To Leave or Not to Leave: The Decisions of Socrates
To leave or not to leave is the decision of Socrates and his reasoning behind staying put and waiting at the door for death. To begin with, Socrates always posed questions in order to understand where someone was truly going. Socrates expressed himself through words that allowed him to better understand the world around him, even though that got him in this pinch. I’ll address why Socrates decided to stay behind even though Crtio begged him to live. Through the view that he was unjustly put there, that no one would willingly do wrong, take care of your children.
Begin with the idea that Socrates knew he could escape the prison in which the city of Athens put him. The scene was set with
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Not so surprisingly, Socrates has decided to remain and accept his punishment of death, even when Crito has tried to persuade him to leave and fulfill what he is meant to do with his life. Socrates had argued many reasons why he stayed put; one of the few that stuck out was the idea that he was put there unjustly by the state and that his leaving would only prove their point about him. Socrates also points out that no one willingly does something wrong. Socrate felt that if he did up and left, he would be viewed as an outlaw and unwelcome in other societies. This Ideal would like to feel ashamed and an actual model of a corrupt life. Which, in his eyes, is not one worth living or, in other words, one that he can not do what he loves. Ask questions and make Athens citizens address things in a more profound sense. I find this argument the most pervasive one in my eyes because it shows an accurate stand on how he thought he would be viewed in other societies. This also connects to the idea that he would be proving the jury’s verdict correct—essentially making him a criminal for doing what he loves. Socrate argument here is not just about himself, but about how the state fed and nurtured him and that he, in a way, had to follow the social contract of Athens because he chose to stay there, so he decided the laws he had to follow. This relates to political philosophy because it addresses the law in which the city of Athens