The Philosophy Book

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46


THE LIFE WHICH


IS UNEXAMINED


IS NOT WORTH


LIVING


SOCRATES (469–399 BCE)


IN CONTEXT


BRANCH
Epistemology

APPROACH
Dialectical method

BEFORE
c.600–450 BCE Pre-Socratic
philosophers in Ionia and Italy
attempt to explain the nature
of the cosmos.
Early 5th century BCE
Parmenides states that we
can only understand the
universe through reasoning.

c.450 BCE Protagoras and the
Sophists apply rhetoric to
philosophical questions.

AFTER
c.399–355 BCE Plato portrays
the character of Socrates in
the Apology and numerous
other dialogues.
4th century BCE Aristotle
acknowledges his debt to
Socrates’ method.

S


ocrates is often referred to
as one of the founders of
Western philosophy, and
yet he wrote nothing, established
no school, and held no particular
theories of his own. What he did do,
however, was persistently ask the
questions that interested him, and
in doing so evolved a new way of
thinking, or a new way of examining
what we think. This has been called
the Socratic, or dialectical, method
(“dialectical” because it proceeds
as a dialogue between opposing
views), and it earned him many
enemies in Athens, where he lived.
He was vilified as a Sophist
(someone who argues for the sake
of deception), and was sentenced to
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