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Socrates in Prison

Feb 20, 202551 min
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Summary

This episode explores Plato's accounts of Socrates' last days, focusing on his refusal to escape prison in the Crito out of respect for the law, and his embrace of death in the Phaedo as the soul's liberation from the body. Guests discuss Socrates' unwavering philosophical inquiry, his arguments for the soul's immortality, and how his principled death cemented his reputation as an inspirational figure.

Episode description

Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss Plato's Crito and Phaedo, his accounts of the last days of Socrates in prison in 399 BC as he waited to be executed by drinking hemlock. Both works show Socrates preparing to die in the way he had lived: doing philosophy. In the Crito, Plato shows Socrates arguing that he is duty bound not to escape from prison even though a bribe would open the door, while in the Phaedo his argument is for the immortality of the soul which, at the point of death, might leave uncorrupted from the 'prison' of his body, the one escape that truly mattered to Socrates. His example in his last days has proved an inspiration to thinkers over the centuries and in no small way has helped ensure the strength of his reputation.

With

Angie Hobbs Professor of the Public Understanding of Philosophy at the University of Sheffield

Fiona Leigh Associate Professor in the Department of Philosophy at University College London

And

James Warren Professor of Ancient Philosophy at the University of Cambridge and Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge

Producer: Simon Tillotson

Reading list:

David Ebrey, Plato’s Phaedo: Forms, Death and the Philosophical Life (Cambridge University Press, 2023)

Dorothea Frede, ‘The Final Proof of the Immortality of the Soul in Plato’s Phaedo 102a-107a’ (Phronesis 23, 1978)

W. K. C. Guthrie, A History of Greek Philosophy, vol. 4, Plato: The Man and his Dialogues, Earlier Period (Cambridge University Press, 2008) Verity Harte, ‘Conflicting Values in Plato’s Crito’ (Archiv. für Geschichte der Philosophie 81, 1999)

Angie Hobbs, Why Plato Matters Now (Bloomsbury, forthcoming 2025), especially chapter 5

Rachana Kamtekar (ed.), Plato’s Euthyphro, Apology and Crito: Critical Essays (Rowman and Littlefield, 2004)

Richard Kraut, Socrates and the State (Princeton University Press, 1984)

Melissa Lane, ‘Argument and Agreement in Plato’s Crito’ (History of Political Thought 19, 1998)

Plato (trans. Chris Emlyn-Jones and William Preddy), Euthyphro, Apology, Crito, Phaedo and Phaedrus (Loeb Classical Library, Harvard University Press, 2017)

Plato (trans. G. M. A. Grube and John Cooper), The Trial and Death of Socrates: Euthyphro Apology, Crito, Phaedo (Hackett, 2001)

Plato (trans. Christopher Rowe), The Last Days of Socrates: Euthyphro, Apology, Crito, Phaedo (Penguin, 2010)

Donald R. Robinson (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Socrates (Cambridge University Press, 2011)

David Sedley and Alex Long (eds.), Plato: Meno and Phaedo (Cambridge University Press, 2010)

James Warren, ‘Forms of Agreement in Plato’s Crito’ (Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Volume 123, Issue 1, April 2023)

Robin Waterfield, Why Socrates Died: Dispelling the Myths (Faber and Faber, 2010)

In Our Time is a BBC Studios Audio Production

Transcript

Intro / Opening

This BBC Podcast is supported by ads outside the UK. Think you know Sherlock Holmes? Hmm. This is the full case file. Oh All 60 stories brought to life by BBC Radio 4 with a cinematic cast and edge of your seat storytelling. Footprints. Footprints. Mr Holmes. They were the footprints of a gigantic hound. Start listening to Sherlock Holmes, the complete BBC collection, wherever you get your audiobooks. BBC Sounds, music, radio, podcast.

This is in our time from BBC Radio 4 and this is one of more than a thousand episodes you can find on BBC Sounds and on our website. If you scroll down the page for this edition, you can find a reading list to go with it. I hope you enjoy the program.

Socrates' Conviction, Crito's Plea

Hello, in three hundred ninety nine BC, Socrates' friends were pleading for him to escape from prison in Athens, where he was awaiting his death by Hemloch. Plato recounted this in two works the Crito in which Socrates shows his respect for the laws under which he'd been convicted, and the Fido, where he embraced death as the immortal soul's release.

him from the prison of the body. In both, Socrates remains calm and keeps working on his philosophy, so consoling his friends and for the last two and a half thousand years inspiring others by his example. When me to discuss Plato's Crito and Fido are Fiona Lee, Associate Professor in the Department of Philosophy at University College London, James Warren, Professor of Ancient Philosophy at the University of Cambridge, and Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge.

and Angie Hobbes, professor of the public understanding of philosophy at the University of Sheffield. Angie Hobbes, what had just happened in the life of Socrates? Why was he in prison? Yes, he's just been convicted of refusing to believe in the cities gods, of believing in new divine beings, and of corrupting the young. And he's been sentenced to death.

and he's awaiting the hemlock. The hemlock can't be administered while the Athenians have sent a sacred mission to the island of Delos in honor of Apollo, and they do this every year, and the boat was sanctified the day before the trial. and they have to wait for the return of the boat from Delos uh before the hemlock can be administered. So that just adds to the drama.

And Crito is with Socrates in the prison and Krito says, I I think you're going to die tomorrow because the boat has been sighted at Sunnium and and Socrates says, No, it'll be not tomorrow but the day after. I've just had a an amazing dream. A woman in white came to me and said, In three days you're going to return to fertile Thea, which is a a quote from Homer in terms of Achilles returning to his And why did he get the death sentence?

What happens is that the jury found him guilty and then both the prosecutor, Miletus in this case, and the defendant Socrates can propose a penalty. Miletus proposes the death penalty, and Socrates is allowed to propose an alternative penalty so that the jurors can choose. He could have proposed exile, they would almost certainly have accepted that. He could have proposed a very hefty fine, his rich friends Crito and Plato and others had guaranteed that.

He doesn't do that initially he says, Well I've benefited Athens so much that Athens should uh maintain me at their expense for the rest of my life. That didn't go down too well. He then proposes a a pretty small fine. That doesn't go down well either, and then er eventually he proposes a larger fine, which Plato and Criter and others say that they will act as backers for but by this time Socrates is so annoyed.

the jurors that they go, No, no, we're going to give you the death penalty. So he has chosen to die and I think we need to think maybe that Socrates is trying to provide an example of a good death. as part of a good life. How you die is part of how you live. And he he's trying to set an example. I think he's maybe taking the long view here and realising that how he dies might have as much influence as his philosophical conversation.

Thank you, James. James Warren. Can you tell us a little more about Crito and about his relationship with Socrates? Yes, Crito is a rough contemporary of Socrates. He's a longstanding friend of Socrates. And it's evident from their discussion that they've spent a lot of time talking together in the past. talking through philosophical questions, talking through precisely the philosophical questions that they revisit in the dialogue that bears Kritos name.

He was evidently very wealthy, and you've already said he's mentioned by Socrates as being one of the people prepared to put up a huge amount of money should Socrates be fined. But when we meet him in the Crito, he arrives in the prison extraordinarily agitated, very worried that he's going to lose his friend and that this is something that he thinks is avoidable.

Socrates' Philosophical Approach to Law

And so he wants to try to persuade Socrates to do whatever it can be done and not to go against convention actually, that this would probably have been expected that if you had rich friends they would intervene and prevent you from being executed in the manner that Socrates eventually faces. Can you give listeners an idea of the place of Socrates in the society in Athens at that time?

Well Socrates is a member of elite Athenian society. He's very well connected. He's depicted in Plato's dialogues talking with most of the great and the good of Athens of the time, including visiting intellectuals from all around the Greek world. So it's pretty clear that he's a well known individual. He'd been depicted in Athenian comedies of the time in a way that's recognizable to the mass audience.

So the Athenians knew him quite well and would probably have formed an opinion of him, likely somewhat negative, I would have thought, as someone well, as someone who's a bothersome intellectual, who's constantly raising troubling questions about. Well, the youth of Athens, in part. It's certainly true. That his discussions encouraged the young people of Athens to rethink and critically examine fundamental moral concerns that seem to be generally accepted by society in general.

Well, such as that courage involves fighting your place in a hoplite rank, for example, or that certain religious beliefs are important for the cohesion of Athenian society. Um, Socrates encourages them to think critically about all of those. It's worth saying some of these young people, and some of the people he's talking with, were famously involved in an anti democratic coup just five years before.

Socrates trial. And it's quite possible that the democratic jury thought that Socrates was involved in some way in encouraging these kinds of uprisings, or at least he was associated with people who'd shown themselves to be enemies of Athenian democracy.

The references in in the notes of all of you uh have him being very unpopular, going round the marketplace asking people what is meant by virtue, what is meant by courage, and making them look fools when they don't answer in the way that's that satisfies him in in his logic.

Yeah, no, he must have been extraordinarily annoying to have around. And uh uh he he um in in the apology that we've mentioned more than once he describes himself as famously a gadfly, who was sent on a kind of divine mission to provoke and rouse the noble but sort of slovenly horse of Athens into further reflection. How does Kritu set about trying to persuade Socrates to escape one way and another with

Well he explains to Socrates that first of all there's no need for Socrates to stay and be executed. He explains that arrangements arrangements could be made to bribe the right people to get him out of jail, that arrangements could be made to find him somewhere outside of Athens where he could stay and and live comfortably, that arrangements would be made for Socrates' family, particularly his children.

I should also add that Kritos says it would make Socrates' friends look bad if they allow the sentence to be carried out. Fiona Lee, how'd Socrates respond to Kreiter's argument about popular opinion? Socrates does something interesting right away. He suggests that they examine the matter together. He reminds Crito that he's the sort of person who listens to nothing inside him except what he thinks on reflection is the best argument.

And the argument as far as he's concerned hasn't changed and the principles on which he based his reasoning haven't changed. So he wants to examine these new suggestions from Krito together with him. And he starts with an argument by analogy. He says just as if you wanted to look after your body, its health and well being, you would look to a trainer who is expert.

in these things and not the popular opinion of the majority. So too, um you would look for an expert in thinking about actions, whether they were just and unjust, whether you should perform the good Or the bad thing, the shameful, or the noble thing. If you listen to the majority in the care of your body, you'll end up doing yourself harm. So too, Socrates suggests. that if you look to the majority in the care of the thing that's benefited and harmed by just actions and unjust actions, The soul

Although he doesn't actually say it, that's what he has in mind. Then you will harm your soul if you listen to the majority. He then goes on to suggest that life itself is not the most important thing, that living a life with a corrupted body or a corrupted soul isn't a life worth living, but instead what's worth living is a good life, a beautiful life. A just life. And so he says we should ignore the opinions of the majority.

Then the laws come to play. Can you tell Lysus what is meant by the laws and how they were effective or not? In this case. Just before the great twist of the dialogue happens, where the laws come into play, Socrates tries to reason with Krito More directly. He reminds Kritov of the principle that you should never do harm willingly, even if it's in retaliation for harm that someone else has done to you.

And he asks Krito whether they should go ahead with his plan for Socrates to escape from prison without the permission of the Athenians, whether that will be doing harm to the people they should least harm. And by this he's got to have in mind himself and Crito. And it follows from the idea that he's stated just earlier, that if you do something unjust, you harm your own soul.

Now they've agreed, Socrates has agreed in his trial, to go along with the verdict, insofar as he willingly chose not to go into exile. So the question is If they break the agreement, are they breaking a just agreement? And Crito can't answer. And this is really important. It's the pivot on which the dialogue turns. Because he can't answer, he says, I just don't know, Socrates.

Socrates can't talk to him any longer, and that's when the laws come in. Socrates starts speaking with the laws of Athens, he personifies them as able to speak and The laws are the ones asking Socrates the questions. Usually Socrates is asking other people questions and they have to answer, but it's the laws. So Plato creates a fiction within the dialogue of Socrates having this conversation with the laws.

And the laws are cross examining him on the supposition that he's persuaded by Krito that it would be just it would be okay to escape prison. Angie, for anyone who's read Plato, why would Socrates deference to the laws seem odd Well in a as we've been hearing in in the crito, if you undermine the laws you're undermining the whole fabric of the state and that's bad. But and it's quite strange. I think for two reasons.

So in the apology, in his defence speech in in Plato's Apology, Socrates says at one point to the jurors If you say you will acquit me on condition that I stop doing philosophy, that I stop tramping round Athens and buttonholing people and interrogating them, I will refuse. I won't obey you. Is that Socrates defying the laws of Athens? Yeah, I think that's a moot point because he is telling the jurors in advance what he will do.

The Laws' Authority and Socrates' Agreement

I think a more serious tension is with other dialogues that Plato writes. in which Plato characterizes Socrates as as being really quite critical of democratic Athens and its laws. You get that criticism in the Gorgias, for instance. And in the first book of the Republic there is a whole general discussion about what is the relationship between laws and morality. Is it always just to obey the law? You get the the start of that that long running debate.

So it is really interesting to me that in the Krito the arguments of the laws are seen as absolutely to be obeyed. So it's really interesting that in the Krito the the arguments of the laws are seen as absolutely authoritative. the laws say if you undermine us, if you disobey us on this matter, you're undermining the whole rule of law and that's going to undermine the very fabric of the state, that the the police the city state just can't exist unless the rule of law operates.

And we have done three specific things. We have acted as we've brought you to birth, uh, through our marriage laws, we've raised you through the education of the state. We've acted as your parents and even more than your parents have done, and you owe us gratitude and obedience even more than you would to your parents. Furthermore, we have specifically benefited you, Socrates. We've allowed you to go around doing philosophy un until we didn't.

And thirdly, by choosing to remain in Athens, you could have left. You never did. Apart from going on military campaign, you never left Athens. So you have implicitly s made a contract with us. You've made a contract to obey us. James, you want to take that on take that further? Mm. Yes, I think the speech that Socrates gives to the laws is tremendously important in the history of philosophical thinking about political authority and obligation.

Because as Angie has just pointed out, in barely three or four pages Two of the most important and long running arguments for political obedience and political authority. On the one hand There's the argument from benefit that says you owe us obedience because of the good that we do to you. On the other, there is the argument that Socrates owes obedience to the laws on the grounds that he's agreed to.

to do so. This agreement is an implicit agreement. He's never explicitly been asked the question, Do you agree to live by the laws of Athens? But the evidence is there that having had the opportunity to move elsewhere, if the if the the laws say if you didn't like us you could have moved, you could have raised objections to us previously, Socrates has failed to do so.

And so the implicit agreement that they rely on means that he would indeed be acting unjustly and breaking a kind of contract between him and the city, were he to fail to obey them on this occasion. Fiona, yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n yw'n? So it's a very difficult question to answer in a way, because under questioning he seems to agree to some of the things that the laws say. But as James has pointed out

they speak in long speeches. So it's hard to know exactly what it is that Socrates is agreeing to. He definitely agrees to their conclusion that by his deeds, particularly his actions of remaining in the city, He's agreed to live amongst the laws and with the laws. One can interpret that two ways. One can have a minimal view and say that he doesn't really endorse what the laws are saying, and one can say, alternatively, that he does.

Some people think that he does endorse what the laws say and that he he is submissive to the laws. And one way of thinking about this is to think that Plato wants to suggest that there are two forms of moral agreement. There's the moral agreement that you get in words explicitly by argumentation. And then there's agreement by action, so there's agreement indeed, and that Socrates is presenting these views as not incompatible, but as possibly even mutually supporting.

Most people in fact take it that Socrates can't be fully endorsing what the laws say, that the agreement is only at best minimal. And one of the reasons that people have thought this is that Socrates makes it very clear from the beginning that he's committed to the principle that one should never do wrong willingly.

Whereas the laws make it plain in their question and answer session with Socrates in their long speech that the moral relationship they see between themselves, the laws of the city and the citizen, is asymmetrical and paternalistic. So the citizen is required, as Angie and James have explained, to either obey the laws or else to persuade the laws otherwise. They're not allowed to retaliate any more than a child is allowed to retaliate against its parents.

For a perceived wrong. So the moral codes here must be different. Socrates, for Socrates non retaliation is absolute, whereas for the laws it's asymmetrical. Why would Plato write a dialogue which presents these two moral codes? One suggestion has been I think it's a really interesting suggestion, is that the question what is the virtue justice is what these two moral codes answer differently. And so Plato's prompting the reader to reflect on that question and think what is justice really?

Υπότιτλοι AUTHORWAVE For me one of the most extraordinary things of all, and most powerful and moving, is not just what Socrates says, and I absolutely agree with with James and Fiona, there's a real debate about the extent to which he accepts the arguments of the laws. It's the fact he's having this debate at all. He's in the very final days of his life, as we're going to see in the feedo, right up to his last breath. He continues in respectful, friendly, but

serious and keen philosophical debate. That for me is is almost as important, if not as important, as anything he actually says.

The Phaedo: Socrates' Final Day

But let's so quite your ends with Socrates staying put in prison. open to being persuaded by Crito, but neither of them thinking that it's at all likely. Can you continue, Angie? There's considerable pathos in a work which follows some time later, in a longer work, Fido, Yes. So in the Fido we get the uh an account of the final day of Socrates' life. It's told by Fido, who was there in the prison cell, and he tells it to um Ecacrates who was not there.

And before we even get into the account of the final day, it is so interesting. The very first question in the Phedo is Achecrates asking Phaedo, Were you there on the day that Socrates took the poison? the the hemlock that you've been talking about. Now the the word for poison is pharmacon, from which we of course get pharmacy and so on. And yes it can mean poison, but it it can also mean medicine. And that whole notion about whether it's the hemlock and Socrates's death

is actually a poison or whether it's a medicine that's going to cure him from the ills of the body and release him to the next life is going to be central. So Fido says yes, um to pick up the story of the the drama of the boat returning from Delos, The day before his friends were with Socrates in the prison cell and when they came out they heard the boat from Delos, the sacred mission to Delos, it's now arrived back in Athens. So that means that Socrates is going to be put to death the next day.

So his friends gather very early, before dawn, and there's a very powerfully written scene that they're let in. And when they're actually in the cell I counted fifteen named associates and friends of Socrates in in the cell, plus various other unnamed Athenians. It was very crowded. And they ask Socrates, What is it that we hear that you've been composing poetry? And he says, Well, all my life I've had a dream.

saying Socrates make music and work at it. And the word for music here, musica, means poetry and embraces poetry as well as music. And Socrates says, I always assumed that this was the god Apollo telling me to just keep doing philosophy in the way I was doing. But now in my final days I think maybe Apollo means me literally to write poetry, so I am turning the fables of Esau. into poetry and I've composed a hymn to Apollo. But that also allows Plato to raise the whole question

Of what is philosophy? What's the relationship between philosophy and literature and myth? And does philosophy need myth as well as rational arguments? Thank you. The crew of NASA's Artemis II mission have successfully completed their voyage around the moon. This is what we've been waiting for for fifty years. Traveling further from the Earth than any human has ever gone before. And 13 minutes, the BBC Space Podcast, told the inside story, with audio from the mission.

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Footprints? Footprints. Mr. Holmes, they were the footprints of a gigantic hound. Start listening to Sherlock Holmes, the complete BBC collection, wherever you get your audiobooks. James, um Socrates suggests that his whole philosophical life has been leading up to this point. And in that case, death means in him separation of the soul from the body. The soul is in prison in him, just as he is in prison. Can you develop that?

Yes, the strange circumstance Socrates finds himself in allows him to make a much more general point, as you say, which is that Each of us is, when alive, a combination of a soul and a body. And the soul and the body can be more or less entangled with one another. Philosophy, says Socrates, is a preparation for death, and what he means by that is that in doing philosophy one ought to try as best one can to disentangle one's soul from one's body even while you are living. So Yeah.

Well a soul good question is whatever it is the principle of life is one way to think about it. It's what The thing whose presence makes you a living thing, rather than a corpse, for example. So when spoilers, at the end of the dialogue Socrates dies, what's left is a corpse, which is a body without a soul. The soul, Socrates says, has left and has departed. But during his own life, importantly, Socrates says he's been trying as hard as he can

to make sure that the soul was as little entangled with the body as possible. And this is by doing whatever you can to free yourself from the concerns of the body. Freeing yourself from being led by physical pleasures or physical pains

and instead being led by the goods of the soul, principally I would think wisdom and virtue and so on. And so if you concentrate on the good of the soul rather than the good of the body, then you're Turning the soul away from the concerns of the body and are doing as best you can to prepare it. For its eventual final separation from its embodied state.

Arguments for Soul Immortality

Thank you, Fiona. Can we you take that on? Um it keeps arguing for the soul and it's it's a very contentious, isn't it, as as it turns out. Can you just say a little more? That was well well put by James. Is there more to say there? Well there is. I mean this is the first sort of set of considerations Sof Socrates offers his friends who are really upset that he's about to die and he's trying to console them because he seems to sincerely believe that the soul is immortal.

And so that he's going to persist and indeed go to a better place. So the first lot of consideration. Sorry to be interrupted. Does he specify the place? Is there a place or is it a state? What is it? It's Hades, it's the underworld. And so he thinks he'll he'll be able to go there and carry on having philosophical conversations.

with other people, other philosophers. He hopes even to talk to Homer. And he wants to convince his his friends that this is what's going to happen. They're not convinced by the set of considerations James has relayed Because the dualism that Socrates supposes here presupposes that the soul doesn't endure destruction at death.

So they want better arguments precisely for the immortality of the soul. Socrates goes on to offer a whole raft of arguments and I could because I find it really interesting. tell you about the last argument. This last argument is interesting in part because Socrates takes it to be conclusive. It's very short and it's very, very abstract.

He says that the soul always brings life with it and most people take this to mean the claim that the soul is essentially alive, that it has it as an essential characteristic being alive and it brings that with it wherever it goes. The second move in the argument is to say that since death is the opposite of life,

and the soul is essentially alive, the soul will not admit death. So the soul is deathless. The third move of the argument that initially struck people from ancient times on as a bit suspect is that because the soul is deathless and death means going out of existence, the soul can't perish. So Socrates thinks he's shown, therefore, that the soul is immortal Because it's essentially alive and deathless, and that means it's indestructible.

Angie, can you take up the influence of Pythagoras and Orpheus on Plato? Does that knit in with what's just been said? So Plato after the death of Socrates in three nine nine, Plato travelled for about ten years. including in southern Italy, where in what was known as Greater Greece, Magna Graecia, he visited Pythagorean communities there. And certainly for a time he was very, very influenced by Pythagorean teachings, which are closely allied. to the Orphic mystery religion.

These are teachings in poems which were ascribed to almost certainly a mythical Orpheus. Not all followers of Orphism were Pythagoreans, but all Pythagoreans to some extent embraced some of the teachings. of orphism. And the whole we've been hearing about the notion of the the body as a tomb, death as the release of the soul from this tomb of a body, that's orphic. all the notion that sort of the m the barnacles and mud of our body kind of tie us down to this earthly life, that's all awful.

So that is key to a lot of this dialogue. Now the the problem, as Simeas himself, who's one of the interlocutors and and Kibes who we've been hearing about from Fiona, they're both uh Pythagoreans.

But they realise that there are some problems with their Pythagorean theories, which Socrates points out. Again, within hours of his death, we're interrogating this notion because C CMS puts forward another of the arguments is that maybe our soul is just a harmony, the right composition of our bodily parts, but that's bad news for the soul as an immortal being, because just as the m the melody of the lyre disappears as soon as the physical lyre is destroyed,

So if our bodies are destroyed, the harmony of our our soul will be destroyed. And and Socrates says, you know, with that that is not compatible with a lot of our other arguments. So though Plato is very influenced by Pythagoreanism and Orphism in the Phaedo, at this stage of his life

incredibly ascetic. He's still willing to interrogate it. That that's the key point. Just one final thing, I always used to find this extreme asceticism in the Fido just very off putting. It's the most body denying of all Plato's dialogues, and and Plato himself does not stay this ascetic in later work. I now come come to th think of it as Plato, who, by the way, is not there on the final day of Socrates' life, couldn't face it.

pretends to be ill. This is Plato's way of trying to come to terms with the absence of Socrates' body. Thank you.

Socrates' Legacy and the Forms

Later, of course, the Roman writer Cicero was to say he found Socrates' arguments plausible while reading them, but afterwards he was unconvinced. Would you go along with Cicero? Oh yes, I think most of them are terrible arguments in various ways, including the one that Fiona set out very clearly. Cicero's an interesting case. Cicero thinks of himself in some way as a follower of Plato. I mean in the sense that he calls himself an academic, someone who's a member of the academy.

But he takes that to license a certain degree of independence of thought that reading Plato encourages you to reflect on various arguments, and some you may find plausible, some less so. But you're entitled to go along with your own judgment on these matters. I think he wants to be persuaded. He likes the idea Cicero likes the idea that the soul is immortal.

and that death, as it were, the physical death of an embodied person is not the end of that person's existence. But for various reasons he doesn't Find conclusive any of the demonstrations that Socrates tends to offer. He's prepared in works such as The Tusculan Disputations, the first book of which is devoted to the question of whether death is a bad thing, he's prepared to think, no, mostly um Plato probably has it right.

that death is most likely and most plausibly thought of as the separation of the soul from the body. And Cicero takes this to be a great consolation, actually. He's writing that work shortly after the death of his own daughter, He's writing the work in the shadow of the Roman civil wars that have claimed many of his friends and will shortly claim him in a violent reprisal from Antony.

And he finds, as many readers did in antiquity, he finds reading the Fido in particular to be extremely helpful in coming to the terms with the prospect of his own death. How can you Fiona, can you tell the listeners how does Socrat how does the Socrates of the Crito compla compare with the warning Fido? So in terms of the drama surrounding Socrates, there's a great deal of continuity because it's only a couple of days later, it's the day of his death.

There are other continuities in the person of Socrates as well. He's still seeking agreement when the people he's talking to are not convinced and say so. he thinks of a new argument and he really wants to examine the reasons behind one conclusion or another. But in lots of ways, actually, there's a great discontinuity between the Socrates of the Krito

and the Apology and the other dialogues generally thought of as early and the Socrates of the Fido. In the so called early dialogues and in the Krito, Socrates' prime concern is with how we should live and what The virtues really are, how we should acquire them in order to truly flourish. That's his primary concern. By contrast, in the Fido, we find him interested in questions of natural science, in questions of causation, in metaphysical questions such as the nature and existence of the soul.

So the characters are really different insofar as they're interested in and focused upon radically different philosophical questions. Most of all the difference. though for a lot of scholars, including me, lies in the fact that Socrates postulates these very special abstract entities called forms. for the first time it's thought in the phido in order to explain what it is that the soul is able to grasp when it grasps the truth about something. So the so

What's a form? Okay. Um a form is a purely intelligible entity that's abstract in the sense of not being in space or time, often said to be everlasting in the dialogue. that we can access or grasp with our minds. But what it is to be a form, many scholars, including me, think. is to be the true nature of some property or characteristic.

What is a true nature? It's the thing that you grasp with your mind if you give a definition of that characteristic. So say you stumble upon something that Socrates searches for for a long time. in the Republic, the nature of justice, what this virtue is, you can give a div you can give a definition of justice. And when you articulate that definition, you're articulating the nature of the property in question and you're explaining what the form is in that case.

Angie, uh back to uh back to the prison, back to the death of Socrates. Can we have a brief description of c uh people around, of his last words, how he died? Yes, so then. He's given his arguments for the immortality of the soul, four arguments. Fiona very eloquently summed up the final argument. Uh, then we have uh a myth about what he thinks uh the other world would be like, an eschatological myth about what will happen to good and bad souls after our death.

It's a wonderful piece of writing. It looks back to make music and work at it, why we might need myth as well as rational arguments. When that's finished. First of all, Socrates says I'm going to go and bathe now, and that will save the women the trouble of bathing my corpse after I'm dead. So he considerately goes off and has his bath before the hemlock's brought in.

Then his old friend Crito, still very upset, says, How are we going to bury you, Socrates? And Socrates says, Well, however you like, uh, if you can catch me. Sort of w you know, I'm not gonna be there. It's just gonna be my body. I don't really care. Burn me uh bury me, I really don't care. His wife and children are brought back in briefly. He d but then they're sent away again. Um

And then the jailer comes in and says it look it's nearly time and the jailer gets very emotional. The jailers become very fond of Socrates, bursts into tears, that gets them all going. Apart from Socrates, they w all the others start crying. Socrates says, no, no, no, no tears. It's not an unhappy thing that's going to happen. The executioner comes in, gives Socrates the hemlock, he s walks around until his legs start to feel heavy.

uh and then he lies down, rigor mortis starts to set in, he's very calm, he's very cheerful, and his final words, he says to his old friend from childhood, Crito, he says, uh, Crito, we owe a cock

to Asclepius, make sure that you pay it. I. e. we need to sacrifi you need to sacrifice a cock to the god of healing, Asclepius. And The idea, of course, is that his death is going to be a healing from the sickness of life, a release of the soul from the prison of his body, looking back to the very first lines of the Fido in which The hemlock, the poison is also described as a pharmacon, a medicine. Thank you, James. Um, how has his time in prison shaped his reputation?

Well I think it's probably th the most iconic part of his life. the way in which he's depicted often. It's hard to find a philosophy book these days without that picture of him um talking to his friends in the in the prison on the front of it. What it shows Is his lifelong and consistent commitment to philosophical inquiry, no matter what. the possible repercussions of that might be. It shows him continuing to be open minded, continuing to be receptive of new ideas and new suggestions.

Prepared even to reconsider commitments that he'd formed in his previous discussions, should a better argument come along, but also committed that In the absence of a better argument, he will continue to act No matter what peculiar circumstances he might find himself in, whatever the risks might be, he will continue to act on the basis of the commitments that he's come to through a process of rational philosophical arguments.

So in some ways his death presents him as the great committed philosopher and it's aped through antiquity by various Romans who find themselves facing death or indeed killing themselves rather than compromise themselves in various ways. He becomes, in a way, you might think, a kind of philosophical martyr. And in some traditions and some discussions He's offered as perhaps um paradoxically, given what we were talking about in the Crito, as a figure of civil disobedience.

as a figure who, rather than compromise his ideals, will allow himself to be subject to the ultimate penalty that the state can inflict. Fiona, what aspect of the crito and the phido have resonated most over the years and why? That's a very hard question to answer on behalf of Western philosophy generally. So perhaps the best I can do is answer it for my own part. In lots of ways I agree with James.

Um, Socrates shows the courage of his convictions, so he's inspirational um for anybody who wants to show the integrity of standing by what they really believe in. Moreover, he does it on the basis of critical rational reflection. The other legacy really of the two dialogues we've been talking about today for me is the commitment to agreement with other people. It's not a question of Socrates sitting on his own

contemplating whether or not he's done the right thing. He wants to make sure that what he's thinking is in agreement with what other people who have the right kind of methodology, that is of rational critical reflection, considering counterexamples and and so on, what they think as well. He w he wants not just to convince other people. In fact I don't think he does want to convince other people. He really wants

to be in agreement with other people and for them to be in agreement with him, because he's always leaving it open that he's made a mistake. Despite that, But you may have made a mistake. Exactly, that he might have made a mistake. He's always open to revising and modifying his views. But for all that He's carefully reviewed his arguments sufficiently to have confidence that he is doing the right thing and that to do otherwise would be to act unjustly. And that's hugely admirable.

Well, we come to the end of the time now, unfortunately. But t ending with you as uh Angie, why do you think his resonance after Two and a half thousand years is still strong enough to have the three of you engaged and possibly spending a lot of your intellectual life following or trying to follow what he said. What How did he how did he manage to achieve that position and that distinction? Just a short question to anyway. Yeah.

Three very brief points. So as Fiona said earlier on, the criteria says the important question isn't how to live but how to live well. And we are getting a model, not the only model, but a model about how to die well and dying being seen as part of life, as part of the good life. And for all the the slightly chilling aspects I've mentioned in Socrates twice sending away his women and children.

from the uh the cell, he only wants the his male friends around him. But for all that Plato does present him as heroic at the end, and I think rightly so. He is calm, he is brave, he is Courteous and friendly until the end. And the third thing is as as Fiona was saying, he he doesn't just continue philosophical debate literally until the hemlock is administered. he does it in an open minded way. He he invites challenge and indeed, after all these very eloquently uh put arguments,

Simeus and Kibes are not entirely convinced and and and Socrates says, Well, I agree with you. I think there are some loopholes here. We that the the discussion needs to be continued more after his death, of course. And that model about how to Work towards agreement, as Fiona was saying, but in this careful, thoughtful, respectful

open minded way where you're always prepared to admit you're wrong and be open to challenge. Uh for all those reasons I think that for all his faults, he's he is a hero. Well, thank you very much. Thank you very much, Angie Hobbes, Fiona Lee and James Warren. Next week, the persistent legend of Pope Joan, the woman who supposedly reigned as Pope in the ninth century, disguised as a man. Thank you for listening.

And the In Our Time podcast gets some extra time now with a few minutes of bonus material from Melvin and his guests.

Bonus: Debating Death and the Soul

Uh I start with you, James. What would you like to have said you didn't have time to say? This might sound like a strange question, but I think it's an important one. And the question is does Socrates die at the end of the feedo? And what I mean by that is Angie reminded us that when Crito says, How would you like us to deal with you after your death he says, Well, I won't be here.

So in a way, if Socrates is his soul, if we are our souls and we separate from the body at the end of our lives, then we don't die. The soul doesn't die, can't die, as Fiona was saying. That's the argument, and if that's who I am, then I will not die. On the other hand, the last lines of the of the Fido say and that was the end of m our friend Socrates. So what has ceased to be is this particular charismatic

individual, this person who has spent his life in Athens talking with people about all sorts of extraordinarily fundamental, challenging questions. That person is no longer So I think it's not a straightforward question whether Socrates dies at the end of the Fido, and it depends what Socrates is, in fact, and that's something that's a big question that the Fido invites us to think quite carefully about. Would you like to say something?

In relation to that actually, the identification it seems in the photo of Socrates with his soul. is something that is going to contrast quite starkly with the d development of the conception of the soul and the self that Plato presents in this his master work The Republic. There the person or the soul is not understood as reducible to the part with which we reason and can grasp truth.

There the soul is described as consisting of three elements. There is the rational part, that is the most important part, but there's also the part with which um we love winning and we want honour and we get angry, the spirited part of ourselves. And the part of the soul, not the body. There's the part of the soul

that desires all the pleasures of the body and wants to avoid the pains of the body. So these three elements are what make up the personality. And this is a much more appealing conception of the self. than the sort of highly intellectualist notion of the self that we get in the phido. So the question of what dies and who dies becomes even more complex in the Republic. I have two big questions about the arguments for immortality of the the soul and the feed.

Whether any of the arguments address the request that the two main interlocutors, the Pythagoreans, Simeus and Kibes, say, they want to know whether Socrates is going to attain personal immortality. Do any of the arguments we get address personal immortality? It's all very well to say, well, the soul, whether you regard it as a concept or a form, there's a big debate about that, we don't need to go into that. But if it always

is attached to or comes with the form of life in some way, so the concept of soul can't admit death because that's just not what the concept of soul is about. That's fine.

But d does that tell you anything about personal immortality, which is what Simees and Kibes and his other friends care about? I'm not sure. The other big question I have, um and in in terms of the argument for immortality, to me they they really are divided between those which see the soul as reasoning mind in the way that Fiona's just been discussing, and those which see the soul as animating force.

It's not clear to me that those conceptions cohere. I I think Plato is really wrestling with very deep issues here for the first time. He's moving away from the historic Socrates. And he's grappling with things which he will clarify a bit more later. James. Well I I think Angie's absolutely right that one way to put it is the Fido doesn't put to the test whether there are such things as salt.

really, that it's very quickly agreed by all of those present that when we're living we are a combination of a body and the soul, and when those two separate, that's what death is. So it's never really subject to any critical reflection whether that makes sense as a conception of life and death. whether we should think ourselves in this of in this kind of dualist fashion as a body plus a soul is what makes a living animal. It Plato's helped himself by having these Pythagoreans as the

uh interlocutors because they're all on board with this kind of stuff and um are uh a quite a receptive audience to this kind of thinking. Now it may be that we're asking too much of Plato. But it does strike me that he's um he's started halfway along to his goal already. So I wanted to now respond to James's earlier question in terms of the FEDO alone by saying that I think that

Socrates does die. The Socrates, the fleshy thing, that is a a personality, a character that is what he is because he's in a body. He he leaves us. And where led to believe that his soul, which is reduced to this intellectualist notion, carries on and goes to Hades, where it can have philosophical conversations. But I wonder if that's not actually problematic for the picture that Plato's got, because Socrates shows great courage in his soul.

And where does that courage come from? That's part of enduring in conversation. Arguably some of the characteristics that we need to be spirited enough to endure um when it's difficult to stand by our principles which we've been talking about, come from precisely being the kind of compound that we are, fleshy creatures, souls with a body. It's very paradoxical. If death isn't a bad thing, then it doesn't take courage to stand up to it.

Um, so you can't you can't have it both ways. You can't um admire Socrates' courage in the face of death if you don't also consider death to be potentially a harm. Finally now, I think we're coming towards the end. Is there anything that that you would regret not saying in two years' time? I w I want to point you know, I I think we should emphasise that

There's quite a lot of humour in the Fido. It's the last day of his life, but Plato cracks a few jokes, Socrates cracks a few jokes, and that fits in with what Fido says to Echecrates right at the beginning that The whole day was a mixture of tears and laughter. Our emotions were all over the place, apart from Socrates, who was sort of calm and cheerful throughout. Now, y you say if you're if you think there's nothing to fear in death, can there be any courage in facing it?

I don't know. I mean I I think that's a bit tough, isn't it? I mean there can be a lot of people who believe in a life after death, but still might have a few tremors as they draw their bl their last breath. I don't know. Well I'm gonna leave it at I don't know. Our producer Simon is gonna come in now. Tea or coffee or penlock or anything. Mm-hmm. Look. I'd love the cuppa. I love a bit of coffee, please. One coffee, two teas and Something with ginger in it, something with peppy.

In our time with Melvin Bragg is produced by Simon Tillotson and it's a BBC Studios audio production. And we're back for a brand new series, series nine, where we're covering all sorts of things, from Aristotle to the legends of King Arthur, to the history of coffee, to the reign of Catherine of Medici of France. We are looking at the arts and crafts movement and the life of Sojourner Truth.

And how cuneiform writing systems worked in the Bronze Age. Loads of different stuff. It's a fantastic series, it's funny, we get great historians, we get great comedians. So if you wanna listen to You're Dead to Me, listen first on BBC Sounds. The crew of NASA's Artemis II mission have successfully completed their voyage around the moon. This is what we've been waiting for for fifty years.

Traveling further from the Earth than any human has ever gone before. And 13 minutes, the BBC Space Podcast, told the inside story, with audio from the mission. We can see the moon out of the docking hatch right now. It is a beautiful sight. We're seeing more and more of the far side. from experts at NASA. That's the way it is in spaceflight. There are a lot of tough questions, and we could never fly a perfectly safe mission. The safest mission is

splashdown catch up with 13 minutes presents Artemis 2 from the BBC World Service. Listen now wherever you get your BBC podcast. It just...

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