Essay Topic Hub

Socrates
Essays

647+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

647 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Socrates stands as one of the most examined figures in Western intellectual history, and essays about him appear across philosophy, classics, and literature courses alike. Because Socrates left no writings of his own, students engage with him almost entirely through the dialogues of Plato — including the Republic, the Euthyphro, and the Apology — making the relationship between author and subject a live interpretive question. Central academic tensions include the nature of knowledge versus opinion, the teachability of virtue, the meaning of piety, and how reason governs a well-lived life. These themes connect Socrates to enduring questions about truth, existence, and the obligations philosophy places on those who pursue it.

Student papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Comparative essays place Socrates alongside figures such as Buddha, Henry David Thoreau, Immanuel Kant, and St. Augustine to test his ideas across different traditions and historical moments. Close-reading essays work through specific passages — such as the stretch of the Republic from 475a to 480a — to analyze arguments about knowledge, opinion, and the philosopher's nature. Other papers address conceptual problems directly, asking whether virtue can be taught or how Glaucon's challenge reframes justice. Some writers bring psychoanalytic perspectives to bear, examining Socratic method through a Freudian lens.

A strong essay on Socrates anchors its thesis in a specific text or argument rather than making broad claims about "ancient philosophy" in general. Evidence drawn from Platonic dialogue — tracking how Socrates actually reasons through a problem — carries more weight than paraphrase alone. The most common pitfall is conflating Socrates's own views with Plato's, so careful writers acknowledge that distinction and account for it explicitly in their analysis.

647 papers
Sort by:
Paper Doctorate
Application essay for George Washington University
Plato's (and Socrates') Criticism of Rhetoric in "Gorgias"
Research Paper Doctorate
Substitute for Experience and the Only Significant
¶ … substitute for experience and the only significant lessons that one learns are from the mistakes made in one's own life. This may have some truth in it but it is certainly not the whole truth.
Research Paper Doctorate
Critical interpretation in academic discourse
Plato relies in debating the true nature of knowledge in the same manner as his tutor, Socrates, assuming and arguing that knowledge was not only about the perception of our senses, as many pf the Ancient philosophers…
Research Paper Doctorate
Gilgamesh Ramayana and Art of War
¶ … connecting the reader with the time period in which it was written. This is why the writings of the distant past, even in translation, are among the most fascinating to modern scholars.
Research Paper Doctorate
Ancient philosophy: major schools and thinkers
Though it is acknowledged that the words and ideas of Socrates have been filtered though the thoughts of those that followed him, namely Plato, as Socrates wrote nothing himself, it is also clear that the interpretation…
Paper Doctorate
Socrates and the Obligation to Obey the Law
Among the celebrated treatises on reason and logic known as the dialogues of Plato, it is the relatively short discourse between and the condemned philosopher Socrates his concerned companion Crito which today stands as…
Paper Doctorate
Thrasymachus's theory of justice in Plato's Republic: refutation through Books 1 and 2
¶ … Justice Given by the Character Thrasymachus in Plato's Republic Is Incorrect
Essay Doctorate
Euthyphro What Is Socrates\' Definition of Piety
This paper discusses the definition of 'piety' in the Socratic dialogue of the Euthyphro. Euthyphro initially defines piety as that which is pleasing to the gods, but when pressed by Socrates, it becomes unclear as to whether he thinks something is pious simply because it is loved by the gods or if the gods love all pious actions. The paper concludes with the author's own definition of piety for modernity.
Research Paper Doctorate
Ethics-Philosophy in This Reading, Socrates Is Defending
In this reading, Socrates is defending himself in the Athenian Court. He was accused of being a cosmologist and a sophist, someone who did not believe in divinity, ancient beliefs and supernatural forces.
Paper Doctorate
Ethical Relativism in the Closing of the American Mind
Allen Bloom wrote one of the most controversial books of the late-20th Century, in which he denounced the demise of the core curriculum at elite U.S. universities and it replacement by what he considered to be a vague…