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.
Three men brought the charges against Socrates. They were:
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.
Socrates has a three pronged attack against this charge.
Socrates is found guilty: 280 jurymen voted against him; 221 voted for him.
In this section of the Apology Socrates antagonises the court even further.
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.
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|width="32%" align="center" rowspan="3"|Preceded by: This is an Article on Apology. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Apology Socrates' Accusers
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
Part One
Socrates' Formal Apology
The Earliest Charges
The Formal Charges
'Socrates is guilty of corrupting the minds of the young'
Reasons behind this charge
'Socrates is guilty of believing in supernatural things of his own invention, instead of the gods recognised by the State'
Reasons behind this charge
Other considerations
The Verdict
Part Two
The Punishment Speech
Part Three
The Speech After the Death Penalty
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.
Euthyphro
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Apology
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Crito
