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Plato's Apology & Socrates' Speech at his Trial

sts tat Socrates was acknowleeged to have made no serious attempt to defend hismelf. There is much contemporary debate about how far this was correct, with Stone (1987) taking the view that it was, and Brickouse and Smith (1989) denying it (Tarrant 34).

Tarrant considers the issue and notes that ther eis much left unsaid in the Apology but that, as Brickhouse and Smith note, it is posisble that some aspects of rthe defense were delivbered by othes who spoke on his behalf. Still, says Tarrant, there were certain things which needed to be said for a good defense, especially concenring aspects of the religious belief of Athens:

Frequently during his speech he makes claims relating to religion which would certianly have been at odds with Athenian views, and would have appeared to confirm that his beliefs had some other religious foundation (Tarrant 34).

Tarant considsers other issues and how well Socrates might have answered them. Tarrant finds that Socrats dos not make a good defense and suggests that this may have been beacuse Socrates only wanted to make a philopshcial statment rather than offer a defense:

Socrates can be accused of convicting himself; likewise the jury can be acused of convicting an innocent man on false charges. Looked at from Socrates' point of view, there waslittle he could do without surrendering his principles, and there was no reason qhy they should be surrendered (Tarrant 35).

However, it is one thing to state that socrates did not offer a good or effective defense and another to say he deliberately avoided offering a defense and did so bacuse he had some other purpose. Indeed, Socrates did make a serious defense, but the irony of his situation did not escape him. He used irony as a wya of defalting the pretensions of others, and he certainly knew that his accusers were not going to be swayed even by the logicla arguemnts he used.

Socrates does indeed offer a defense to the charges--he d...

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Plato's Apology & Socrates' Speech at his Trial. (1969, December 31). In LotsofEssays.com. Retrieved 02:51, May 01, 2024, from https://www.lotsofessays.com/viewpaper/1690769.html