Seen by numerous as the establishing figure of Western theory, Socrates (469-399 B.C.) is without a moment's delay the most commendable and the weirdest of the Greek scholars. He grew up amid the brilliant age of Pericles' Athens, presented with unique excellence as a warrior, however turned out to be best known as an examiner of everything and everybody. His style of educating—deified as the Socratic Method—included not passing on information yet rather making inquiry in the wake of illuminating inquiry until the point that his understudies touched base at their own comprehension. He didn't compose anything himself, so all that is thought about him is separated through the compositions of a couple of peers and adherents, above all, his understudy Plato. He was blamed for ruining the adolescent of Athens and condemned to death. Picking not to escape, he spent his last days in the organization of his companions previously drinking the killer's measure of harmful hemlock.
Albeit a large number of Aristophanes' reactions appear to be out of line, Socrates trim a bizarre figure in Athens, going about shoeless, since quite a while ago haired and unwashed in a general public with staggeringly refined measures of magnificence. It didn't help that he was from every angle physically monstrous, with an upturned nose and protruding eyes. Regardless of his insightfulness and associations, he dismissed the kind of acclaim and power that Athenians were relied upon to make progress toward. His way of life—and in the end his passing—typified his soul of scrutinizing each presumption about prudence, shrewdness and the great life.
Two of his more youthful understudies, the student of history Xenophon and the savant Plato, recorded the most huge records of Socrates' life and reasoning. For both, the Socrates that shows up bears the characteristic of the essayist. In this way, Xenophon's Socrates is more clear, willing to offer counsel as opposed to just making more inquiries. In Plato's later works Socrates talks with what appear to be to a great extent Plato's thoughts, yet in the prior exchanges—considered by students of history to be the most exact depiction—Socrates once in a while uncovers any conclusions of his own as he splendidly enables his conversationalists to dismember their musings and intentions.
One of the best conundrums that Socrates helped his understudies investigate was whether shortcoming of will—fouling up when you really realized what was correct—at any point genuinely existed. He assumed something else: individuals just fouled up when right now the apparent advantages appeared to exceed the expenses. Therefore the improvement of individual morals involves acing what he called "the craft of estimation," remedying the mutilations that skew one's examinations of advantage and cost.
Socrates was additionally profoundly intrigued by understanding the points of confinement of human learning. When he was informed that the Delphic prophet had proclaimed that he was the most shrewd man in Athens, Socrates shied away until the point that he understood that, in spite of the fact that he didn't know anything, he was (dissimilar to his kindred natives) definitely mindful of his own numbness.