Socrates Quote Analysis

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I shall not give up my philosophy as long as I breath”, those are my favorite words by one of the wisest humans that history has. Socrates was a philosopher that was born in 469 B.C. Ironically how Socrates, although that he was very smart, he didn’t knew how to read or write so all the information that history has is because of his pupils Plato and Xenophon. By the age of 17 he was already the favorite pupil of Arca Laius. Apparently, Socrates was a humble man because it is known that he frequently spoke to the citizens of Athens and discussed questions of justice and virtue, he wanted that the citizens of Athens to be more “morally perfect”. He loved his city with his life, he served in the Peloponnesian war to protect Athens. When the Oracle of Delphi announced that he was the wisest men, no one believed it so Socrates himself set up to find people wiser than him. Socrates questioned the people of Athens about the knowledge of good and virtue, then he drove people to disprove their own words. He said “I only know that I don’t know nothing” because he came to the conclusion that no one was smarter than him, he came to that conclusion because he was the only one that recognized his ignorance. He had the idea that god put him in …show more content…

“The three accusers, Meletus, Anytus, and Lycon, and they had a total of three hours to present from an elevated stage their argument for guilt; no record of the prosecution's argument against Socrates and he survives”. The words and actions of Socrates may have contributed to his impiety charge. Socrates failed to attend important religious festivals, he may have stirred additional resentment by offering arguments against the collective, ritualistic view of religion shared by most Athenians. Xenophon indicates that the impiety charge stemmed primarily from the contention of Socrates that he received divine communications directing him to avoid politics and concentrate on his philosophic