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Why Is Socrates Guilty

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In our modern-era of a technology based democracy, most if not all (people) are exposed to trials by jury’s in diverse forms of media. Less than often, we rarely give these legal inquiries a second thought but every so often there comes a trial that captures our attention and we become apprehended until a verdict is handed down. This sequence has been continued throughout centuries and regardless of the lack of media, in the past there were still specific trials that everybody spoke of. The treatment of the defendant by the courts has always been under scrutiny and either criticised for being too compassionate or too abrasive (?). It is rare as most prefer a skillful lawyer to defend them but it does happen that defendants do represent themselves …show more content…

The term is specifically not guilty, never innocent. One reason for this is because there is no need for a plea of innocence because the defendant is already innocent until proven guilty without a reasonable doubt. The final ruling given to Socrates by his audience was guilty. Further analysis of Socrates’ trial has brought up the question of weather he was guilty as charged or if there was a miscarriage of justice. Throughout this paper (?), both guilty and not guilty will be discussed (or, Both guilty and not guilty will be discussed throughout this paper) in regards to Socrates but ultimately I will press my beliefs on why the final verdict was correct(fair) or …show more content…

Meletus brings before the court an accusation that Socrates does not believe in the gods but in the same breath concludes that Socrates is a believer of other divinities. In his own words Socrates reads out his charge, “I must, as if they were my actual prosecutors, read the affidavit they would have sworn. It goes something like this: Socrates is guilty of wrongdoing in that he busies himself studying things in the sky and below the earth; he makes the worse into the stronger argument, and he teaches these same things to others.” (19b).1 Socrates admits that he does not believe in the gods of the city but he does proclaim that he lives by the words of a higher being- his daimon. “…but I live in great poverty because of my service to the god.” (23b).2 In the texts that Plato has left us he describes that Socrates was man who did not care about his appearance. Even in the sculptures and paintings depicting Socrates that we see today, he looks (WHAT DOES HE LOOK LIKE) Atheist are those who lack the belief in the existence of God or deities. Therefore, the argument that Socrates is an atheist is

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