Socrates
Socrates
(469-399 BC)
BACKGROUND
A central figure in western philosophy, but what is known about him comes from two of his pupils, Plato and Xenophon, He lived (469-399)the Golden Age of Athens. Hes Father was a sculptor and stonemason while his mother was a midwife.
EDUCATION
The wealthy Athenian Crito took him out of the stone-masons workshop and paid for his education He was a pupil of Anaxagoras Attracted to the topics raised by the Sophists. One dialogue of Plato has a young Socrates listening to Zeno of Elea and talking with him and Parmenides.
2. It is conversational.
1. It employs the dialogue not only as a didactic device, but as a technique for the actual discovery of opinions amongst men, there are truths upon which all men can agree, 2. Socrates proceeds to unfold such truths by discussion or by question and answer. 3. Beginning with a popular or hastily formed conception proposed by one of the members of the company or taken from the poets or some other traditional source, Socrates subjects this notion to severe criticism, as a result of which a more adequate conception emerges. 4. His method, in this aspect, is often described as the maieutic method. It is the art of intellectual midwifery, which brings other men's ideas to birth. It is also known as the dialectical method or the Socratic method.
3. It is conceptual or definitional
1. The Socratic Method sets as the goal of knowledge the acquisition of concepts, such as the ethical concepts of justice, piety, wisdom, courage and the like. 2. Socrates tacitly assumes that truth is embodied in correct definition. 3. Precise definition of terms is held to be the first step in the problem solving process.
I. Socrates' Life: Several features of Socrates' life give some insight into his ethics.
A. As a young man in battle, he distinguished himself for bravery several times. B. Socrates exhibited a "daimon" (his genuis or demon)--a sign or inner voice which issued prohibitory messages in periods of dazes (suggestive of epilepsy). C. The Delphic Oracle: "There is no person living wiser than Socrates." Socrates interpreted this response as indicating his purported wisdom was simply that he knew he was not wise.
D. The great example of the trial and death of Socrates demonstrated, as well, the agreement between his character and his philosophy 1.Socrates was found guilty of impiety (not worshipping the gods the state worships), corruption of the youth (infusing into the young persons the spirit of criticism of Athenian society), among other accusations. 2. Socrates refused to leave Athens, although he could have escaped: (1) escape would have been contrary to his moral principles and (2) escape would have been an injustice to the state which was his parent, education, and origin of law.
III. Socrates' ethical intellectualism has an eudaemological character. A. Socrates presupposed reason was the way to the good life.
1. Our true happiness is promoted by doing what is right. 2. When your true utility is served (tending your soul), you are achieving happiness. Happiness is evident from the long-term effect on the soul. 3. The Socratic ethics has a teleological character -- mechanistic explanation of human behavior is mistaken. Human action aims toward the good, and there is purpose in nature.
B. The Socratic Paradox: People act immorally, but they do not do so deliberately.
1. Everyone seeks what is most serviceable to oneself or what is in one's own self-interest. 2. If one [practically] knows what is good, one will always act in such manner as to achieve it. (Otherwise, one does not know or only knows in a theoretical fashion.) 3. If one acts in a manner not conducive to ones good, then that person must have been mistaken (i.e., that person lacks the knowledge of how to obtain what was serviceable in that instance). 4. If one acts with knowledge then one will obtain that which is serviceable to oneself or that which is in ones self-interest. 5. Thus, for Socrates knowledge = [def.] virtue, good, arete ignorance = [def.] bad, evil, not useful
6. Since no one knowingly harms himself, if harm comes to that person, then that person must have acted in ignorance. 7. Consequently, it would seem to follow we are responsible for what we know or for that matter what we do not know. So, then, one is responsible for ones own happiness. 8. The essential aspect of understanding the Paradox is to realize that Socrates is referring to the good of the soul in terms of knowledge and doing what's right not to wealth or freedom from physical pain. The latter play no role in the soul being centered.
D. Socrates' influence extended to almost all areas of the history of ethics in the West
Socratic Ethics
Cynicism
Diogenes
"the good"
happiness