
Note: The tonic system has been changed from polytonic to monotonic. The spelling of the book has not been changed otherwise. Bold words are included in &, while words in italics in _. Footnotes have been placed at the end of the book. // Σημείωση: Το τονικό σύστημα έχει αλλάξει από πολυτονικό σε μονοτονικό. Η ορθογραφία του βιβλίου κατά τα άλλα παραμένει ως έχει. Λέξεις με έντονους χαρακτήρες περικλείονται σε &, ενώ λέξεις με πλάγιους χαρακτήρες σε _. Οι υποσημειώσεις των σελίδων έχουν τεθεί στο τέλος του βιβλίου.
The work offers a vivid portrait of a 5th‑century Athenian thinker, born to a sculptor and a midwife, whose early training in the arts gave him a keen eye for detail. He abandoned the workshop for the agora, where he engaged citizens in plain‑spoken dialogues that exposed hidden assumptions and rejected the flamboyant rhetoric of the sophists. Through these conversations he championed the moral development of youth, insisting that true wisdom begins with self‑examination.
At the heart of the book is Socrates’ own defense before the Athenian jury, a speech that lays out his reason for questioning everything and his belief that a life unexamined is not worth living. He confronts his accusers with calm logic, arguing that his mission to awaken critical thought serves the city rather than harms it. The encounter captures a defining moment when a single voice challenges the values of an entire polis, shaping the foundations of Western philosophy.
Language
el
Duration
~2 hours (122K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Sophia Canoni. Book provided by Iason Konstantinides. Thanks to George Canonis for his major work in proofreading.
Release date
2012-04-16
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

-428–-348
One of the great thinkers of ancient Greece, this Athenian philosopher shaped Western thought through vivid dialogues, big questions, and a school that would influence centuries of learning. His works still feel alive because they turn philosophy into conversation.
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