Socrates As Navia puts it, "there are not many things that are known about Socrates with certainty," (15). Historians do know the philosophers years of birth and death (469 BCE and 399 BCE, respectively), and the fact that he was poisoned by an Athenian jury much as Plato described the matter in his Apology. As with Jesus, Socrates life is pieced together by the writings of other people, many of whom did not actually know the philosopher or even live during the same era. Beck claims that the lack of reliable historiography related to the life of Socrates is known as the "Socratic Problem." Navia states that the Socratic Problem also entails the fact that anything that is known about Socrates from one source is readily contradicted by another. The Socratic Problem can never be solved, because there are no definitive sources. Socrates did not leave behind an autobiography, and even if he did, it might be considered problematic as well. Furthermore, Socrates often features as a fictionalized character in works such as Aristophanes' The Clouds. Therefore, Socrates is as much a...
One thing that can be known for sure is that Socrates was a "man of great complexity," (Beck 1). Socrates was a teacher and a philosopher, possibly an eccentric, and certainly a controversial figure. It has been suggested that any overlap between the major sources of information about Socrates constitutes absolute truth, but Nails notes that this approach is flawed because there is actually "too little overlap" (1).Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
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