
INTRODUCTION.
EUTHYPHRO
On a quiet Athenian porch, Socrates waits for his own trial on charges of impiety, while a self‑confident priest‑like figure, Euthyphro, prepares to prosecute his own father for murder. Their chance encounter brings together two legal battles: Socrates’ defense against a public accusation and Euthyphro’s personal quest for justice. The dialogue quickly turns from courtroom strategy to a deeper inquiry, as Socrates asks the obvious yet unsettling question—what exactly is piety?
What follows is a careful, back‑and‑forth examination of whether something is holy because the gods love it, or whether the gods love it because it is holy. Through Socrates’ relentless questioning, the conversation exposes the difficulty of pinning down a universal definition of virtue, even for someone as learned as Euthyphro. Listeners are drawn into a timeless exploration of moral philosophy that feels as fresh today as it was in ancient Athens.
Language
en
Duration
~52 minutes (50K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Sue Asscher, and David Widger
Release date
1999-02-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

-428–-348
A student of Socrates and the teacher of Aristotle, this Athenian philosopher helped shape the way people think about justice, knowledge, politics, and the soul. His dialogues have stayed alive for more than two thousand years because they still feel like arguments we are having today.
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