After reading Philanthropy‚ we see the stranger’s idea of love was most like Eros‚ which was a contorted picture of what was thought ought to be. It is expected that Socrates was endeavoring to demonstrate the agnostics obliviousness to divine love. While debating with Socrates the stranger proposed that‚ "I suppose that our wishes and ideals are a part of our present selves‚ and that a true lover of men would not love them apart from that idealism in them which keeps them alive and human." The statement
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is given a chance‚ everything will be better. He believes in following just laws‚ just as Socrates believes in doing the right thing. In Plato’s‚ Crito‚ Socrates refuses exile from jail because it would have been wrong for him to leave. He believes in justice and escaping would have been an injustice. He does not want to leave because he respects the laws and does not want to disobey them. In addition‚ Socrates teaches about doing the right thing and how could he continue if he is not living by it
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I. What Is Philosophy? In the given quote‚ Socrates is defending himself in court against Meletus’ claim that he believes in false Gods‚ and he is giving his opinion on the meaning of life. He says that a docile life – one without speculation and reason – is not worth living. He explains that he will not live in exile because it is God’s will that he be a gadfly‚ and that he will not keep quiet because enlightenment is his meaning in life. He explains to the jury that he is like a gadfly and
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1. Callicles claims that we only have to look at nature to find evidence that it is right for better people to have a greater share than worse people. How does Socrates respond to this argument? Who makes the stronger case? Why? Socrates firstly exposes Callicles’ use of equivocation‚ a rhetorical ploy that avoids acknowledgement of an undermining truth while not being literally false‚ itself. He then accuses Callicles of equating strength with superiority‚ highlighting an absence of semantic
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People are accused everyday for something they didn’t do. People are put in jail for something another person has done. Someone’s life may be put to death over a fib. People are hurt for hearing information that they thought was true‚ but it wasn’t. There are three reasons why people are wrongly accused and that would be; false information‚ media‚ and being too scared. The first one is false information. People are given false information all the time. There is this and that going around
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The founding father of Philosophy was known as Socrates‚ he was born on 469 BCE and was later executed on 399 BCE while Athens was dealing with the Peloponnesian war against Sparta (Ancient). The decision to execute Socrates during the war may had been the fragile state that Athens was dealing with while in war. If there wasn’t a war the outcome of his death could had been a different. Socrates official formal accusation was in 399 BCE‚ he was brought in to the jury by Meletus a man that was
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In other arguments‚ Socrates illustrates that the soul must enter the body before or during birth‚ so ontologically the soul must have existed before birth meaning that it was present before the body was formed. Why Socrates’ argument and analogies to explain this are not very convincing is due to the fact that if we critically examine the cyclical argument itself with regards
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In my recent interview with my fellow education major Daniela Guzman‚ we discussed many different topics including the factors that lead us to deciding to go into the teaching profession. The questions we came up with ranged from teachers that had an influence on us to how we would like to decorate our classrooms. Daniela and I each wish to teach a different grade so the answers each of us gave were the same in many ways but also had their own personal touch. Daniela has always been good with children
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"...this is what you are‚ this is all you’ve ever been. A toy for me to use whenever and however I see fit." He shook his head‚ he wanted to cry out ’no! No! Don’t make me watch this please! Please! Not this‚ anything but this...’He wanted to back away‚ but his feet wouldn’t move. His hand clasped over his mouth and tears welled in his eyes ’please don’t make me watch me rape him...please...’ He wasn’t sure what he was begging‚ God maybe‚ but God didn’t answer‚ God didn’t even hear. “Please‚
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To Socrates the connection of the good life and death are very important‚ and he talks about what a good life is in The Apology. So‚ what is a good life according to Socrates? And what is a good life’s relation to death? What do these two very opposing ideas have to do with each other? Well they have a lot more to do with each other than one would immediately think. First in order to understand the connection between these two antithetical concepts we have to understand what exactly Socrates means
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