c. 470 – 399 BC · Athens, Greece
Socrates was a classical Greek philosopher credited as one of the founders of Western philosophy. Unlike the Sophists of his day, he claimed to possess no wisdom himself—only the awareness of his own ignorance. He left no written works; nearly everything we know comes from the accounts of his students, principally Plato and Xenophon, and from the playwright Aristophanes.
He spent his life in Athens engaging fellow citizens in dialogue in the agora, the gymnasia, and at private gatherings, probing the meaning of concepts like justice, virtue, beauty, and the good.
Socrates' signature contribution is the method of elenchus—systematic cross-examination through questions and answers. Rather than lecturing, he would ask his interlocutor to define a concept, then reveal contradictions in their reasoning through further questioning. The goal was not to humiliate but to reach a clearer understanding, or at least an honest recognition of ignorance.
This dialectical approach laid the groundwork for the Western tradition of critical thinking and remains central to legal education, psychotherapy, and philosophical inquiry today.
No one does wrong willingly. Wrongdoing arises from ignorance of the good. To know the right is to do the right.
A life of self-reflection and philosophical inquiry is the only life truly worth living.
"I know that I know nothing." True wisdom begins with recognizing the limits of one's own knowledge.
The soul's well-being matters more than wealth, reputation, or bodily pleasure. Philosophy is the soul's medicine.
Courage, temperance, justice, and piety are not separate qualities but aspects of a single integrated wisdom.
Socrates claimed a daimonion—a divine inner sign that warned him when he was about to make a wrong decision.
In 399 BC, Socrates was charged with failing to acknowledge the gods recognized by the city and with corrupting Athenian youth. The trial, recounted in Plato's Apology, saw Socrates mount a defiant defense: he argued that his philosophical mission was a service to Athens, given to him by the god at Delphi.
Found guilty by a narrow margin, he was sentenced to death. In the days before his execution—described in Plato's Crito and Phaedo—he calmly discussed the immortality of the soul with friends, declined an offer to escape, and drank the hemlock with composure.
Socrates never founded a school, yet his influence is immeasurable. His students went on to establish major philosophical traditions: Plato founded the Academy, Antisthenes inspired the Cynics, and Aristippus the Cyrenaics. Through Plato, Socratic thought shaped Aristotle, Neoplatonism, early Christian philosophy, the Renaissance, and the Enlightenment.
Today Socrates endures as the archetype of the philosophical life—someone who pursued truth without compromise, even at the cost of his own life.