‘Socrates was the first to call philosophy down from the heavens… and compel it to ask questions about life and morality’ (Tusculan Disputations V 10–11).
No matter how metaphysical it is always the human things that ground the dialogues. "Know thyself". — Fooloso4
Or you could learn from a scholar who specializes in ancient Greece. — frank
Socrates was accused of atheism — Fooloso4
Who I find persuasive and who you find persuasive has a great deal to do with our assumptions about the relationship between the human and the divine. — Fooloso4
Socrates was accused of atheism. If he did not believe in the gods then he would have regarded the mystical prophecies as human inventions. — Fooloso4
He was actually accused of perverting the youth by teaching them or preaching them atheism. His own atheism was collateral damage. — god must be atheist
Don't know if you guys are being sarcastic or not, but Socrates was neither an atheist or formally/expressly charged by the Athenian state for teaching "atheism"; taking "a-theism" in the most literal sense of the word, as one who denies or disbelieves in the existence of any kind of God &-or gods. In fact, he'd considered himself to be sent by "God" (whom he refers to in the singular form during his hearing/trial) to the Athenians. — aRealidealist
In fact, he'd considered himself to be sent by "God" (whom he refers to in the singular form during his hearing/trial) to the Athenians. — aRealidealist
godless communists! — frank
Are you Greek? — frank
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