Socrates of Athens


SOCRATES OF ATHENS
It may come as a surprise to some that in ancient Greece people paid little attention to family names. Thus even though there may have been other persons named Socrates in Athens in those days, since the famous philosopher did indeed become famous, all that was necessary as a designation was “Socrates of Athens.” We do not know very much about the great philosopher other than that he was the spoke-person for Plato’s philosophy in most of the latter’s writings, even though it is not certain that Socrates would have always agreed with Plato. Nonetheless, most of what we know about Socrates as a person we learn from various historians of his day.
He was born into an aristocratic family, served with distinction in both the army and the Senate, and retired around the age of 70 to become an itinerate teacher of young Athenian boys. He had a wife named Xantippe and several children, one born when he was nearing 70 years of age. He spent his final years defending himself before the Athenian Parliament against the charges that he was a heretic who misled the Athenian youths. His primary accuser was a man named Miletus. The basic drama of this trial was recorded by Plato in his famous Apology. He was eventually found guilty and sentenced to death. His last days as a prisoner, as well as the account of death, are reported in Plato’s Crito and Phaedo.
From a political and historical point of view the most important thing to bear in mind is that in reality Socrates was being tried as a scapegoat for the defeat of Athens by the Spartans in their war a few years earlier. At its heart, this trial was also a kind of payback for the impact of Socrates’ manner of teaching and the fact that he taught in the streets without collecting any fees. In this latter matter he stood out against the other free-lance teachers, such as the Sophists, who charged significant fees for their efforts. In reality it was Socrates’ manner of teaching that confused and angered his enemies. In his defense Socrates claimed that he had been stimulated to begin his teaching career by the Oracle at Delphi’s statement that “Socrates of Athens is the wisest man of all.” Socrates said that he had set out to prove the oracle wrong by finding at least one person in Athens who was wiser than himself.
When we turn to his manner of teaching we arrive at the heart of who and what Socrates really was. His method is, in fact, called “The Socratic method,” and it involves the serious and relentless of asking one crucial question after another until one arrives at a satisfactory answer. It is of course, true that this method of searching for knowledge can be long and arduous. Indeed, Plato’s dialogues, in which he sought both to illustrate and apply Socrates’ method, often seem endless and overly complex. They begin innocently enough, with Socrates or one of his friends asking a question about the nature of truth, knowledge, or goodness, and then diving into a long, convoluted discussion of the various possibilities and ramifications thereof. Along the way Socrates often offers a few specific concerns and insights, sometimes even about side-issues, which to him seem pertinent.
Scholars are of mixed opinions as to how much of these conversations actually took place, as well as to how much of what we are told what Socrates said he actually did say. Surely a great deal of their content was the work of Plato himself expressing his own ideas. Indeed, it is pretty much agreed that most of such books as the Republic and the Timaeus seem far too theoretic to serve as common representatives of Socrates’ own thoughts. It is clear, however, that the dialogical pattern of Plato’s dialogues does represent the sort of posture that Socrates would have struck when approaching the various issues in question. The crucial thing about the so-called “Socratic method” of teaching has to do with the movement from one question or issue to the next after the initial problem has been focused.
In one dialogue, for example, the Euthyphro, Socrates encounters his friend Euthyphro on his way to “see justice done” by having his own father jailed for killing a man. Socrates detains him with a series of questions about the meaning of the term ‘justice’, etc. until finally Euthyphro runs off complaining that all these questions only confuse the issue. The issue of the value of all these questions is presented directly when Socrates is asked later on in the Republic how he knows that asking and answering questions will lead to knowledge. He answers, in effect, that he is sure that if we keep asking questions and seeking their answers “we shall be better and wiser people.”
At one point in his defense against the charges presented against him by Miletus Socrates makes the following statement: “Wickedness runs faster than death.” I have always found this remark to be as deep as it is seemingly paradoxical. His point was clearly that the claims and accusations of those who were accusing him of being an “enemy of the state” were driven by vengeful, wicked motives. To say that wickedness “runs faster than death” is to say that wickedness is worse than death, indeed outlives it. The expression “out runs” carries far more clout than does “out lasts death” because it cannot be erased by it. Socrates said this knowing that he himself was facing certain death at the hands of the government, but knowing as well that its evil will still be present long after both he and his accusers are dead. Somehow for me the phrase “runs faster than death” carries far more clout than something like “lasts longer” would. In my mind it is this insight that renders Socrates of Athens to be more wise than his contemporaries, and even our own.


5 responses to “Socrates of Athens”

  1. Excerpts from recent translations of “Plato’s Apology”. Three terms used (in addition to “wickedness”) are synonyms: “unrighteousness”; “depravity”; “evilness”. Possibly interesting is that one of the translated terms – “shame” (George Theodoridis, 2015) – is a perception that is subjectively experienced by “actors” themselves (as opposed to constituting the judgments of observers) about “evilness”.

    “The difficulty, my friends, is not to avoid death, but to avoid unrighteousness; for that runs faster than death. I am old and move slowly, and the slower runner has overtaken me, and my accusers are keen and quick, and the faster runner, who is unrighteousness, has overtaken them. And now I depart hence condemned by you to suffer the penalty of death, —they too go their ways condemned by the truth to suffer the penalty of villainy and wrong; and I must abide by my award — let them abide by theirs. I suppose that these things may be regarded as fated, —and I think that they are well.”
    Translation by Benjamin Jowett (1999):
    https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/1656/pg1656-images.html

    “… this is not difficult, O Athenians! to escape death; but it is much more difficult to avoid depravity, for it runs swifter than death. And now I, being slow and aged, am overtaken by the slower of the two; but my accusers, being strong and active, have been overtaken by the swifter, wickedness. And now I depart, condemned by you to death; but they condemned by truth, as guilty of iniquity and injustice: and I abide my sentence, and so do they. These things, perhaps, ought so to be, and I think that they are for the best.”
    Translation by Henry Cary (2004):
    https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/13726/pg13726-images.html#the_apology_of_socrates

    “… I fear gentlemen that escaping death is not as difficult as escaping shame because shame is a faster runner than death. And so, now, since I am old and slow, I am overtaken by the slower of the two, while my accusers, being strong and fast have been overtaken by the other, the faster of the two, the evilness. So now I shall leave here, having been condemned to death by you whilst my accusers are condemned by the power of the truth as being guilty of dishonesty and injustice. I accept my own punishment as should they. Perhaps all this has happened the way they should, which I think is fair and reasonable.”
    Translated by George Theodoridis (2015):
    https://bacchicstage.wordpress.com/plato/platos-apology

    • I like this idea and I assume it is related to the saying “there’s no rest for the wicked.” If “wickedness/unrighteousness/shame” is faster than death it’s because it’s a shallow and ignorant way of living. When someone is unworried about integrity and morality, great progress can be made quickly. It seems like there’s analogy to the biblically story about the rich man and the “eye of the needle.” Running faster than death might feel like the way to go but is it? Not thinking about the worth of one’s life is not the same as not fearing death. It’s just running around like a chicken with its head cut off.

      • Among the terms: “wickedness”; “unrighteousness”; “depravity”; “evilness”; and “shame”, only the latter is a typically inwardly directed value judgment – all of the others are arguably subjective value judgments that persons are most likely to avere regarding the thoughts/acts of other individuals (as opposed to themselves). Seemingly similarly so for perceptions surrounding “integrity” and “morality”. That Socrates and his contemporaries had differing viewpoints seems not surprising. Perhaps what made Socrates arguably wiser is that his chosen quest (as was described by others) was to perhaps falsify the Oracle’s assertion that he was the “wisest person in Athens”. As Socrates was thought to have believed that he himself knew “practically nothing”, he may have been the wiser only based upon a condition where it might be reasonably concluded that other Athenians knew “practically nothing” themselves – where his unique personal recognition and acknowledgement of his own ignorance set him apart from those Athenian contemporaries who (literally, as well as figuratively) judged and summarily condemned him. Perhaps Socrates superior wisdom was ultimately demonstrated by his acceptance of the existence of the arbitrarily subjective and socially expedient functional nature of his contemporaries’ value judgments, declarations, and decrees concerning his corporeal existence – and in doing so, transcending their subjectivity merely masquerading as politically self-declared sanctimonious objectivity. By letting go of his corporeal subjectivity in a manner that his contemporaries were wholly incapable of conceiving.

  2. Likewise, “there’s no rest for the wicked.” You outrun death only if you run shallowly, merely on the surface of life. ‘Running around like a chicken with its head cut off.’ But death still comes for and catches up with you eventually. Reminds me of the turtle and hare story and of the rich man and heaven and the camel and the “eye of the needle.” It seems like fear of death is primarily fear of regret you wasted your one life and chance to some extent.

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