  • He drank poison Hemlock and philosophized with
    his friends until his last breath.
  • He became a martyr for truth.
  • His weakness He assumed that if people knew what
    the right thing was to do, they would do it.
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