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Thursday, March 14, 2019

Socrates: the Question of Morality :: Philosophy, Philosophers

The question of morality came up when Socrates and Cephalus were having a conversation nearly money. Cephalus says someone who has led a bad life will be possessed of nightm ares and a psyche who leads a good life will non have such dreams and will be happy. Cephalus says being true and free things back is morality. Socrates gives an example were you can buoy do something good by non gibing something back. His example was if you borrow a weapon from a genius, and he is sensible at the time and at the time you should give it back your friend is insane then you shouldnt give it back so you can protect him from doing harm which is also good. Cephalus agreed that Socrates was correct that this was doing something good so Socrates said if that is the case than the definition of morality isnt to read the verity and give back whatever one has borrowed. Polemarchus interjected saying that morality is to tell the truth and to give back whatever one has borrowed if you believe Simon ides. Polemarchus says what Simonides was arduous to say was friends owe friends good deeds not bad ones. Socrates responds by saying, what Simonides meant was we give back to people what is appropriate for them, or owed to them. Polemarchus said to be consistent with what I said earlier it has to be the art of with child(p) benefit and harm to friends and enemies respectively. Socrates makes a point that morality only seems to be useful when something is not being used, for example when money needs to be saved. Socrates asks if a moral person can harm anyone and Polemarchus agreed that a moral person could harm an evil man. What Socrates was trying to get at was well if this man was really moral why is he trying to harm anyone. Socrates goes on saying many things but one primary(prenominal) point he made was as follows It is not the calling of a moral person to harm a friend or anyone else, it is the job of his opposite, an immoral person. Polemarchus agreed to this, which bas ically went against everything he said in the opening night of this conversation. Socrates says that the claim that its right and moral to give back to people what they are owed, if this is taken to mean that a moral person owes harm to his enemies and champion to his friends, turns out to be a claim no clever person would make.

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