Socrates Was Not an Enemy to the State
Was Socrates an enemy of the state? There are two appropriate answers -- "yes" and "no." But first a definition of "enemy" is needed. In Mark Twain's short story "The Mysterious Stranger," Satan explains why there will always be war. It is because "a loud little handful" at first instigates it then, "…the great, big, dull bulk of the nation will rub its sleepy eyes and try to make out why there should be a war… [and later] statesmen… [will] blame…the nation that is attacked" -- in other words, as long as the "enemy" is identified, there will always be war. Therefore, an "enemy" is not just someone to distrust or despise, or someone who threatens the peace and safety of a community, but someone to blame. In the case of Socrates and his trial, the court apparently found Socrates to be an enemy. The "state" is that component of a nation or country that holds political or dictatorial power over the citizens. So, yes, the jury portrayed Socrates as an "enemy," but in fact he was not an enemy in any sense that he posed a threat.
ONE: What is your initial point-of-view?
My point-of-view initially was that historically Socrates has been viewed as a martyr because he was put to death based on the accusation of crimes that were not crimes: he was not an atheist (he did not introduce gods of his own), and he did not corrupt the young. Before delving into all the dynamics in Athens at that time, and reviewing the testimony that Socrates gave -- in response to the ridiculous charges brought against him -- it was my assumption that the trial was totally trumped up because the proletariat (average person without advanced education) was jealous of his vast knowledge and debating skills.
TWO: How can you define your point-of-view more clearly?
Here is a giant in the world of philosophy and history, whose narrative (through Plato) was beyond brilliant and in fact the modern world of elite dialogue, intellectualism and scholarship has patented a strategy called "Socratic" -- to identify the deft style of questioning and responding that Socrates authored. How could Athens put him to death for being a luminous teacher of willing young minds? Certainly there were criminals in Athenian society that deserved to be sentenced to death, but not Socrates. This was my initial point-of-view prior to reading deeper into the matter. However, once I had done the deeper research, I am closer to an understanding of why he was convicted (albeit unjustly). The fact is that there "…was perhaps an anti-intellectual stirring in the city of Athens" that had "accumulated in the years leading up to" the trial (Ahbel-Rappe, 2009, p. 19). This, on top of the fact that Socrates refused to be apologetic in any sense during the trial -- on the contrary, he appeared to be arrogant -- is a fair and reasonable assumption that leads toward a fully understanding of the outcome of the trial.
THREE: What is an example of your point-of-view.
Examples of my more informed point-of-view -- vis-a-vis the accusations against Socrates -- and his rebuttal to those accusations can be found in the subject of the Athenian view of politeness and sophism. Socrates told the jurors he was sent on a "search-and-destroy mission" by Apollo. This of course did not exactly endear him to the jury. He went on the mission, Socrates said, in order to reveal those in "high positions" and expose their "ignorance concerning matters of supreme importance, the nature of virtue" (Ahbel-Rappe, 20). By making this outlandish statement, surely tongue-in-cheek but none-the-less sarcastic, Socrates brought...
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