Socratic Philosophy They don't need to be Gods. They exist within the Good, the One or the Unmoved Mover, just like thoughts or ideas exist in the human mind. — Apollodorus
Therefore, the point of view is not inherently atheist as you keep arguing it is. You keep forgetting that it is your argument that the position is atheistic. It is not being claimed by Fooloso4.
quote="Apollodorus;564365"]From accounts about Socrates it may be inferred that he was a kind of mystic or contemplative, who had little interest in mainstream religion or politics.[/quote]
The Republic, Gorgias, Phaedo, and The Statesman suggest otherwise. Or the burden of proof is upon you to demonstrate otherwise since those topics are discussed in those dialogues.
I tend to believe that he wrote for educated intellectuals, i.e., a relatively small social and economic class who, as stated above, included philosophers with an interest in religion and religious people with an interest in philosophy. — Apollodorus
That is a more "Straussian" perspective than I take. The esoteric versus exoteric argument relates to political arguments about an "intellectual" aristocracy. Strauss also is not a "secularist" that in your other writings are identified as "Marxist."
The particulars of the various topics being discussed aside, I don't understand your passion to have the last word on the subject. If the meaning has been completely worked out, there is no need to read texts themselves. It is like an Hegelian synthesis that puts the pin into the last butterfly of a species. When you see an argument, the first thing you do is google who is against it. It is all dead for you.