Socrates: On Trial For Your Own Life

1685 Words4 Pages

On Trial For Your Own Life Imagine you are a philosopher, and you are on trial for simply teaching your fellow students how to think logically or in other words outside the box. At your trial, you make your best to defend yourself of the charges and demonstrate that you been living an honest, healthy life and have not broken laws or have done wrong to society, but no matter what your claim are you are deemed a criminal just for teaching and practicing in what you strongly believe in, however the case is that the upper powers just simply want you to shut up and not cause change within the society. Well, this happen to the famous philosopher Socrates. Socrates is accused and sentence to death for refusing to recognize the established religion, …show more content…

As the tittle of the story is “The Apology” one will assume that Socrates apologies for his actions however he did not and that is what has made the judges gone mad. He stood for his believes till the last second without a doubt. The judges offer Socrates to beg for mercy but he refuse to do so by stating “To fear death, my friends, is only to think ourselves wise, without being wise: for it is to think that we know what we do not know. For anything that men can tell, death may be the greatest good that can happen to them: but they fear it as if they knew quite well that it was the greatest of evils. And what is this but that shameful ignorance of thinking that we know what we do not know?” This made the judge upset that not even death penalty inspired fear in Socrates and made him change his philosophical ideas. In other word Socrates did not fear death because he does not know what happens after death therefore he has no reason to fear death, fear is not an empty emotion, he claims, but has a meaning. To fear something is to believe that it is bad but if one has never died before therefore how does he know is bad? Socrates acclaims that death might not be that bad after all, that is like falling into a deep sleep or simply a getaway to another

More about Socrates: On Trial For Your Own Life

Open Document