Reality George R.R. Martin, an American novelist and short-story writer, once said, “Never forget what you are, for surely the world will not. Make it your strength. Then it can never be your weakness. Armor yourself in it, and it will never be used to hurt you.” In other words, one is unique to their reality; this reality is not universal, it lingers on with one’s existence. As humans, we use our reality as a way to interact and thrive in life; it is our sword and shield that fights back at all of life’s misfortunes. With George R.R. Martin’s aid, one can begin to gain perspective on their life, and how this reality has come to be. Moreover, the philosophical publications, Plato’s Five Dialogues, Descartes’ Meditation and Other Metaphysical Writings, and then Nozick’s The Experience Machine guided the idea of reality to a new degree of certainty. The essence of reality exists because the proof of objects and a god are real, arguments from these sources provide evidence that god is real and that reality exists. Corresponding to these stories, one can begin the journey of comprehending that reality is truly exclusive to one’s being. To begin, Plato explains the story of Socrates and how his settlement has failed him and sentenced him upon an unjust trial. The Five Dialogues focus on the reality of Socrates’ life and the frustrations that he must face in order to define his own actions. Euthyphro answers Socrates on the premises of murdering a stranger by saying:
It is
When discussing reality, several questions emerge regarding what reality is. A reality, "the real situation that exist," (Merriam-Webster.com) consists of two forms-perceived reality and actual reality. One spends his or her entire life trying to decipher the difference between the two forms; yet to truly understand reality, it is essential that you comprehend both. Plato 's "Allegory of the Cave," Dick Gregory 's "Shame" and Frederick Douglass ' "Learning to Read and Write" illustrate examples of both perceptions. Furthermore, how conceptualization of reality helps establish who one will become.
Euthyphro replies by saying that surely the gods agree that the unjust killing of a man is unholy and should be punished. Socrates refutes by saying that that is not what is in question and that yes they do agree on factual things. He says that the question is that they do not always agree with what is just and what is unjust, each has their own opinion, and if this is true that they must not agree. Socrates uses his method to get Euthyphro to question his decision on prosecuting his father. This leads Euthyphro to change his definition up yet again.
Roger Martin was born on January 5, 1947 in Tulsa, Oklahoma to Carl and Marjorie Martin. Roger had one brother that he was 10 years older than and a sister that he was 2 year years younger than him. Both of his parents worked so they were called latch-key kids. His Dad was a chef and his mom at a was a switchboard operator in a hotel. His dad went to work at 4:00am to 1:00am then he went home and power naped till 4:30 and then worked until 8:00 His dad let him work at the restaurant he worked at. He started out washing dishes and then his dad made his own restaurant and then he worked his way up to chef. One of Rogers chores was mowing the acre of land with a push mower. Roger also raised a calf Bufford and sold him to his neighbor. His neighbor slaughtered the cow and brought hamburger over to Roger home. His little brother would not eat it because he knew it was Bufford. Roger spent most of his time outside for entertainment, playing with neighbors, and his siblings. They made forts and dug tunnels. In the summer, his mother and the children would go to his grandma’s house in Kansas for a month at a time. There they played with their cousins, they swam
Key Statement: “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.” Therefore anyone that lives in the USA can never be considered an outsider anywhere within the bounds.
Plato’s dialogue, ‘Euthyphro’, is about Socrates and Euthyphro conversion about “what they think piety is and who is pious”(Thinking Socratically, p 5). It begins by Socrates meeting Euthyphro outside of the court where he about to be tried. Socrates was getting tried on the accusation of him corrupting the youth with his philosophical questioning of people in public. He was also charged with believing in not believing in the Gods of Athens. Euthyphro begins to console Socrates, telling him he is also waiting trail but as the prosecutor. He is prosecuting his father in the killing of his slave, and begins to explain people telling him that he shouldn’t prosecute his father which leads him to say, “so little, Socrates, they know what the gods
In the Euthyphro Dilemma, Plato writes of a conversation, which took place between Socrates and Euthyphro. The latter alleged his father committed murder and Socrates questioned the moral basis of that allegation. Socrates was in a situation in which he faced charges that included corrupting younger persons with impiety. He hoped that Euthyphro could teach him principles of the nature of piety and, therefore, be able to use that knowledge in his own defense (POR, Euthyphro).
Socrates explains that he has been indicted for corrupting the young and not believing in the gods in whom the rest city believes. Euthyphro, on the other hand, has come to prosecute his own father for having unintentionally killed a labourer who himself was a murder. Socrates is stunned by this and suggests that Euthyphro must be a great expert in religious matters if he is willing to impeach his own father. Euthyphro agrees that he does know
The story "The Trail and Death of Socrates" illustrates the profound meaning of questioning and teaching, hidden within the passage of Euthyphro. Plato was able to manipulate his characters in a way such that Socrates, the protagonist, sought to define ethnical terms and ask awkward questions, since he wanted to be, in the perspective of the reader, the teacher. Euthyphro is an introduction to the drama touching upon the references to the trial and its charges. We are set in Athens and witness two trials. One is an indictment to Socrates for teaching by questioning to a greater extent which seems like to the Athenians him teaching verbally when in fact he was teaching mentally. He posed questions to find an understanding to what or how did
This essay will begin with a detailed explanation as to how Socrates was put into the predicament of being on “death row” as we would say today from the chapter ‘Apology’. The false accusations will be discussed as well as a brief insight into the reason as to why he might have gone along with the whole ordeal. Afterwards,
“‘Real’ is based on facts and experiences. Traditions and literature are examples of ‘real’,” Mr. Blanchard asserted.
In an effort to spread the word of Socrates to a larger audience, Plato often wrote down the discussions he held in the form of dialogues. In these dialogues, Socrates continuously makes an effort to define that which is not easily defined and addresses questions in which the solution is not always straight forward. Reading through Plato’s dialogues, such as, Euthyphro, Crito and The Apology, readers can ponder the claims Socrates makes and receive a particular insight into his point of view. It is known that Socrates is sentenced to death after being charged with corrupting the youth and denying the existence of the gods, as he presents his defense in The Apology. However, the debate as to whether or not Socrates is a “good person” is left up to interpretation as he never clearly states that he believes himself to be one. Nevertheless, his actions reflect that he is indeed a good person because of his constant pursuit of the complete truth in all matters, his lifestyle choices and unconcern for material objects and lastly his lack of fear in the certain face of death.
In the Euthyphro, Socrates goes on to have a serious argument with a self assured, presumptuous young man, Euthyphro. Euthyphro has the reputation of being a wise person, godly of some sort. Both Socrates and Euthyphro are involved in matters of a legal nature. Socrates has been accused of impiety and the youth and is facing a court trial. Euthyphro advises Socrates for making a contrast when it comes to murder and goes on to say that he feels as if it is his duty to bring charge against his father even if it is family, otherwise impiety, while the rest of his family go on to say “He did not kill him, and that if he did, dead man was
Although the Platonic dialogue chronicling Socrates' death is called the Apology, many critics have noted that Socrates seems notably unapologetic throughout the speech, thus raising the ire of his Athenian listeners. Socrates is openly confrontational in his address to an Athenian jury of his peers, and his philosophical elitism seems designed to confirm, rather than disprove the image the prosecution had created of an unstable, dangerous, and impious man intent upon corrupting the young. The only reasonable conclusion which can be drawn is that, rather than trying to defend himself against the charges, Socrates was committing a kind of state-sanctioned suicide. His refusal to flee Athens after he received a death sentence lends credence to this charge.
Plato was one the Socrates’ greatest admirers. Socrates was a brilliant Greek philosopher at that time, whose philosophical works stand at the foundation of modern Western philosophy. Unfortunately, he never recorded his works. Nevertheless, most of our current knowledge about Socrates stems from Plato’s work. We find Plato’s thought mostly in the form of fictional dialogues, a very common literary style in ancient Greece. Most of these dialogues have Socrates as the protagonist, and primary interlocutor. Plato uses Socrates as a mouthpiece of his own views, and philosophical ideals.
Socrates was a great philosopher of the Greek world. He was quite an atypical and distinctive person. Being different from all the other philosophers of the land, Socrates was teaching his students ideas totally out of the ordinary from what the society believed was right. As a result, he displeased many people so much that they decided to get rid of him. Socrates was put to trial, accused of spoiling the youth of Athens, tried and sentenced to death. His personal defense is described in works two of his students: Xenophon and Plato. Both of them wrote papers called Apology, which is the Greek word for “defense”. In this essay I used Apology by Plato as the main resource, since it contents a more full account of the trial of Socrates and