Plato's 'Apology' Socrates On Trial For His Life
Plato's Apology is one
of the most famous and admired texts in world literature. It offers what many scholars believe is a
fairly reliable account of what the Athenian philosopher Socrates (469 BCE -
399 BCE) said in court on the day that he was tried and condemned to death on
charges of impiety and corrupting the youth. Although short, it offers an
unforgettable portrait of Socrates, who comes across as smart, ironic, proud,
humble, self-assured, and fearless in the face of death. It offers not just a defense of Socrates the
man but also a defense of the philosophical life, which is one reason it has
always been popular with philosophers!
Plato's 'Apology' Socrates On Trial For His Life
The work was written by
Plato who was present at the trial. At
the time he was 28 years old and a great admirer of Socrates, so the portrait
and the speech may be embellished to cast both in a good light. Even so, some of what Socrates' detractors
called his "arrogance" comes through. The Apology is most definitely
not an apology: the Greek word "apologia" really means
"defense."
This is a little
complicated. The trial took place in
Athens in 399 BCE. Socrates was not
prosecuted by the state--that is, by the city of Athens, but by three individuals,
Anytus, Meletus, and Lycon. He faced two
charges:
1) corrupting the youth
2) impiety or irreligion.
But as Socrates himself
says, behind his "new accusers" there are "old accusers."
Part of what he means is this. In 404
BCE, just five years earlier, Athens had been defeated by its rival city state
Sparta after a long and devastating conflict known ever since as the
Peloponnesian War. Although he fought bravely for Athens during the war,
Socrates was closely associated with characters like Alcibiades who some blamed
for Athens' ultimate defeat.
Worse still, for a
short time after the war, Athens was ruled by a bloodthirsty and oppressive
group put in place by Sparta, the "thirty tyrants" as they were
called. And Socrates had at one time
been friendly with some of them. When
the thirty tyrants were overthrown in 403 BCE and democracy was restored in Athens,
it was agreed that no-one should be prosecuted for things done during the war
or during the reign of the tyrants. Because of this general amnesty, the
charges against Socrates were left rather vague. But everyone in court that day would have
understood what lay behind them.
Socrates' formal refutation of the charges against him
In the first part of
his speech Socrates shows that the charges against him don't make much sense.
Meletus in effect claims that Socrates both believes in no gods and that he
believes in false gods. Anyway, the
supposedly impious beliefs he is accused of holding--e.g. that the sun is a
stone--are old hat; the philosopher Anaxagoras makes this claim in a book that
anyone can buy in the market place. As
for corrupting the youth, Socrates argues that no-one would do this
knowingly. To corrupt someone is to make
them a worse person, which would also make them a worse friend to have around.
Why would he want to do that?
Socrates' real defense: a defense of the philosophical life
The heart of the
Apology is Socrates' account of the way he has lived his life. He recounts how his friend Chaerephon once
asked the Delphic Oracle if anyone was wiser than Socrates. The Oracle said that no -one was. On hearing this Socrates claims to have been
astounded, since he was acutely aware of his own ignorance. He set about trying to prove the Oracle wrong
by interrogating his fellow Athenians, searching for someone who was genuinely
wise. But he kept coming up against the
same problem. People might be quite
expert about some particular thing such as military strategy, or boatbuilding;
but they always thought themselves expert on many other things, particularly on
deep moral and political questions. And
Socrates, in the course of questioning them, would reveal that on these matters
they didn't know what they were talking about.
Naturally, this made
Socrates unpopular with those whose ignorance he exposed. It also gave him the reputation (unjustly, he
says) of being a sophist, someone who was good at winning arguments through
verbal quibbling. But he stuck to his mission throughout his life. He was never interested in making money; not
did he enter politics. He was happy to
live in poverty and spend his time discussing moral and philosophical questions
with anyone who was willing to converse with him.
Socrates then does
something rather unusual. Many men in his position would conclude their speech
by appealing to the jury's compassion, pointing out that they have young
children, and pleading for mercy.
Socrates does the opposite. He
more or less harangues the jury and everyone else present to reform their
lives, to stop caring so much about money, status, and reputation, and start
caring more about the moral quality of heir souls. Far from being guilty of any
crime, he argues, he is actually god's gift to the city, for which they should
be grateful. In a famous image he likens
himself to a gadfly that by stinging the neck of a horse keeps it from being
sluggish. This is what he does for Athens: he keeps people from becoming
intellectually lazy and forces them to be self-critical.
The Verdict
The jury of 501
Athenian citizens proceed to find Socrates guilty by a vote of 281 to 220. The system required the prosecution to
propose a penalty and the defense to propose an alternative penalty. Socrates' accusers propose death. They probably expected Socrates to propose
exile, and the jury would probably have gone along with this. But Socrates won't play the game. His first proposal is that, since he's an
asset to the city, he should receive free meals at the prytaneum, an honor
usually given to Olympic athletes. This
outrageous suggestion probably sealed his fate.
But Socrates is
defiant. He rejects the idea of exile.
He even rejects the idea of staying in Athens and keeping his mouth
shut. He can't stop doing philosophy, he says, because "the unexamined
life is not worth living."
Perhaps in response to
the urgings of his friends, Socrates eventually proposes a fine, but the damage
was done. By a larger margin, the jury voted for the death penalty.
Socrates is not
surprised by the verdict, nor is he phased by it. He's seventy years old and will die soon
anyway. Death, he says, is either an endless dreamless sleep, which is nothing
to fear, or it leads to an afterlife where, he imagines, he will be able to
carry on philosophizing.
A few weeks later
Socrates died by drinking hemlock, surrounded by his friends. His last moments are beautifully related by
Plato in the Phaedo.
SOURCE:
https://www.thoughtco.com/platos-apology-2670338
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