Biography of Socrates Life
Personal Characteristics of Socrates
The
Eccentricity of Socrates
The
Accusations Against Socrates
Socratic Method and
Doctrine
The
Socratics (After Socrates)
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Socrates -
Greek philosopher
The ancient Greek philosopher
Socrates is best known today through his appearance in the Dialogues of
Plato. Socrates left no writings behind him, and indeed was by his principles precluded from dogmatic
exposition. The only records we have of the life Socrates are through the
previously mentioned Dialogues, and the records and works of Xenophon,
a noted Ancient Greek historian. Xenophon having no philosophical views of his own
to develop, and no imagination to lead him astray is an excellent witness.
Plato, though he understood his
master better, is a less trustworthy authority, as he makes Socrates the
mouthpiece of his own more advanced and even antagonistic doctrine.
Yet to all
appearance The Apology is a careful and exact account of Socrates’s habits
and principles of action; the earlier dialogues, those which are commonly
called “Socratic,” represent Socrates’ method; and if in the later and more important
dialogues the doctrine is the doctrine of Plato, echoes of the master’s
teaching are still discoverable, approving themselves as such by their accord
with the Xenophonean testimony. It is in the face of these two principal witnesses
that The Life of Socrates may be constructed.
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