Details, Explanation and Meaning About Apology

Apology Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

The Apology is Plato's version of the speech given by Socrates as he defends himself against the charges of corruption the young men of Athens and worshipping gods not approved by the state. Such a speech by the defendant was technically known as a 'apology'. It means to 'give an account of' rather than to apologise in a modern sense of the word.

Table of contents
1 Socrates' Accusers
2 The Charges Against Socrates
3 Part One
4 Part Two
5 Part Three

Socrates' Accusers

Three men brought the charges against Socrates. They were:

  • Anytus, a prominent democrat and almost certainly the leader of the accusers, whom Socrates describes as speaking on behalf of politicians and professional men.
  • Meletus, the chief spokesperson of the the accusers and the target of much of Socrates' attack, a fiery man with a beaked nose, and a representative of the poets.
  • Lycon, about whom little is known; he was according to Socrates a representative of the orators.

The groups mentioned here can be identified with those whom Socrates questioned, and upset, in the early stages of his quest to find people who possessed knowledge.

The Charges Against Socrates

Socrates summarises the formal charges against him as follows: "Socrates is guilty of corrupting the minds of the young, and of believing in supernatural things of his own invention instead of the gods recognised by the State."

However, there was another set of 'charges' against him which Socrates recognised as being more important, and dangerous, because they stemmed from years of gossip and prejudice against him and hence were unanswerable. These so called 'informal charges' Socrates puts into a legalistic form — an 'affidavit', as he calls it: "Socrates is committing an injustice, in that he enquires into things below the earth and in the sky, and makes the weaker argument the stronger, and teaches others to follow his example."

Those in fact were the 'charges' levelled in particular against the sophists, teachers who charged for their services, with whom in the popular mind Socrates was wrongly identified.

Part One

Socrates' Formal Apology

The Earliest Charges

  • Socrates begins by insisting that his skill as an orator lies solely in his ability to tell the truth. He goes on to the attack straightaway, claiming that his accusers are liars.
  • He deals first with the earliest charges, that which he summarises in the affidavit. These are difficult as there are no real accusers. He denies that he has engaged in the physical speculation of the sort carried out by Antaxagoras, who claimed that the sun was a stone, adn the moon a lump of earth — neither heavenly body being divine. He is not the Socrates who features in Aristophanes' Clouds, spouting a great deal of nonsense. Nor has he ever charged for his services; he is not a professional teacher like the sophists. It was Socrates' misfortune to be identified with them; the popular mind was unwilling to make any distinction between the two.
  • Socrates angers the court by claiming that his wisdom is limited to a realisation that he in fact knows little. This realisation stemmed from the visition of his friend Chaerephon to the Delphic Oracle seeking to find out if there was anyone wiser than Socrates. The oracle assured Chaerephon that there was nobody wiser. Socrates was puzzled. The god Apollo could not be lying. Socrates embarked on a pilgrimage to determine the 'hidden meaning' behind the oracle's words.
  • In the beginning, this pilgrimage involved questioning three main groups: politicians, poets and craftsmen. He found that the politicians knew little, that poets had a source of inspiration beyond themselves because others could explain their poems better than the author, and that while craftsmen possessed knowledge of their particular skill, they felt it gave them the right to claim knowledge in ever other area as well.
  • Showing up people's lack of knowledge hardly made Socrates popular. This was compounded by the general view that Socrates was playing stupid by pretending not to know the answers when in fact he did. Socrates interpreted his pilgrimage as showing that true wisdom belongs to the gods — that of humans has no or little value.
  • This personal obedience to Apollo has had further effects. It dominated his public and personal life, and reduced him to a state of poverty. It resulted in the young men of his circle questioning others.

The Formal Charges

'Socrates is guilty of corrupting the minds of the young'

Socrates has a three pronged attack against this charge.

Reasons behind this charge

  • Socrates' anti-democratic views, his criticisms of 'lottery debate', were widely disliked and could be seen as having a negative affect on young men with whom he came into contact. His frienship with prominent conservatives with oligarchical tendencies like Alcibiades and Critias made him very unpopular. Unlike many Athenians, especially those with strong democratic beliefs, Socrates did not leave the city during the 18-month rule of the Thirty Tyrants at the end of the Peloponnesian War. The charges can be views as basically political in nature, and what would have been seen as his tolerant attitude to the Spartan-imposed oligarchy (Critias was one of the tyrants) was the last straw for many Athenians.
  • However, Socrates could not be charged with specific political offences because the assembly had charged an amnesty against such charges as a result of the bloodletting that had occurred when democracy was restored. So the accusers, led by Anytus who had played a prominent part in restoration of democracy, were forced to find a different language in which to couch the charges.
  • In his search for universally valid definitions of moral truths, Socrates' close scrutiny of the widely held communal values of the average Athenian could be seen as undermining and discrediting these values.
  • The young men with wealthy fathers and plenty of leisure who formed Socrates' circle, would in their turn question others. Many would see this as a bad influence that Socrates had on the young.
  • In Aristophanes' play Clouds one of the characters is corrupted by Socrates' teaching. Socrates singles out this play as having a strong influence on the way many people viewed him.
  • This accusation was levelled against many sophists, because of their emphasis on teaching relative, not absolute, values that the high fees that some of them charged. Many could not make a distinction between Socrates and the sophists.

'Socrates is guilty of believing in supernatural things of his own invention, instead of the gods recognised by the State'

  • Socrates begins his defence by backing Meletus into a corner. Meletus argues that Socrates is actually an atheist: he believes in no gods at all. In doing so Meletus, as Socrates points out, contradicts the wording of the charge.
  • This allows Socrates greater room to attack Meletus. All he has to do is prove he believes in one divine being at least, and the revised charge will be disproved. He does this through analogy. Does anyone, he asks, believe in human activities without belieiving in humans? In equine matters without believing in horses? In musical activites but not in musicians? Similarly, no one believes in divine activities without believing in divine beings. Obviously, if Socrates is being accused of believing and teaching supernatural things, he must believe in supernatural beings, and not be an atheist. Also, while he does not mention it, Socrates is referring to his daimon, a negative or checking impulse which bars him from certain courses of action. This, treated with suspicion, is linked by Socrates to Apollo.

Reasons behind this charge

  • In his youth Socrates had studied in the school of Anaxagoras which was concerned with the study of the world rather than with moral values. Anaxagoras himself had faced charges of impiety when he declared that the sun and moon were not gods, but fled Athens before he could come to court. No doubt people remembers Socrates' youthful connections with Anaxagoras' teachings.
  • Socrates' claims to a daimon were treated with suspicion by many Athenians. Such a claim was not part of their religious attitudes.
  • At the beginning of the Peloponnesian War, the Delphic Oracle declared that the Spartans would win the war against Athens. The proviso was that the Spartans must use careful strategies; that advice no doubt would have been given to the Athenians had they asked first! Many Athenians, however, would have been mistrustful of this 'enemy' oracle.
  • In Aristophanes' Clouds, Socrates is depicted as being an atheist. In 5th century Athens, atheists were regarded with suspicion as destroyers of traditional moral standards.
  • Shortly before the start of the war, one of its leaders, Alcibiades, was recalled to Athens on a charge of desecrating the religious statues known as herms common in Athens. As a friend of his, Socrates would have come under suspicion.
  • Socrates had expressed reservations about some of the gorier stories of the gods.

Other considerations

  • Socrates repeats his claim that it will not be the formal charges which will destroy him, but rather the gossip and slander. He is not afraid of death, because he is more concerned about whether he is acting rightly or wrongly. Further, Socrates argues, those who fear death are showing their ignorance: death may be a great blessing, but many people fear it as an evil when they cannot possibly know it to be such. Again Socrates points out that his wisdom lies in the fact that he is aware that he does not know.
  • Socrates states clearly that a lawful superior, whether human or divine, should be obeyed. If there is a clash between the two, howeevr, divine authority should take precedence. "Gentlemen, I am your grateful and devoted servant, but I owe a greater obedience to God that to you; and as long as I draw breath and have my faculties I shall never stop practising philosophy." Since Socrates has interpreted the Delphic Oracle as singling him out to spur his fellow Athenians to a greater awareness of moral goodness and truth, he will not stop questioning and arguing should the people forbid him to do so, even if they were to withdraw the charges. Nor will he stop questioning his fellow citizens. "Are you now ashamed that you give your attention to acquiring as much money as possible, and similarly with reputation and honour, and give no attention or thought to truth and understanding and the perfection of your soul?"
  • In an highly inflammatory section of the Apology, Socrates claims that no greater good has happened to Athens that his concern for his fellow citizens, that wealth is a consequence of goodness (and not the other way round), that God does not permit a better man to be harmed by a worse, and that, in the strongest statement he gives of his task, he is a stinging fly and the state a lazy horse "and all day long I never cease to settle here, there and everywhere, rousing, persuading and reproving every one of you."
  • As further evidence of his task, Socrates reminds the court of his daimon which he sees as a supernatural experience. He recognises this as partly behind the charge of believing in invented beings. Again Socrates makes no concession to his situation. He would have been well aware that many if not most in the courtroom would have viewed this with utmost suspicion.
  • Socrates claims to never have been a teacher, in the sense of imparting knowledge to others. He cannot therefore be held responsible if any citizen turns bad. If he has corrupted anyone, why have they not come forward to be witnesses? Or if they do not realise that they have been corrupted, why have their relatives not stepped forward on their behalf? Many relatives of the young men associated with him, Socrates points out, are presently in the courtroom to support him.
  • Socrates concludes this part of the Apology by reminding the jurors that he will not resort to the usual emotive tricks and arguments. He will not break down in tears, nor will he produce his three sons in the hope of swaying the jurors. He does not fear death; nor will he act in a way contrary to his religious duty. He will rely solely on sound argument and the truth to present his case.

The Verdict

Socrates is found guilty: 280 jurymen voted against him; 221 voted for him.

Part Two

The Punishment Speech

In this section of the Apology Socrates antagonises the court even further.

Part Three

The Speech After the Death Penalty

Socrates' punishment speech angered the jurors. 360 voted for the death penalty; only 141 voted for a fine of 3000 drachmae. Now Socrates has to respond to the verdict. He first addresses those who voted for death.

To those who voted for his acquittal, Socrates gives them encouragement: Socrates concludes his Apology with the claim that he bears no grudge against those who accused and condemned him, and in a remarkable show of trust asks them to look after his three sons as they grow up, ensuring that they put goodness before selfish interests.

{| border=2 align="center" |width="32%" align="center" rowspan="3"|Preceded by:
Euthyphro |width="36%" align="center"|The
Apology |width="32%" align="center" rowspan="3"|Followed by:
Crito

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