I.F. Stone - The Trial of Socrates
Coming to court - Why was Socrates tried?
A red herring - religious impiety
General free speech in Athens
Abundant rationalistic interpretations and criticism of gods in the theatre
The accusation of 'disbelieving in the gods of the city' actually hides a rejection of the democratic nomos, re-deified by the polis
Zeus Agoraios
Peitho
Hephaistos and Athena, gods of the craftsmen
The real deal - Socrates' and his disciples' Philolaconism
Political reasons avoided in the Platonic texts
Socrates as mentor and intellectual inspiration for the radical antidemocratic dictatorships: 411, 404, 401
Xenophon's story about Socrates' half-hearted opposition to the 30, as opposed to his antidemocratic vehemence
Plato's intense antidemocratic beliefs and ideals
'Noble lies', eugenics, clean slates and caste system in the Republic
The 'Critias' - an alternative view to democratic Athens
Plato's silence about the 30, and positive representations of Charmides and Critias in the dialogues
At the court - Why was Socrates condemned?
Socrates' main accuser: Anytus, the democratic politician
a democratic general, active in overthrowing the 30
a moderate who renounced the possibility of recovering his confiscated wealth
Motivations - the general and the personal - Anytus' son
Two Roman-period lies - Anytus was murdered and Athenian repentance at Socrates' death
Named sitophylakes
Aeschines's speech
Socrates the Suicidal - boycotting his own case
Defiance and arrogance towards the court
Prytaneion as punishment
Socrates as the wisest of mortals
Why did Socrates want to die?
Red herrings? Old age, obeisance to the law
Philosophically held strong beliefs
Philosophy as a preparation for death
soma-sema: body as a prison for the soul
Immortality of the soul and pleasant Afterlife
Martyrdom and self-fulfilling demonstration of the wickedness and inferiority of democratic rule
The trial of Socrates as an issue of free speech
Socrates' accusation was based on his beliefs, not on deeds
Slim majority in condemning probably reflects the unease of the jury
While highlighting this might have saved Socrates, he clearly had no interest in doing so
In spite of all his case for the prosecution, the writer finds the city of Athens wanting in this case where is freedom of speech is put to the test
My thoughts on it
Very well written and very persuasive
Probably, a bit hash on Socrates
The Plague of the Present in analyzing the Past
Idealization of Athenian Democracy?
Pericles as Thomas Jefferson
The author as journalist and late-time classicist
Socrates' views opposed to generally held Greek beliefs
Men as a herd animals that should obey their betters
"Only the learned should rule"
Idealized kings, with some inspiration from pre-classical texts (Homer, Lyrical poetry)
Virtue = Knowledge, but Knowledge can't be taught
At most, a human can be aware of his 'lack of knowledge', and only a few can aspire to learn even this.
'True' knowledge is abstract, pure, perfect, and conceptually clear
Socrates' negative dialectic - striving for impossibly perfect definitions
Paradox: people can be courageous (or any other virtue) without being able to define the concept precisely
Paradox: mixing knowledge and virtue is plainly contradictory
Socrates' wise, unruly and morally wicked disciples: Critias and Alcibiades
Paradox - disciples get to choose between plain skepticism (Anthistenes) or dualism (Plato)
Delphi Oracle - Socrates a the wisest of men
Socratic Irony: while reducing to ridicule the administrators and citizens of Athens, is he (and followers) really humble?
"He who knows the truth can do no evil"
Rhetoric as mere flattery
One shouldn't devote oneself to public service (politics), but to cultivation of self
Danger and moral dereliction of duty? Why didn't Socrates advice against harsh policies (Melos, Mytilene) or against tyrannical rule?
The real philosophers avoid stepping in the public spaces of the democracy
Spartans as 'closet' philosophers
Idealized view of the Spartan and Cretan constitutions, models for a self-centered, totalitarian and xenophobic state
Greek and Athenian beliefs opposed to Socrates'
Men as citizens (zoon politikon)
Citizens should rule. Only issue of dispute is if citizens should be few (oligarchy) or many (democracy).
All humans have basic moral and political knowledge - otherwise, any community would be impossible.
Knowledge can be learnt by everybody - Sophists as teachers of the emerging middle class
Aristotle, Rhetoric: "Man has sufficient intelligence to be reached by reasoned argument"
Rhetorical syllogism - from true premises to the probable
Courts and Assemblies
Dialectical syllogism - from true premises to the necessarily and always true
Moral obligation of participating in the city business and common weal - ἰδιώτης