Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated:
1
00:00:01,509 --> 00:00:04,342
(dramatic music)
2
00:00:05,430 --> 00:00:07,830
Since the dawn of civilization,
3
00:00:07,830 --> 00:00:11,400
the forces of nature and the whims of gods
4
00:00:11,400 --> 00:00:13,603
held sway over humanity.
5
00:00:15,500 --> 00:00:17,540
But 2,500 years ago,
6
00:00:17,540 --> 00:00:21,403
humankind experienced a profound transformation.
7
00:00:24,380 --> 00:00:28,200
Suddenly there were new possibilities.
8
00:00:28,200 --> 00:00:29,800
This is a time when rationality
9
00:00:29,800 --> 00:00:31,803
overrode superstition and belief.
10
00:00:32,700 --> 00:00:35,793
This is an ethic which does not rely on the gods.
11
00:00:36,726 --> 00:00:39,960
The world is now explained in terms of natural forces.
12
00:00:39,960 --> 00:00:42,363
We're now responsible for our own destiny.
13
00:00:46,740 --> 00:00:48,850
Upheavals across the globe
14
00:00:48,850 --> 00:00:52,740
sparked an ambitious vision of what humans could achieve,
15
00:00:52,740 --> 00:00:56,203
spearheaded by three trailblazers.
16
00:00:57,190 --> 00:01:00,370
Socrates, Confucius, and the Buddha.
17
00:01:00,370 --> 00:01:02,650
Great thinkers from the ancient world
18
00:01:02,650 --> 00:01:05,683
whose ideas still shape our own lives.
19
00:01:07,180 --> 00:01:08,963
Is wealth a good thing?
20
00:01:09,840 --> 00:01:12,633
How do you create a just society?
21
00:01:13,727 --> 00:01:15,653
How do I live a good life?
22
00:01:17,830 --> 00:01:20,280
By daring to think the unthinkable,
23
00:01:20,280 --> 00:01:23,663
they laid the foundations of our modern world.
24
00:01:24,740 --> 00:01:28,040
I've always been intrigued by the fact that these men,
25
00:01:28,040 --> 00:01:30,630
who lived many thousands of miles apart,
26
00:01:30,630 --> 00:01:34,810
seemed, spontaneously and within 100 years of one another,
27
00:01:34,810 --> 00:01:37,653
to come up with such radical ideas.
28
00:01:42,100 --> 00:01:44,180
So, what was going on?
29
00:01:44,180 --> 00:01:47,160
I want to investigate their revolutionary ideas
30
00:01:47,160 --> 00:01:49,460
to understand what set them in motion.
31
00:01:49,460 --> 00:01:51,740
This time, Socrates.
32
00:01:51,740 --> 00:01:54,730
It's so thrilling imagining those big, new ideas
33
00:01:54,730 --> 00:01:57,240
could possibly have been enacted there.
34
00:01:57,240 --> 00:01:59,540
He was the soldier whose bravery in battle
35
00:01:59,540 --> 00:02:03,530
was matched by the inflammatory courage of his ideas.
36
00:02:03,530 --> 00:02:05,770
Socrates encouraged his fellow citizens
37
00:02:05,770 --> 00:02:10,370
to rationally examine every aspect of their lives.
38
00:02:10,370 --> 00:02:12,030
Does the person who possesses knowledge
39
00:02:12,030 --> 00:02:13,780
in a big way know everything?
40
00:02:13,780 --> 00:02:14,960
You don't know?
I don't know.
41
00:02:14,960 --> 00:02:16,460
I give up. I give up.
42
00:02:16,460 --> 00:02:18,790
I'm going to inhabit his world
43
00:02:18,790 --> 00:02:21,300
to examine how his subversive philosophy
44
00:02:21,300 --> 00:02:23,460
challenged superstitious belief
45
00:02:23,460 --> 00:02:25,130
that had reigned for millennia
46
00:02:27,020 --> 00:02:30,350
and to discover how his search for truth
47
00:02:30,350 --> 00:02:32,493
led to his downfall.
48
00:02:52,672 --> 00:02:55,255
In 469 B.C., Socrates was born,
49
00:02:56,550 --> 00:02:59,280
the son of a midwife and a stonemason,
50
00:02:59,280 --> 00:03:03,693
into a city in the midst of a tumultuous transformation.
51
00:03:04,820 --> 00:03:07,030
He grew up in the suburbs of Athens
52
00:03:07,030 --> 00:03:10,073
at eye level with the sacred Acropolis rock.
53
00:03:12,730 --> 00:03:15,000
But young Socrates wouldn't have looked out
54
00:03:15,000 --> 00:03:18,040
over the elegant lines of the Parthenon temple,
55
00:03:18,040 --> 00:03:20,830
that exquisite symbol of Western civilization
56
00:03:20,830 --> 00:03:23,590
that still stands proud today.
57
00:03:23,590 --> 00:03:27,810
Instead he'd have woken every morning to a horror,
58
00:03:27,810 --> 00:03:31,690
the blackened and burned-out remains of buildings
59
00:03:31,690 --> 00:03:33,517
brutalized by war.
60
00:03:40,950 --> 00:03:44,020
His city bore the scars of a ferocious conflict
61
00:03:44,020 --> 00:03:47,490
with the region's superpower, Persia.
62
00:03:47,490 --> 00:03:50,600
But against the odds, Athens had triumphed
63
00:03:50,600 --> 00:03:53,143
just 10 years before Socrates was born.
64
00:03:54,320 --> 00:03:58,910
Now it reveled in what some call the Greek Miracle,
65
00:03:58,910 --> 00:04:00,373
a golden age.
66
00:04:01,220 --> 00:04:04,010
Burgeoning trade flooded the region with new wealth
67
00:04:04,010 --> 00:04:06,423
and, crucially, with new ideas.
68
00:04:10,315 --> 00:04:14,200
But the key ideology that would shape young Socrates' life
69
00:04:14,200 --> 00:04:16,810
belonged to Athens alone.
70
00:04:16,810 --> 00:04:20,400
Because here, around 508 B.C.,
71
00:04:20,400 --> 00:04:25,400
democracy, the power of the people, was born.
72
00:04:25,630 --> 00:04:28,640
Virtually overnight, all adult male citizens
73
00:04:28,640 --> 00:04:32,873
found they didn't just serve the state, they were the state.
74
00:04:33,720 --> 00:04:35,430
You cannot overemphasize
75
00:04:35,430 --> 00:04:38,210
how electrically exciting this must have been.
76
00:04:38,210 --> 00:04:40,460
Ordinary men were selected randomly at lot
77
00:04:40,460 --> 00:04:43,150
to hold the very highest of offices,
78
00:04:43,150 --> 00:04:45,700
the equivalent of being head of the foreign office
79
00:04:45,700 --> 00:04:47,633
or home secretary for one day.
80
00:04:53,440 --> 00:04:56,810
Socrates wouldn't only witness a city being rebuilt,
81
00:04:56,810 --> 00:05:00,163
but the ethical hazards of a new social experiment.
82
00:05:01,660 --> 00:05:05,843
As he was growing up, democracy, too, was finding its feet.
83
00:05:08,030 --> 00:05:10,550
Ordinary Athenians now had the potential
84
00:05:10,550 --> 00:05:13,220
to determine their own future,
85
00:05:13,220 --> 00:05:15,390
but their fate was still very firmly
86
00:05:15,390 --> 00:05:16,993
in the hands of the gods.
87
00:05:18,120 --> 00:05:21,720
Gods, demigods, and spirits were believed to be everywhere,
88
00:05:21,720 --> 00:05:24,093
influencing people's everyday lives.
89
00:05:26,060 --> 00:05:27,350
If I'd been looking out over Athens
90
00:05:27,350 --> 00:05:28,800
during Socrates' lifetime,
91
00:05:28,800 --> 00:05:31,830
then this scene would have been thick with smoke,
92
00:05:31,830 --> 00:05:34,860
and the smell of sacrifice would be heavy in the air,
93
00:05:34,860 --> 00:05:37,140
as Athenians frantically rushed around
94
00:05:37,140 --> 00:05:41,153
trying to keep their gods on side, all 2,000 of them.
95
00:05:44,600 --> 00:05:46,220
This pantheon of gods
96
00:05:46,220 --> 00:05:49,482
gave people a sense of their place in the universe.
97
00:05:49,482 --> 00:05:51,810
But in these exciting times,
98
00:05:51,810 --> 00:05:54,883
a few were daring to question religious convention.
99
00:05:56,220 --> 00:05:58,630
As a teenager, Socrates sought them out
100
00:05:58,630 --> 00:06:00,120
in one of Athens' most edgy
101
00:06:00,120 --> 00:06:03,173
and marginal districts, Kerameikos.
102
00:06:07,420 --> 00:06:10,810
For 600 years, this had been Athens' main burial ground.
103
00:06:10,810 --> 00:06:13,070
Come Socrates' day, and it had evolved
104
00:06:13,070 --> 00:06:17,200
into a kind of cosmopolitan suburb of sin.
105
00:06:17,200 --> 00:06:19,560
Traveling salesmen plied their wares here,
106
00:06:19,560 --> 00:06:20,910
along with prostitutes,
107
00:06:20,910 --> 00:06:23,800
who offered what were euphemistically known
108
00:06:23,800 --> 00:06:25,773
as middle-of-the-day marriages.
109
00:06:30,330 --> 00:06:33,060
Many young Athenians didn't need to work.
110
00:06:33,060 --> 00:06:37,110
There was one slave to every two free citizens.
111
00:06:37,110 --> 00:06:39,540
So Socrates had the free time to come here
112
00:06:39,540 --> 00:06:42,893
and listen in on theories carried in on the trade routes.
113
00:06:44,340 --> 00:06:47,000
He encountered thinkers from the Eastern Mediterranean
114
00:06:47,000 --> 00:06:49,680
whose ideas had, for over a century,
115
00:06:49,680 --> 00:06:53,183
confronted traditional explanations of the cosmos.
116
00:07:03,230 --> 00:07:06,850
What people saw as mysterious and unfathomable
117
00:07:06,850 --> 00:07:09,580
they viewed as rationally ordered
118
00:07:09,580 --> 00:07:13,173
and, to some degree, rationally explicable.
119
00:07:17,320 --> 00:07:20,930
We refer to them now as one group, the pre-Socratics,
120
00:07:20,930 --> 00:07:25,283
but in reality, they were brilliant, independent thinkers.
121
00:07:26,880 --> 00:07:30,263
They asked hugely ambitious scientific questions.
122
00:07:31,200 --> 00:07:33,880
What is the cosmos made of?
123
00:07:33,880 --> 00:07:37,220
What is matter, and how do we perceive it?
124
00:07:37,220 --> 00:07:39,240
Their answers, in some cases,
125
00:07:39,240 --> 00:07:43,660
undermined the role of the gods as rulers of the cosmos.
126
00:07:43,660 --> 00:07:46,450
Their abstract theories, obviously conceived
127
00:07:46,450 --> 00:07:49,150
without the help of scientific instruments,
128
00:07:49,150 --> 00:07:52,740
that the universe was made of atoms and empty space,
129
00:07:52,740 --> 00:07:56,300
that water was the fundamental element of the world,
130
00:07:56,300 --> 00:07:59,880
and that the sun was one giant red-hot rock
131
00:07:59,880 --> 00:08:03,000
were wildly provocative.
132
00:08:03,000 --> 00:08:07,703
The scale and audacity of their thinking was breathtaking.
133
00:08:13,000 --> 00:08:14,270
The pre-Socratics
134
00:08:14,270 --> 00:08:17,800
not only struck at the core of traditional belief,
135
00:08:17,800 --> 00:08:20,790
but their use of reason opened up a new way
136
00:08:20,790 --> 00:08:24,350
to look at the entirety of human experience,
137
00:08:24,350 --> 00:08:27,763
an approach eagerly taken up by the young Socrates.
138
00:08:28,970 --> 00:08:32,120
Suddenly it's not just tradition or myth
139
00:08:32,120 --> 00:08:33,750
or religious hierarchies
140
00:08:33,750 --> 00:08:36,310
that are telling you how to make sense of your world,
141
00:08:36,310 --> 00:08:40,490
but rational debate, systematic thought.
142
00:08:40,490 --> 00:08:42,510
Just like those other groundbreaking philosophers
143
00:08:42,510 --> 00:08:43,343
of the age.
144
00:08:43,343 --> 00:08:46,770
Confucius in China and the Buddha in what's now India,
145
00:08:46,770 --> 00:08:48,620
Socrates and his contemporaries
146
00:08:48,620 --> 00:08:51,610
are daring to harness the power of the mind
147
00:08:51,610 --> 00:08:54,200
to explain the world around them.
148
00:08:54,200 --> 00:08:57,893
This is a quantum shift.
149
00:08:59,870 --> 00:09:02,610
Confident, brave-new-world Athens
150
00:09:02,610 --> 00:09:06,370
didn't seek to suppress this new spirit of inquiry.
151
00:09:06,370 --> 00:09:09,713
The city became a magnet for innovation,
152
00:09:09,713 --> 00:09:11,900
thanks in large part to the man
153
00:09:11,900 --> 00:09:13,760
who would dominate Athenian politics
154
00:09:13,760 --> 00:09:16,420
for almost half of Socrates' life,
155
00:09:16,420 --> 00:09:18,703
the visionary politician Pericles.
156
00:09:19,620 --> 00:09:22,050
He gathered thinkers and artists to advise him
157
00:09:22,050 --> 00:09:25,470
and set about making democracy the dominant ideology
158
00:09:25,470 --> 00:09:26,653
in the Greek world.
159
00:09:27,570 --> 00:09:31,180
He glorified the streets with sumptuous statues
160
00:09:31,180 --> 00:09:34,650
and fetishized democratic principles.
161
00:09:34,650 --> 00:09:39,650
Athens built warships called Freedom and Freedom of Speech.
162
00:09:39,776 --> 00:09:41,900
Yet Socrates would understand
163
00:09:41,900 --> 00:09:44,950
all this success had its flip side.
164
00:09:44,950 --> 00:09:49,273
Democracy's high ideals would need to be interrogated.
165
00:09:50,520 --> 00:09:53,647
A later source tells us that Socrates declared,
166
00:09:53,647 --> 00:09:56,590
"Beautiful statues, high city walls,
167
00:09:56,590 --> 00:09:58,870
and warships are all very well,
168
00:09:58,870 --> 00:10:02,720
but what's the point if those within them aren't happy?"
169
00:10:02,720 --> 00:10:05,250
So we have to imagine a young Socrates
170
00:10:05,250 --> 00:10:08,330
walking around this fabulous, febrile city,
171
00:10:08,330 --> 00:10:10,320
beginning to ask those big questions
172
00:10:10,320 --> 00:10:12,403
that are still utterly relevant today.
173
00:10:13,540 --> 00:10:16,060
Is wealth a good thing?
174
00:10:16,060 --> 00:10:20,080
Can a democracy itself create a just society?
175
00:10:20,080 --> 00:10:23,493
What is it that makes us truly happy?
176
00:10:32,350 --> 00:10:34,960
Democracy had opened a Pandora's box
177
00:10:34,960 --> 00:10:37,880
of new dilemmas and contradictions.
178
00:10:37,880 --> 00:10:39,370
As he reached adulthood,
179
00:10:39,370 --> 00:10:41,860
Socrates would become the one to point them out,
180
00:10:41,860 --> 00:10:46,860
a constant irritant known as "the gadfly of Athens,"
181
00:10:47,300 --> 00:10:49,633
an infamous celebrity of his day.
182
00:10:54,060 --> 00:10:57,470
But Socrates is also an enigma, because as far as we know,
183
00:10:57,470 --> 00:11:01,630
he didn't write anything down, not a single line.
184
00:11:01,630 --> 00:11:03,480
He thought that writing was dangerous
185
00:11:03,480 --> 00:11:05,503
because it imprisoned knowledge.
186
00:11:07,120 --> 00:11:09,610
It's only thanks to contemporaries, such as Plato,
187
00:11:09,610 --> 00:11:12,470
who may have coined the term "philosopher,"
188
00:11:12,470 --> 00:11:14,410
perhaps with Socrates in mind,
189
00:11:14,410 --> 00:11:17,163
that his thoughts and life story have been preserved.
190
00:11:19,270 --> 00:11:21,630
And what a man he seems to have been.
191
00:11:21,630 --> 00:11:24,550
Ironic, courageous, brilliant,
192
00:11:24,550 --> 00:11:28,370
wildly charismatic, and utterly infuriating.
193
00:11:28,370 --> 00:11:30,650
Plato's compelling accounts of his life,
194
00:11:30,650 --> 00:11:33,290
his ideas, and his dramatic death
195
00:11:33,290 --> 00:11:35,903
are a jewel in the canon of Western thought.
196
00:11:49,370 --> 00:11:51,410
When we think of the ancient Greek philosophers,
197
00:11:51,410 --> 00:11:53,610
we often visualize them as they've been portrayed
198
00:11:53,610 --> 00:11:56,100
in Renaissance works of art.
199
00:11:56,100 --> 00:11:59,010
Lofty gray beards, draped in elegant robes,
200
00:11:59,010 --> 00:12:01,690
hanging around classical columns.
201
00:12:01,690 --> 00:12:03,300
We don't, perhaps, imagine them
202
00:12:03,300 --> 00:12:06,983
involved in the dirty and bloody business of war.
203
00:12:13,290 --> 00:12:15,710
Athens' appetite for territorial expansion
204
00:12:15,710 --> 00:12:17,140
seems to been sharpened
205
00:12:17,140 --> 00:12:19,913
by the collective will of democratic voters.
206
00:12:21,440 --> 00:12:24,500
Socrates, like all male Athenian citizens,
207
00:12:24,500 --> 00:12:26,623
was expected to fight.
208
00:12:28,270 --> 00:12:31,950
He was in his late 30s when he was sent here to Potidaea
209
00:12:31,950 --> 00:12:34,220
to help take control of this strategic city
210
00:12:34,220 --> 00:12:35,393
in Northern Greece.
211
00:12:37,430 --> 00:12:38,780
It's from this time of war
212
00:12:38,780 --> 00:12:42,470
we get sharper textual details of Socrates' life.
213
00:12:42,470 --> 00:12:45,580
The man himself starts to come into focus,
214
00:12:45,580 --> 00:12:50,012
his vision, his physical courage, his eccentricities,
215
00:12:50,012 --> 00:12:53,533
and a man with something momentous on his mind.
216
00:12:57,390 --> 00:12:59,430
The fighting was fierce,
217
00:12:59,430 --> 00:13:03,120
and for three years, the town was besieged.
218
00:13:03,120 --> 00:13:06,663
In desperation, locals turned to cannibalism.
219
00:13:07,750 --> 00:13:12,180
Yet in amongst all these horrors and the pity of war,
220
00:13:12,180 --> 00:13:15,173
somehow Socrates found stillness.
221
00:13:21,960 --> 00:13:26,273
We're told he became absorbed by complex, private thoughts.
222
00:13:27,890 --> 00:13:29,630
In the depths of winter,
223
00:13:29,630 --> 00:13:32,513
wearing just a threadbare cloak and with bare feet,
224
00:13:33,430 --> 00:13:38,430
he stood for 24 hours at a stretch stock-still,
225
00:13:40,080 --> 00:13:42,463
lost in his own mind.
226
00:13:45,100 --> 00:13:46,990
Unlike the pre-Socratic thinkers,
227
00:13:46,990 --> 00:13:50,500
Socrates came to believe that understanding the cosmos
228
00:13:50,500 --> 00:13:54,683
was an esoteric diversion from something far more important.
229
00:13:55,560 --> 00:13:58,930
Studying the secrets of the stars was all very well.
230
00:13:58,930 --> 00:14:02,603
But human affairs had far greater urgency.
231
00:14:06,990 --> 00:14:10,763
So Socrates did something truly groundbreaking.
232
00:14:12,180 --> 00:14:15,070
He turned rational thought inward
233
00:14:15,070 --> 00:14:18,093
to solve the mortal dilemmas we all face.
234
00:14:21,160 --> 00:14:23,130
He threw all his energies into resolving
235
00:14:23,130 --> 00:14:26,580
the fundamental questions of human existence.
236
00:14:26,580 --> 00:14:28,910
What kind of a life should we lead?
237
00:14:28,910 --> 00:14:31,113
What sort of people do we want to be?
238
00:14:31,960 --> 00:14:34,330
He's the first individual in the West
239
00:14:34,330 --> 00:14:37,773
to put ethics at the very heart of his philosophy.
240
00:14:47,500 --> 00:14:50,230
Socrates' starting point was simple.
241
00:14:50,230 --> 00:14:53,750
Everyone yearns for a full and flourishing life.
242
00:14:53,750 --> 00:14:56,350
But it wasn't to be found in the transitory pleasures
243
00:14:56,350 --> 00:14:58,973
and distractions of the material world.
244
00:15:00,400 --> 00:15:04,330
Socrates believed we can only realize our human potential
245
00:15:04,330 --> 00:15:06,430
when we nurture the most precious,
246
00:15:06,430 --> 00:15:10,760
the most permanent part of our beings, our souls.
247
00:15:10,760 --> 00:15:13,710
When we do right, we protect our soul.
248
00:15:13,710 --> 00:15:16,133
When we do wrong, we harm it.
249
00:15:18,570 --> 00:15:20,260
Knowing right from wrong
250
00:15:20,260 --> 00:15:23,690
was fundamental to every aspect of life.
251
00:15:23,690 --> 00:15:26,873
And in 5th-century Athens, the issue was acute.
252
00:15:28,040 --> 00:15:33,040
As many as 4,000 legal cases were heard each year.
253
00:15:33,090 --> 00:15:36,133
Democracy had revolutionized the law courts.
254
00:15:37,130 --> 00:15:39,240
Now any male citizen,
255
00:15:39,240 --> 00:15:42,010
from aristocrats right down to fishmongers,
256
00:15:42,010 --> 00:15:43,893
could be a judge for the day.
257
00:15:44,940 --> 00:15:48,603
We're told Socrates found such amateur governance troubling.
258
00:15:49,440 --> 00:15:51,770
If those sitting in judgment weren't qualified
259
00:15:51,770 --> 00:15:54,600
to understand the difference between right and wrong,
260
00:15:54,600 --> 00:15:57,490
then they could convict an innocent person.
261
00:15:57,490 --> 00:16:01,040
They'd be punishing someone who didn't deserve to be hurt.
262
00:16:03,937 --> 00:16:05,630
But in Socrates' view,
263
00:16:05,630 --> 00:16:08,720
the innocent person would only suffer physically.
264
00:16:08,720 --> 00:16:12,830
It's the jurors who would be harming themselves much more.
265
00:16:12,830 --> 00:16:16,650
By unknowingly doing wrong, they would inflict terrible,
266
00:16:16,650 --> 00:16:20,540
lasting damage to their own souls.
267
00:16:20,540 --> 00:16:22,670
In order to protect Athenians,
268
00:16:22,670 --> 00:16:25,277
Socrates needed to teach them.
269
00:16:25,277 --> 00:16:29,180
"The only evil is ignorance," he said.
270
00:16:29,180 --> 00:16:31,550
But Socrates faced a problem.
271
00:16:31,550 --> 00:16:34,811
The Greeks did have an ethical framework of sorts,
272
00:16:34,811 --> 00:16:37,333
but it wasn't either clear or consistent.
273
00:16:41,080 --> 00:16:44,862
The destiny of all Greeks was in the hands of the gods.
274
00:16:44,862 --> 00:16:48,020
They were venerated, even though their personal lives
275
00:16:48,020 --> 00:16:50,463
were pretty short on moral guidance.
276
00:16:51,640 --> 00:16:54,750
Capricious and vengeful, they fought with each other.
277
00:16:54,750 --> 00:16:56,520
They slept with one another's wives.
278
00:16:56,520 --> 00:16:58,900
They abducted mortals.
279
00:16:58,900 --> 00:17:01,810
And appropriately, the gods didn't seem that interested
280
00:17:01,810 --> 00:17:03,503
in human morality, either.
281
00:17:05,110 --> 00:17:08,850
Living a good life didn't guarantee favor with the gods.
282
00:17:08,850 --> 00:17:10,400
Respecting their power
283
00:17:10,400 --> 00:17:14,300
and offering the most expensive and bloodiest sacrifice
284
00:17:14,300 --> 00:17:15,873
was a much safer bet.
285
00:17:18,990 --> 00:17:22,580
Greeks did, however, believe there were five virtues.
286
00:17:22,580 --> 00:17:26,423
Justice, temperance, courage, piety, and wisdom.
287
00:17:27,390 --> 00:17:30,380
But in practice, these virtues were slippery,
288
00:17:30,380 --> 00:17:32,300
shifting ideals.
289
00:17:32,300 --> 00:17:35,737
What was considered just or pious for an aristocratic man
290
00:17:35,737 --> 00:17:39,083
wasn't necessarily the same for a slave woman.
291
00:17:40,220 --> 00:17:43,500
In Socrates' experience, traditional moral thinking,
292
00:17:43,500 --> 00:17:47,290
the kind taught by elders and priests and epic poets,
293
00:17:47,290 --> 00:17:49,910
just didn't stand up to scrutiny.
294
00:17:49,910 --> 00:17:51,620
His philosophy became a search
295
00:17:51,620 --> 00:17:55,083
for more robust, universal definitions.
296
00:17:57,670 --> 00:18:01,740
Socrates thought that all the virtues were interlinked.
297
00:18:01,740 --> 00:18:03,830
They couldn't be separated.
298
00:18:03,830 --> 00:18:05,860
He thought of them as one thing,
299
00:18:05,860 --> 00:18:09,803
something he called knowledge of the human good.
300
00:18:13,730 --> 00:18:16,660
For him, virtue is knowledge,
301
00:18:16,660 --> 00:18:18,760
knowledge of the human good.
302
00:18:18,760 --> 00:18:21,680
He says that this knowledge of the human good
303
00:18:21,680 --> 00:18:24,550
is going to, in some sense, save your life.
304
00:18:24,550 --> 00:18:26,960
This is really strong language.
305
00:18:26,960 --> 00:18:28,640
But is that an abstract idea,
306
00:18:28,640 --> 00:18:30,400
or is this something that can play out
307
00:18:30,400 --> 00:18:32,230
in people's day-to-day lives?
308
00:18:32,230 --> 00:18:33,230
Oh, no, absolutely.
309
00:18:33,230 --> 00:18:35,890
Knowledge of the human good is what enables us
310
00:18:35,890 --> 00:18:40,410
to make the right practical decisions in our daily lives.
311
00:18:40,410 --> 00:18:44,550
But it's going to look different in different contexts.
312
00:18:44,550 --> 00:18:46,630
For instance, if you're on a battlefield,
313
00:18:46,630 --> 00:18:48,530
it will manifest itself as courage.
314
00:18:48,530 --> 00:18:53,050
If you're sacrificing in a temple, it will look like piety.
315
00:18:53,050 --> 00:18:55,380
And it's through those decisions and actions
316
00:18:55,380 --> 00:18:58,510
that we are enabled to take care of our souls,
317
00:18:58,510 --> 00:19:00,980
our most precious possession,
318
00:19:00,980 --> 00:19:04,170
on which all our happiness depends.
319
00:19:04,170 --> 00:19:06,380
But that means that people have real agency,
320
00:19:06,380 --> 00:19:07,970
because it seems to be that he's saying
321
00:19:07,970 --> 00:19:09,400
it's not down to the gods
322
00:19:09,400 --> 00:19:10,550
to make the world a better place.
323
00:19:10,550 --> 00:19:11,850
It's down to us.
324
00:19:11,850 --> 00:19:12,683
Absolutely.
325
00:19:12,683 --> 00:19:15,930
Socrates is saying you don't have to depend on the whims
326
00:19:15,930 --> 00:19:17,660
and the caprices of the gods.
327
00:19:17,660 --> 00:19:22,130
It's really about individual empowerment and responsibility.
328
00:19:22,130 --> 00:19:24,820
And furthermore, whereas he inherited a tradition
329
00:19:24,820 --> 00:19:27,190
which said there was one kind of virtue for a man,
330
00:19:27,190 --> 00:19:28,030
another for a woman,
331
00:19:28,030 --> 00:19:32,400
one for, you know, a well-born person, another for a slave,
332
00:19:32,400 --> 00:19:35,840
he's saying, no, it's about knowledge of the human good
333
00:19:35,840 --> 00:19:37,940
in a universal sense.
334
00:19:37,940 --> 00:19:40,290
It's available to everybody.
335
00:19:40,290 --> 00:19:41,767
Cicero later says of him,
336
00:19:41,767 --> 00:19:44,430
"He brings philosophy down from the heavens
337
00:19:44,430 --> 00:19:46,520
and into people's homes."
338
00:19:46,520 --> 00:19:48,730
Into people's individual homes.
339
00:19:48,730 --> 00:19:53,040
This really is a very radical moment in Western thought.
340
00:19:53,040 --> 00:19:56,570
Exciting and empowering but also dangerous.
341
00:19:56,570 --> 00:20:00,650
Indeed, because even though Socrates himself
342
00:20:00,650 --> 00:20:02,610
was personally very religious,
343
00:20:02,610 --> 00:20:04,710
as far as we know, very pious,
344
00:20:04,710 --> 00:20:07,130
this is socially threatening.
345
00:20:07,130 --> 00:20:09,490
It's threatening traditional religion,
346
00:20:09,490 --> 00:20:11,180
and, of course, these messages
347
00:20:11,180 --> 00:20:13,713
are disturbing to a lot of people.
348
00:20:18,360 --> 00:20:21,270
Socrates didn't deny the existence of the gods,
349
00:20:21,270 --> 00:20:23,610
but his emphasis on the capacity of humans
350
00:20:23,610 --> 00:20:25,420
to shape their own destiny
351
00:20:25,420 --> 00:20:28,493
could be seen as challenging their traditional roles.
352
00:20:32,420 --> 00:20:35,110
Fortunately, the sacrificial fires to the gods,
353
00:20:35,110 --> 00:20:36,840
which had burned for centuries,
354
00:20:36,840 --> 00:20:39,600
were now lit in a city that also prized
355
00:20:39,600 --> 00:20:41,043
freedom of expression.
356
00:20:42,480 --> 00:20:46,363
Initially Socrates' unorthodox ideas were tolerated.
357
00:20:47,300 --> 00:20:52,297
But then in 431 B.C., the good times looked set to end.
358
00:20:56,750 --> 00:21:00,713
The violence of Potidaea escalated into all-out conflict.
359
00:21:01,860 --> 00:21:04,600
The pitiless Peloponnesian War between Athens
360
00:21:04,600 --> 00:21:07,893
and its nemesis, the city-state of Sparta.
361
00:21:09,630 --> 00:21:11,870
Here at the National Archeological Museum,
362
00:21:11,870 --> 00:21:15,660
funerary urns depict the heartbreaking suffering and loss
363
00:21:15,660 --> 00:21:17,653
experienced by the Athenians.
364
00:21:22,090 --> 00:21:26,040
With Spartan hordes ravaging the countryside around Athens,
365
00:21:26,040 --> 00:21:29,350
Pericles ordered every citizen from the surrounding area
366
00:21:29,350 --> 00:21:31,323
to come inside the city walls.
367
00:21:32,197 --> 00:21:34,313
It was a fatal strategy.
368
00:21:35,160 --> 00:21:38,623
A new kind of terror was unleashed from within.
369
00:21:42,230 --> 00:21:45,270
Athens became one giant refugee camp.
370
00:21:45,270 --> 00:21:47,600
With the population hemmed in together,
371
00:21:47,600 --> 00:21:51,110
a deadly disease spread like wildfire.
372
00:21:51,110 --> 00:21:53,670
The symptoms were ghastly,
373
00:21:53,670 --> 00:21:58,670
sweats, fevers, a suppurating rash, and a racking cough.
374
00:21:59,256 --> 00:22:01,650
At a conservative estimate,
375
00:22:01,650 --> 00:22:06,123
at least 1/3 of the population was wiped out.
376
00:22:09,980 --> 00:22:13,770
Angry and frustrated, Athenians turned on their poster boy
377
00:22:13,770 --> 00:22:15,773
and removed Pericles from office.
378
00:22:17,230 --> 00:22:21,483
Eventually he died, it's believed, of the plague himself.
379
00:22:22,630 --> 00:22:24,730
A thriving Athens had been robust enough
380
00:22:24,730 --> 00:22:27,303
to deal with the searching questions of Socrates.
381
00:22:28,190 --> 00:22:32,223
Now with confidence ebbing away, tolerance was threatened.
382
00:22:34,310 --> 00:22:37,280
Yet energized by the same sense of crisis and danger
383
00:22:37,280 --> 00:22:38,800
which motivated the philosophies
384
00:22:38,800 --> 00:22:40,871
of Confucius and the Buddha,
385
00:22:40,871 --> 00:22:43,193
Socrates seems to have flourished.
386
00:22:46,270 --> 00:22:51,270
By now in his 40s and surrounded by war, death, and disease,
387
00:22:51,980 --> 00:22:54,263
his search took on a new intensity.
388
00:22:56,188 --> 00:22:58,013
How do we decide what is good?
389
00:23:01,530 --> 00:23:03,213
Is wealth a good thing?
390
00:23:06,090 --> 00:23:08,563
What makes us truly happy?
391
00:23:11,130 --> 00:23:13,640
In Athens, Socrates wasn't the only one
392
00:23:13,640 --> 00:23:16,853
discussing big ideas with its embattled citizens.
393
00:23:18,190 --> 00:23:22,670
The Sophists were cocksure, showy educators,
394
00:23:22,670 --> 00:23:25,403
masters in the art of persuasive argument.
395
00:23:26,300 --> 00:23:29,000
They acted as speechmakers in legal trials,
396
00:23:29,000 --> 00:23:32,030
entertaining huge crowds in stadiums.
397
00:23:32,030 --> 00:23:36,190
Socrates was skeptical, to say the least.
398
00:23:36,190 --> 00:23:39,010
Like the Sophists, he challenged orthodox thought.
399
00:23:39,010 --> 00:23:41,030
But he also passionately believed
400
00:23:41,030 --> 00:23:43,760
that philosophy should have a higher purpose.
401
00:23:43,760 --> 00:23:48,623
Clever ideas and persuasive arguments just weren't enough.
402
00:23:51,940 --> 00:23:55,570
To the Sophists, smart words were currency.
403
00:23:55,570 --> 00:23:58,600
They sold their services to the highest bidder.
404
00:23:58,600 --> 00:24:02,410
But Socrates refused to be paid,
405
00:24:02,410 --> 00:24:04,543
preferring handouts from friends.
406
00:24:06,160 --> 00:24:09,665
That's not to say he didn't enjoy worldly pleasures.
407
00:24:09,665 --> 00:24:12,710
He drank and made love.
408
00:24:12,710 --> 00:24:14,720
But barefoot and unwashed,
409
00:24:14,720 --> 00:24:17,643
he stood out in materially minded Athens.
410
00:24:19,050 --> 00:24:20,950
We're told that he marched past shop stalls
411
00:24:20,950 --> 00:24:25,567
in his shabby robes, saying, "How many things I don't need."
412
00:24:27,060 --> 00:24:29,440
He saw wealth as impermanent,
413
00:24:29,440 --> 00:24:33,350
a distraction from the search for absolute values.
414
00:24:33,350 --> 00:24:36,500
Socrates believed you couldn't buy knowledge.
415
00:24:36,500 --> 00:24:40,170
And wisdom didn't come from listening to long speeches.
416
00:24:40,170 --> 00:24:42,960
It could only come through something else.
417
00:24:42,960 --> 00:24:44,710
Dialogue.
418
00:24:44,710 --> 00:24:46,730
So, Bettany, I understand you're here
419
00:24:46,730 --> 00:24:48,640
to do a documentary about Socrates.
420
00:24:48,640 --> 00:24:49,790
Yes.
421
00:24:49,790 --> 00:24:51,817
Why are you making this documentary?
422
00:24:51,817 --> 00:24:55,080
His Socratic method worked something like this.
423
00:24:55,080 --> 00:24:57,530
Socrates would engage someone in the street.
424
00:24:57,530 --> 00:24:59,870
I can learn something more about Socrates
425
00:24:59,870 --> 00:25:01,730
and I can share that knowledge
426
00:25:01,730 --> 00:25:03,280
with the people who are watching it.
427
00:25:03,280 --> 00:25:05,060
These are big words, knowledge and truth.
428
00:25:05,060 --> 00:25:07,160
Should we take one of them? What would it mean.
429
00:25:07,160 --> 00:25:09,360
He'd ask them an ethical question.
430
00:25:09,360 --> 00:25:13,370
So, what is this thing knowledge that you want to impart?
431
00:25:13,370 --> 00:25:18,370
In my book, knowledge is love of what it is to be human.
432
00:25:19,530 --> 00:25:22,080
The person would attempt to define the concept.
433
00:25:22,080 --> 00:25:25,150
But Socrates would find inconsistencies
434
00:25:25,150 --> 00:25:26,530
in their answers.
435
00:25:26,530 --> 00:25:28,340
Knowledge is love, okay.
436
00:25:28,340 --> 00:25:33,340
So if you wanted to have an operation for appendicitis,
437
00:25:33,870 --> 00:25:37,160
would you go to a woman who was full of love
438
00:25:37,160 --> 00:25:39,710
but knew nothing about surgery?
439
00:25:39,710 --> 00:25:40,543
No.
440
00:25:40,543 --> 00:25:43,390
Okay, so, I would say that the definition of knowledge
441
00:25:43,390 --> 00:25:46,000
as love is not good enough.
442
00:25:46,000 --> 00:25:48,690
They would be forced to withdraw their definition
443
00:25:48,690 --> 00:25:51,310
and to reformulate and refine their ideas.
444
00:25:51,310 --> 00:25:53,400
So let's try it again.
445
00:25:53,400 --> 00:25:56,893
Is there one kind of knowledge or many kinds of knowledge?
446
00:25:58,070 --> 00:26:00,950
Knowledge is one.
Take your time.
447
00:26:00,950 --> 00:26:03,100
I don't know the answers to this.
448
00:26:03,100 --> 00:26:08,100
Maybe knowledge is one thing, but knowing is many things.
449
00:26:08,100 --> 00:26:09,410
This process would spiral
450
00:26:09,410 --> 00:26:12,760
into a dizzying round of question and answer.
451
00:26:12,760 --> 00:26:14,860
To know how the stars move
452
00:26:14,860 --> 00:26:18,133
and to know how the liver operates is the same thing.
453
00:26:19,720 --> 00:26:21,790
No, they're not the same thing.
454
00:26:21,790 --> 00:26:24,200
Does the person who possesses knowledge in a big way
455
00:26:24,200 --> 00:26:25,470
know everything?
456
00:26:25,470 --> 00:26:28,850
Between those two, who is probably the best stone maker?
457
00:26:28,850 --> 00:26:32,700
Uh, the one who.
458
00:26:32,700 --> 00:26:34,260
I don't know. I don't know.
459
00:26:34,260 --> 00:26:36,490
Come on.
I give up. I give up.
460
00:26:36,490 --> 00:26:39,360
Socrates likens his role to that of a midwife
461
00:26:39,360 --> 00:26:42,930
who helps to nurture and deliver the thoughts of others.
462
00:26:42,930 --> 00:26:45,360
But it was never an easy birth.
463
00:26:45,360 --> 00:26:47,143
I have to say the one thing you've proved to me
464
00:26:47,143 --> 00:26:49,040
is that I know nothing.
465
00:26:49,040 --> 00:26:50,393
Ah, no, no. That's me.
466
00:26:51,590 --> 00:26:54,320
I am the expert at making other people know things.
467
00:26:54,320 --> 00:26:56,210
But I'm no good. I know nothing.
468
00:26:56,210 --> 00:27:00,053
And that is the only knowledge I claim for myself.
469
00:27:01,670 --> 00:27:05,980
That Socratic method is fascinating and stimulating,
470
00:27:05,980 --> 00:27:08,628
but it is also infuriating.
471
00:27:08,628 --> 00:27:11,960
Yes, because it's in an oral context the way we do it,
472
00:27:11,960 --> 00:27:14,120
and Socrates famously believed
473
00:27:14,120 --> 00:27:17,220
in the supremacy of the oral over the written,
474
00:27:17,220 --> 00:27:19,910
and that also stirs up the emotions.
475
00:27:19,910 --> 00:27:21,970
First of all, in his pretense
476
00:27:21,970 --> 00:27:24,960
of being the fool, the ignorant man.
477
00:27:24,960 --> 00:27:26,130
Of knowing nothing, yeah.
478
00:27:26,130 --> 00:27:30,030
Yes, and because that is his tool that he turns, in fact,
479
00:27:30,030 --> 00:27:34,460
against his friends or opponents, as you may take it,
480
00:27:34,460 --> 00:27:37,210
and makes them admit to things
481
00:27:37,210 --> 00:27:38,630
that they don't want to admit to
482
00:27:38,630 --> 00:27:41,620
by playing, essentially, the fool, saying,
483
00:27:41,620 --> 00:27:43,200
"I know nothing. I know nothing.
484
00:27:43,200 --> 00:27:46,000
I can only ask you to tell me, because I know nothing."
485
00:27:46,000 --> 00:27:48,940
So he laid an emphasis on definitions,
486
00:27:48,940 --> 00:27:53,180
then on what he called diaeresis, division,
487
00:27:53,180 --> 00:27:55,970
of breaking down a problem into little part,
488
00:27:55,970 --> 00:27:58,560
analyzing parts, analyzing it,
489
00:27:58,560 --> 00:28:01,150
and then attacking each one separately
490
00:28:01,150 --> 00:28:03,963
and then trying inductively to group them back together
491
00:28:03,963 --> 00:28:06,290
into a more general concept.
492
00:28:06,290 --> 00:28:10,720
So Socrates uses that to make people become aware
493
00:28:10,720 --> 00:28:14,637
that things they consider simple and elementary and basic
494
00:28:14,637 --> 00:28:17,203
and that they know they, in fact, don't know.
495
00:28:18,364 --> 00:28:19,710
And what about the modern world?
496
00:28:19,710 --> 00:28:22,672
Do you think we could have the modern world
497
00:28:22,672 --> 00:28:25,460
without Socratic debate,
498
00:28:25,460 --> 00:28:28,301
without questioning what it is to be human
499
00:28:28,301 --> 00:28:31,430
and what it is to be human in the world around us?
500
00:28:31,430 --> 00:28:35,220
Well, I think that the best way to accept,
501
00:28:35,220 --> 00:28:38,060
to find Socrates' place in it
502
00:28:38,060 --> 00:28:41,760
is to see that the opposite of the Socratic method
503
00:28:41,760 --> 00:28:45,133
essentially is fanaticism and dogmatism.
504
00:28:46,010 --> 00:28:47,350
And in that sense,
505
00:28:47,350 --> 00:28:51,720
the modern world very much needs an antidote to those things
506
00:28:51,720 --> 00:28:52,623
at every level.
507
00:28:57,550 --> 00:29:00,110
The Socratic method was cathartic.
508
00:29:00,110 --> 00:29:02,480
It got difficult issues out into the open
509
00:29:02,480 --> 00:29:05,403
and defined concepts with much greater precision.
510
00:29:08,490 --> 00:29:11,840
Socrates' tough questioning, with his trademark irony,
511
00:29:11,840 --> 00:29:16,713
was conducted in public, causing a stir wherever he went.
512
00:29:19,000 --> 00:29:21,510
He was inviting everyone to seek knowledge
513
00:29:21,510 --> 00:29:25,143
of the human good, to identify fundamental truths.
514
00:29:26,108 --> 00:29:28,390
But people could only do this for themselves
515
00:29:28,390 --> 00:29:31,070
by constantly interrogating their actions
516
00:29:31,070 --> 00:29:33,237
and most deeply held beliefs.
517
00:29:33,237 --> 00:29:37,577
"The unexamined life," Socrates said, "is not worth living."
518
00:29:42,910 --> 00:29:44,163
But there was a problem.
519
00:29:45,230 --> 00:29:48,453
Socrates' teaching found particular favor with the young.
520
00:29:49,470 --> 00:29:52,250
With no end in sight to war with Sparta,
521
00:29:52,250 --> 00:29:55,723
these human resources were vital to Athens' future.
522
00:29:56,650 --> 00:30:01,052
Laws attempted to protect the youth from malign influence.
523
00:30:01,052 --> 00:30:03,690
Encouraging them to think for themselves
524
00:30:03,690 --> 00:30:05,523
was fraught with danger.
525
00:30:06,680 --> 00:30:08,940
Yet Socrates sought them out
526
00:30:08,940 --> 00:30:12,973
close to the most public place in the city, the agora.
527
00:30:14,750 --> 00:30:15,970
Across the ancient world,
528
00:30:15,970 --> 00:30:18,880
commerce was increasingly a driver for change,
529
00:30:18,880 --> 00:30:22,540
and that was felt particularly keenly here in Athens.
530
00:30:22,540 --> 00:30:25,350
The agora was a buzzing market,
531
00:30:25,350 --> 00:30:28,613
a place where people came to exchange goods and gossip.
532
00:30:32,590 --> 00:30:35,690
Socrates loved sharing his ideas here.
533
00:30:35,690 --> 00:30:39,140
It's from "agora" we get the word "agoraphobia,"
534
00:30:39,140 --> 00:30:40,993
a fear of open spaces.
535
00:30:42,630 --> 00:30:46,663
There was anxiety back then, too, as under-18s were barred.
536
00:30:48,000 --> 00:30:49,750
Now archeology helps point
537
00:30:49,750 --> 00:30:51,800
to how Socrates met young Athenians
538
00:30:51,800 --> 00:30:55,293
just outside the agora's boundary in a private dwelling.
539
00:30:56,170 --> 00:30:58,500
So, we're right on the edge of the agora space,
540
00:30:58,500 --> 00:31:00,800
and we're in between the public space
541
00:31:00,800 --> 00:31:02,490
and the private space behind us here.
542
00:31:02,490 --> 00:31:04,680
And this wall behind us right here
543
00:31:04,680 --> 00:31:06,860
is one of those private establishments.
544
00:31:06,860 --> 00:31:08,260
And we have a later source
545
00:31:08,260 --> 00:31:10,670
that mentions Socrates visiting the house
546
00:31:10,670 --> 00:31:12,000
of a friend of his,
547
00:31:12,000 --> 00:31:14,550
and we have this figure, Simon the Cobbler,
548
00:31:14,550 --> 00:31:16,910
and he's hosting young men.
549
00:31:16,910 --> 00:31:18,670
So, we have the literary source.
550
00:31:18,670 --> 00:31:22,060
But what's nice is that during the excavations right here,
551
00:31:22,060 --> 00:31:24,610
they found hobnails, they found bone eyelets,
552
00:31:24,610 --> 00:31:26,352
and then they also found a cup.
553
00:31:26,352 --> 00:31:29,260
And this is the amazing bit of evidence, really,
554
00:31:29,260 --> 00:31:32,860
because this cup has the name Simon scratched on it.
555
00:31:32,860 --> 00:31:35,076
And this is a replica right here of the cup,
556
00:31:35,076 --> 00:31:39,520
and you can see that it does have "Simonos" scratched on it.
557
00:31:39,520 --> 00:31:41,670
I just, It's so thrilling being here,
558
00:31:41,670 --> 00:31:43,660
imagining those big, new ideas
559
00:31:43,660 --> 00:31:47,364
could possibly have been enacted there 2,500 years ago.
560
00:31:47,364 --> 00:31:49,470
We can say that Socrates was walking around this space,
561
00:31:49,470 --> 00:31:51,638
and he was probably hanging out right here
562
00:31:51,638 --> 00:31:53,940
in order to discuss things,
563
00:31:53,940 --> 00:31:56,530
things that might otherwise be something
564
00:31:56,530 --> 00:31:57,820
that might get him in trouble.
565
00:31:57,820 --> 00:31:59,860
I mean, it's a dangerous situation there, potentially.
566
00:31:59,860 --> 00:32:02,020
So you've got this magnetic personality
567
00:32:02,020 --> 00:32:04,640
having these rumbustious conversations with young men
568
00:32:04,640 --> 00:32:06,740
and encouraging them to think for themselves.
569
00:32:06,740 --> 00:32:07,800
That's exactly right.
570
00:32:07,800 --> 00:32:09,310
This is the place where we're supposed to have
571
00:32:09,310 --> 00:32:12,210
freedom of thought and freedom of expression and so on
572
00:32:12,210 --> 00:32:15,066
in this democratic idea.
573
00:32:15,066 --> 00:32:18,850
But this is a place where you have to respect the gods
574
00:32:18,850 --> 00:32:20,610
and you have to respect your elders
575
00:32:20,610 --> 00:32:22,930
and you have to respect the laws of the city.
576
00:32:22,930 --> 00:32:25,890
He's questioning the gods. He's questioning the laws.
577
00:32:25,890 --> 00:32:28,560
So he's really putting it to the test
578
00:32:28,560 --> 00:32:30,390
and forcing these young guys
579
00:32:30,390 --> 00:32:32,320
to see things in a different way,
580
00:32:32,320 --> 00:32:34,170
and the city didn't really like that.
581
00:32:36,360 --> 00:32:38,940
Socrates was storing up trouble,
582
00:32:38,940 --> 00:32:40,700
especially as some of his devotees
583
00:32:40,700 --> 00:32:43,620
were confident young aristocrats,
584
00:32:43,620 --> 00:32:45,323
the city's future leaders.
585
00:32:50,410 --> 00:32:52,833
Most notable was Alcibiades.
586
00:32:54,740 --> 00:32:58,640
Well-born, wealthy, and an Olympic champion,
587
00:32:58,640 --> 00:33:01,140
this sexually promiscuous hell-raiser
588
00:33:01,140 --> 00:33:05,533
entranced and scandalized Athens for decades.
589
00:33:07,250 --> 00:33:10,436
Yet this playboy was friends with Socrates,
590
00:33:10,436 --> 00:33:13,150
who was 20 years his senior.
591
00:33:13,150 --> 00:33:15,640
Socrates had actually saved Alcibiades' life
592
00:33:15,640 --> 00:33:17,243
during the battle of Potidaea.
593
00:33:19,120 --> 00:33:22,210
Plato's "Symposium" describes an infamous exchange
594
00:33:22,210 --> 00:33:23,800
that took place between them
595
00:33:23,800 --> 00:33:26,723
during a heady aristocratic drinking party.
596
00:33:28,660 --> 00:33:32,299
A drunken Alcibiades, we're told, crashes the discussion,
597
00:33:32,299 --> 00:33:35,582
which turns to the question of beauty.
598
00:33:35,582 --> 00:33:38,920
In Greek culture, Alcibiades' body beautiful
599
00:33:38,920 --> 00:33:41,285
would typically have been regarded
600
00:33:41,285 --> 00:33:43,263
as a sign of his moral beauty, too.
601
00:33:44,340 --> 00:33:46,780
But it appears Alcibiades bought into
602
00:33:46,780 --> 00:33:50,803
Socrates' alternative concept of real beauty.
603
00:33:52,560 --> 00:33:56,070
Socrates, he says, might be ugly on the outside,
604
00:33:56,070 --> 00:33:57,880
but he has an inner beauty
605
00:33:57,880 --> 00:34:00,657
that by far outshines any physical beauty
606
00:34:00,657 --> 00:34:03,660
and that he, Alcibiades, loves Socrates
607
00:34:03,660 --> 00:34:05,730
because he is the wisest man
608
00:34:05,730 --> 00:34:08,263
and therefore the most beautiful.
609
00:34:15,070 --> 00:34:17,350
However, when it came to achieving inner beauty
610
00:34:17,350 --> 00:34:22,190
for himself, Alcibiades was woefully out of step.
611
00:34:22,190 --> 00:34:24,901
He thought his good looks could help him.
612
00:34:24,901 --> 00:34:29,627
But his cocky plan to seduce Socrates was rebuffed.
613
00:34:29,627 --> 00:34:31,300
"You are plotting to get real beauty
614
00:34:31,300 --> 00:34:34,477
in exchange for its appearance," Socrates said.
615
00:34:34,477 --> 00:34:37,157
"That would be gold for bronze."
616
00:34:42,810 --> 00:34:45,820
For Socrates, the talents of young aristocrats
617
00:34:45,820 --> 00:34:49,353
were worthless without the wisdom to use them properly.
618
00:34:50,330 --> 00:34:51,510
By debating with them,
619
00:34:51,510 --> 00:34:53,853
he was pushing the patience of Athens.
620
00:34:55,650 --> 00:34:58,610
Yet Socrates didn't compromise his principles
621
00:35:00,260 --> 00:35:04,473
as demonstrated in the story of the Oracle of Delphi.
622
00:35:09,530 --> 00:35:12,710
We're told that a friend of Socrates' called Chaerephon,
623
00:35:12,710 --> 00:35:15,710
a rather impetuous individual from all accounts,
624
00:35:15,710 --> 00:35:18,893
came on pilgrimage here to this sacred site.
625
00:35:22,230 --> 00:35:24,450
Delphi had been a place of religious devotion
626
00:35:24,450 --> 00:35:26,093
for 2,000 years.
627
00:35:29,310 --> 00:35:31,980
Chaerephon, in time-honored fashion,
628
00:35:31,980 --> 00:35:35,810
climbed the sacred way to ask a question of the god Apollo,
629
00:35:35,810 --> 00:35:37,463
who spoke through a priestess.
630
00:35:42,340 --> 00:35:45,467
When he finally reached the oracle, he asked,
631
00:35:45,467 --> 00:35:49,470
"Is there any man wiser than Socrates?"
632
00:35:49,470 --> 00:35:52,467
And the answer came back, "No."
633
00:35:57,360 --> 00:35:59,940
Chaerephon took the message to Socrates,
634
00:35:59,940 --> 00:36:03,963
who, in typical manner, questioned the oracle's words.
635
00:36:05,870 --> 00:36:08,960
Even the words of Apollo, a god, for heaven's sake,
636
00:36:08,960 --> 00:36:11,440
were subject to Socrates' scrutiny.
637
00:36:11,440 --> 00:36:13,670
He set about cross-examining people
638
00:36:13,670 --> 00:36:16,040
who had a reputation for wisdom
639
00:36:16,040 --> 00:36:18,613
or a particular kind of specialist knowledge.
640
00:36:20,480 --> 00:36:24,690
After questioning public officials, poets, and craftsmen,
641
00:36:24,690 --> 00:36:28,983
he discovered that they all lacked the wisdom they claimed.
642
00:36:31,950 --> 00:36:34,000
Eventually Socrates concluded
643
00:36:34,000 --> 00:36:36,400
that the oracle was indeed right.
644
00:36:36,400 --> 00:36:41,147
He was the wisest of men but only because, as he put it,
645
00:36:41,147 --> 00:36:44,567
"I don't pretend to know what I don't know."
646
00:36:55,920 --> 00:36:57,710
Socrates was wiser
647
00:36:57,710 --> 00:37:00,813
because he acknowledged the limits of his own understanding.
648
00:37:02,000 --> 00:37:05,040
By publicly exposing the false pretensions and ignorance
649
00:37:05,040 --> 00:37:07,530
of those who did claim to know the truth,
650
00:37:07,530 --> 00:37:10,120
he was bound to make enemies.
651
00:37:10,120 --> 00:37:11,760
But there was something else about Socrates
652
00:37:11,760 --> 00:37:14,090
that was even more unsettling.
653
00:37:14,090 --> 00:37:18,490
He claimed to have his own daimonion, or guiding spirit,
654
00:37:18,490 --> 00:37:20,790
a kind of hotline of communication
655
00:37:20,790 --> 00:37:22,090
to the supernatural world.
656
00:37:32,010 --> 00:37:36,660
This daimonion spoke to him during trancelike episodes.
657
00:37:36,660 --> 00:37:39,203
It warned him from making wrong decisions.
658
00:37:40,170 --> 00:37:41,220
On one occasion,
659
00:37:41,220 --> 00:37:44,163
it advised against entering public politics.
660
00:37:45,290 --> 00:37:47,640
Socrates' followers would have been in awe
661
00:37:47,640 --> 00:37:50,830
of this uniquely personal divine calling,
662
00:37:50,830 --> 00:37:53,700
but the average Athenian would have been confused
663
00:37:53,700 --> 00:37:56,430
and deeply disturbed by it.
664
00:37:56,430 --> 00:37:58,730
Don't forget, this is a time and place
665
00:37:58,730 --> 00:38:01,080
where ritual, devotion, and belief
666
00:38:01,080 --> 00:38:05,613
all take place out in public as part of a shared experience.
667
00:38:06,950 --> 00:38:10,470
Not only that, but Greek folk culture imagined the world
668
00:38:10,470 --> 00:38:13,733
to be infused with spirits, not all of them good.
669
00:38:20,920 --> 00:38:23,781
Socrates' unorthodox, private spirituality
670
00:38:23,781 --> 00:38:25,650
could easily be confused
671
00:38:25,650 --> 00:38:29,320
with a darker, more troubling kind of magic.
672
00:38:29,320 --> 00:38:31,663
Some muttered that he was a sorcerer.
673
00:38:34,580 --> 00:38:36,960
In this super-religious culture,
674
00:38:36,960 --> 00:38:39,973
the philosopher was laying himself open to scandal.
675
00:38:41,780 --> 00:38:43,630
False rumors and innuendo
676
00:38:43,630 --> 00:38:47,010
would culminate on a very public stage,
677
00:38:47,010 --> 00:38:49,132
fostering the kind of misinformation
678
00:38:49,132 --> 00:38:53,423
that would ultimately spell disaster for Socrates.
679
00:39:03,910 --> 00:39:07,390
Picture Socrates bustling up here to the Theatre of Dionysus
680
00:39:07,390 --> 00:39:10,783
in spring 423 B.C.
681
00:39:10,783 --> 00:39:13,210
He finds some snacks to munch during the show,
682
00:39:13,210 --> 00:39:15,530
chickpeas, figs, nuts,
683
00:39:15,530 --> 00:39:17,533
settling down to watch the drama.
684
00:39:19,710 --> 00:39:22,770
He's here to watch a new comedy called "Clouds"
685
00:39:22,770 --> 00:39:26,520
by the young buck of Athenian theater, Aristophanes,
686
00:39:26,520 --> 00:39:30,153
only 22 and eager to make his mark.
687
00:39:32,000 --> 00:39:34,020
By now a big character in the city,
688
00:39:34,020 --> 00:39:36,430
Socrates is considered fair game.
689
00:39:36,430 --> 00:39:39,330
And he's parodied pretty mercilessly.
690
00:39:39,330 --> 00:39:41,650
He's portrayed as a ludicrous figure,
691
00:39:41,650 --> 00:39:45,543
the head of a ridiculous school called the Think Shop.
692
00:40:04,290 --> 00:40:07,750
Socrates' character was merged with other intellectuals
693
00:40:07,750 --> 00:40:10,660
who were arousing popular suspicion,
694
00:40:10,660 --> 00:40:13,580
the devious Sophists, who undermined society
695
00:40:13,580 --> 00:40:17,580
by making the weak argument defeat the stronger,
696
00:40:17,580 --> 00:40:20,060
and the pre-Socratics, who, in some cases,
697
00:40:20,060 --> 00:40:23,683
displaced the preeminence of the gods with their science.
698
00:40:24,540 --> 00:40:26,720
We're told that Socrates actually came to the theater
699
00:40:26,720 --> 00:40:28,810
to watch Aristophanes' "Clouds."
700
00:40:28,810 --> 00:40:30,490
What could it have felt like
701
00:40:30,490 --> 00:40:32,493
to see himself portrayed in that way?
702
00:40:32,493 --> 00:40:34,200
I think he must have been amused.
703
00:40:34,200 --> 00:40:36,450
There is this anecdote of Socrates
704
00:40:36,450 --> 00:40:40,480
actually standing up in the seats of the theater
705
00:40:40,480 --> 00:40:42,560
so that those who didn't know him
706
00:40:42,560 --> 00:40:44,960
knew who he was and what he looked like
707
00:40:44,960 --> 00:40:48,290
as his character was being ridiculed onstage.
708
00:40:48,290 --> 00:40:50,420
So I think Socrates was detached
709
00:40:50,420 --> 00:40:54,060
from all these standard norms of society,
710
00:40:54,060 --> 00:40:58,404
and I think it's possible that he might have enjoyed that.
711
00:40:58,404 --> 00:41:01,230
Yeah. On the face of it, this is all very amusing,
712
00:41:01,230 --> 00:41:03,310
but do you think that Socrates should be worried
713
00:41:03,310 --> 00:41:06,230
by the way that Aristophanes is choosing to portray him?
714
00:41:06,230 --> 00:41:09,080
In hindsight, I think he should have been worried.
715
00:41:09,080 --> 00:41:12,110
The core of democracy, the principle of democracy
716
00:41:12,110 --> 00:41:14,310
is that the citizens be educated.
717
00:41:14,310 --> 00:41:15,910
If you don't have educated citizens,
718
00:41:15,910 --> 00:41:17,450
democracy does not work.
719
00:41:17,450 --> 00:41:19,950
The theater was a major tool
720
00:41:19,950 --> 00:41:22,400
for educating the Athenian citizens,
721
00:41:22,400 --> 00:41:25,130
and the memory of that portrayal
722
00:41:25,130 --> 00:41:27,550
would have remained for decades to come
723
00:41:27,550 --> 00:41:29,130
as a whole generation of Athenians
724
00:41:29,130 --> 00:41:30,290
would have been exposed to it.
725
00:41:30,290 --> 00:41:32,950
It's the ancient equivalent of trial by media?
726
00:41:32,950 --> 00:41:35,183
It is, it is, in 5th-century Athens, yeah.
727
00:41:56,883 --> 00:41:59,510
But the cracks appearing in Socrates' reputation
728
00:41:59,510 --> 00:42:01,140
were nothing compared to what
729
00:42:01,140 --> 00:42:03,163
was happening to Athens itself.
730
00:42:08,130 --> 00:42:10,580
As the war with Sparta dragged on,
731
00:42:10,580 --> 00:42:14,083
people questioned the success of the democratic experiment.
732
00:42:15,800 --> 00:42:17,180
At the heart of the uncertainty
733
00:42:17,180 --> 00:42:19,173
was Socrates' close friend Alcibiades.
734
00:42:20,150 --> 00:42:22,420
He'd been chosen to lead an expedition against Sicily
735
00:42:22,420 --> 00:42:27,420
in 415 B.C., the largest in Athens' military history.
736
00:42:30,100 --> 00:42:32,670
But one night, before they set sail,
737
00:42:32,670 --> 00:42:35,250
someone stalked through Athens' streets
738
00:42:35,250 --> 00:42:39,420
mutilating statues of the protector god Hermes.
739
00:42:39,420 --> 00:42:41,310
The rumor spread that Alcibiades
740
00:42:41,310 --> 00:42:42,990
and his aristocratic friends
741
00:42:42,990 --> 00:42:47,223
were the vandals, part of a plot to bring down democracy.
742
00:42:48,770 --> 00:42:52,260
Back in Athens, rumor escalated to outrage,
743
00:42:52,260 --> 00:42:54,130
and Alcibiades was ordered home
744
00:42:54,130 --> 00:42:57,150
to face trial on charges of sacrilege.
745
00:42:57,150 --> 00:42:59,630
But then, en route, he vanished.
746
00:42:59,630 --> 00:43:03,310
And where he reappeared shocked everyone.
747
00:43:03,310 --> 00:43:06,220
He turned up a traitor in the bosom
748
00:43:06,220 --> 00:43:09,203
of Athens' greatest enemy, Sparta.
749
00:43:16,830 --> 00:43:18,940
Alcibiades' damaging defection
750
00:43:18,940 --> 00:43:23,130
exacerbated the anxieties of a god-fearing public.
751
00:43:23,130 --> 00:43:25,290
They needed a scapegoat,
752
00:43:25,290 --> 00:43:28,333
and Socrates was tainted by association.
753
00:43:30,810 --> 00:43:32,625
But he seems unconcerned,
754
00:43:32,625 --> 00:43:35,550
doggedly pursuing the knowledge of right from wrong
755
00:43:35,550 --> 00:43:36,903
above all else.
756
00:43:41,297 --> 00:43:42,130
So when the philosopher
757
00:43:42,130 --> 00:43:45,570
unexpectedly entered public life in his 60s,
758
00:43:45,570 --> 00:43:48,137
he was on a collision course with Athens.
759
00:43:55,610 --> 00:43:59,400
He became presiding officer in an emotionally charged case
760
00:43:59,400 --> 00:44:03,660
whose drama was played out here on the hill of the Pnyx.
761
00:44:03,660 --> 00:44:06,740
Six disgraced Athenian generals were accused
762
00:44:06,740 --> 00:44:08,220
of failing to collect the bodies
763
00:44:08,220 --> 00:44:10,793
of dead soldiers lost at sea.
764
00:44:14,110 --> 00:44:17,560
The public called for the generals to be tried together,
765
00:44:17,560 --> 00:44:19,343
in breach of Athenian law.
766
00:44:20,510 --> 00:44:23,030
But Socrates refused to be swept along
767
00:44:23,030 --> 00:44:25,053
by the vengeful mood of the crowd.
768
00:44:27,920 --> 00:44:30,390
Even though threatened with indictment for treason,
769
00:44:30,390 --> 00:44:32,720
Socrates refused to budge.
770
00:44:32,720 --> 00:44:36,020
He wanted no part in this kangaroo court.
771
00:44:36,020 --> 00:44:38,640
As the sun set, there was stalemate.
772
00:44:38,640 --> 00:44:41,866
And then the next morning, Socrates was off the case.
773
00:44:41,866 --> 00:44:43,760
Later that day,
774
00:44:43,760 --> 00:44:47,584
the generals were all tried here together at the Pnyx,
775
00:44:47,584 --> 00:44:50,573
condemned, and then executed.
776
00:44:56,970 --> 00:45:00,180
To me, this case embodies one of the most important ideas
777
00:45:00,180 --> 00:45:03,520
that Socrates has been developing all his adult life,
778
00:45:03,520 --> 00:45:06,780
which is that one should never take revenge.
779
00:45:06,780 --> 00:45:10,040
And in this, he's completely turning on its head
780
00:45:10,040 --> 00:45:13,530
one of the foundational tenets
781
00:45:13,530 --> 00:45:15,720
of traditional Greek morality,
782
00:45:15,720 --> 00:45:18,020
which said that you should help your friends
783
00:45:18,020 --> 00:45:19,470
and harm your enemies.
784
00:45:19,470 --> 00:45:21,150
And Socrates says no.
785
00:45:21,150 --> 00:45:23,610
Because all you can do to another person
786
00:45:23,610 --> 00:45:25,510
is you can take away their possessions,
787
00:45:25,510 --> 00:45:28,260
you can damage their body, you can kill them,
788
00:45:28,260 --> 00:45:30,740
but you can't harm their soul.
789
00:45:30,740 --> 00:45:33,070
But by doing wrong to somebody else,
790
00:45:33,070 --> 00:45:35,350
you are damaging your own soul
791
00:45:35,350 --> 00:45:39,550
and thereby taking away your chance of a virtuous
792
00:45:39,550 --> 00:45:42,800
and, hence, also a happy and flourishing life.
793
00:45:42,800 --> 00:45:45,620
This was a city-state that believed in justice,
794
00:45:45,620 --> 00:45:47,780
that wanted to see justice enacted,
795
00:45:47,780 --> 00:45:51,820
so in Socrates' book, what form should punishment take?
796
00:45:51,820 --> 00:45:52,653
It's a good point.
797
00:45:52,653 --> 00:45:56,360
He does believe that sometimes punishment is appropriate,
798
00:45:56,360 --> 00:45:59,209
but you punish somebody solely in terms
799
00:45:59,209 --> 00:46:01,840
of trying to cure their soul
800
00:46:01,840 --> 00:46:05,430
of the damage that they have brought upon themselves
801
00:46:05,430 --> 00:46:06,690
by doing wrong.
802
00:46:06,690 --> 00:46:11,690
So punishment is there to cure and purify a damaged soul.
803
00:46:12,120 --> 00:46:13,480
I mean, even today,
804
00:46:13,480 --> 00:46:15,720
those still feel like quite progressive ideas.
805
00:46:15,720 --> 00:46:16,553
Absolutely.
806
00:46:16,553 --> 00:46:19,920
I mean, we're barely catching up with these ideas even now.
807
00:46:19,920 --> 00:46:23,633
We still have debates, "What is the purpose of punishment?
808
00:46:25,255 --> 00:46:30,040
Is it to kind of retribution, or is it some kind of reform?"
809
00:46:30,040 --> 00:46:32,540
Now, Socrates is absolutely clear.
810
00:46:32,540 --> 00:46:35,670
The purpose of punishment is to reform.
811
00:46:35,670 --> 00:46:37,820
They are fascinating ideas,
812
00:46:37,820 --> 00:46:39,130
but they must have been very,
813
00:46:39,130 --> 00:46:41,000
very troubling to the Athenians,
814
00:46:41,000 --> 00:46:43,830
because it must have felt as if he was kind of unpicking
815
00:46:43,830 --> 00:46:46,610
the foundations that kept communities together.
816
00:46:46,610 --> 00:46:49,380
Yeah, it would have looked weak to them.
817
00:46:49,380 --> 00:46:51,540
It would have looked like, "Oh, no, you're not a real man.
818
00:46:51,540 --> 00:46:53,860
You're not standing up for yourself.
819
00:46:53,860 --> 00:46:55,291
What are you doing?"
820
00:46:55,291 --> 00:46:58,640
In a way, he's almost anticipating
821
00:46:58,640 --> 00:47:00,610
the teaching of the Sermon on the Mount,
822
00:47:00,610 --> 00:47:03,290
you know, turn the other cheek, in a sense.
823
00:47:03,290 --> 00:47:06,180
But he's 500 years before all that.
824
00:47:06,180 --> 00:47:09,300
How does he dare to march so out of step
825
00:47:09,300 --> 00:47:11,100
from the rest of society?
826
00:47:11,100 --> 00:47:14,420
Because I think he absolutely believes
827
00:47:14,420 --> 00:47:17,390
that nobody else can harm his soul,
828
00:47:17,390 --> 00:47:20,200
but if he takes part in the illegal actions
829
00:47:20,200 --> 00:47:22,680
that he was invited to take part in,
830
00:47:22,680 --> 00:47:27,030
then he will be absolutely damaging his own soul
831
00:47:27,030 --> 00:47:31,303
and taking away his chance of a happy and flourishing life.
832
00:47:34,140 --> 00:47:35,830
In the name of wisdom and truth,
833
00:47:35,830 --> 00:47:38,200
Socrates was prepared to stick his head
834
00:47:38,200 --> 00:47:40,667
dangerously high above the parapet.
835
00:47:40,667 --> 00:47:43,160
Interestingly, it's a quality that he shares
836
00:47:43,160 --> 00:47:45,553
with both Confucius and the Buddha.
837
00:47:45,553 --> 00:47:47,830
For all three philosophers,
838
00:47:47,830 --> 00:47:50,290
personal comfort and personal security
839
00:47:50,290 --> 00:47:53,370
came a poor second to principle.
840
00:47:53,370 --> 00:47:55,220
And in the case of Socrates,
841
00:47:55,220 --> 00:47:57,011
having the courage of his convictions
842
00:47:57,011 --> 00:48:00,323
would prove to be a matter of life or death.
843
00:48:09,410 --> 00:48:14,093
As Athens' enemies closed in, society turned in on itself.
844
00:48:15,460 --> 00:48:18,977
Freedom was a luxury it could no longer afford.
845
00:48:24,650 --> 00:48:28,210
Finally the Spartans brought Athens to her knees.
846
00:48:28,210 --> 00:48:30,140
They tore down her city walls
847
00:48:30,140 --> 00:48:33,823
and installed a junta of 30 handpicked oligarchs.
848
00:48:37,890 --> 00:48:39,860
Death squads roamed the streets,
849
00:48:39,860 --> 00:48:42,960
and thousands of democrats were disappeared,
850
00:48:42,960 --> 00:48:45,923
forced into exile, or executed.
851
00:48:49,430 --> 00:48:51,960
Even though a counterrevolution restored democracy
852
00:48:51,960 --> 00:48:53,870
just eight months later,
853
00:48:53,870 --> 00:48:57,170
it was a deeply compromised democracy,
854
00:48:57,170 --> 00:48:59,933
riven with suspicion and recrimination.
855
00:49:01,510 --> 00:49:03,710
In this poisonous atmosphere,
856
00:49:03,710 --> 00:49:08,153
Athens finally decided to deal with its troublesome gadfly.
857
00:49:21,729 --> 00:49:26,562
In 399 B.C., at the age of 70, Socrates was back in court.
858
00:49:27,690 --> 00:49:29,913
This time, he was on trial.
859
00:49:30,790 --> 00:49:34,070
The accusations against him were read out here in the agora
860
00:49:34,070 --> 00:49:35,603
close to this oath stone.
861
00:49:37,216 --> 00:49:38,520
The first charge was impiety,
862
00:49:38,520 --> 00:49:41,380
denying the gods and introducing new ones,
863
00:49:41,380 --> 00:49:44,550
the second that he'd corrupted the young.
864
00:49:44,550 --> 00:49:48,993
Both could carry the heaviest penalty, execution.
865
00:49:54,900 --> 00:49:57,203
The trial took place in a religious court.
866
00:49:58,100 --> 00:50:00,290
Using the latest technology,
867
00:50:00,290 --> 00:50:03,070
a water clock measured the three hours allowed
868
00:50:03,070 --> 00:50:04,853
to the prosecution's case.
869
00:50:06,210 --> 00:50:08,710
Were his accusers politically motivated?
870
00:50:08,710 --> 00:50:11,080
Was he being scapegoated for his association
871
00:50:11,080 --> 00:50:13,763
with prominent anti-democrats like Alcibiades?
872
00:50:14,914 --> 00:50:16,700
Perhaps.
873
00:50:16,700 --> 00:50:20,680
But then, he'd set about to open the minds of the young
874
00:50:20,680 --> 00:50:22,750
and, with his goading questions,
875
00:50:22,750 --> 00:50:24,553
to challenge the status quo.
876
00:50:28,850 --> 00:50:31,190
Eventually the water clock was refilled
877
00:50:31,190 --> 00:50:33,273
for the philosopher to defend himself.
878
00:50:34,490 --> 00:50:38,273
Plato recounts how Socrates feels he's fighting a lost cause
879
00:50:38,273 --> 00:50:42,497
thanks to Aristophanes' searing, damaging caricature of him.
880
00:50:50,347 --> 00:50:52,987
"It's not my crimes that will convict me," he said,
881
00:50:52,987 --> 00:50:54,780
"but rumor and gossip.
882
00:50:54,780 --> 00:50:56,920
I can't possibly defend myself.
883
00:50:56,920 --> 00:50:59,820
It's like boxing with shadows.
884
00:50:59,820 --> 00:51:02,747
You will persuade yourselves that I am guilty."
885
00:51:05,290 --> 00:51:08,560
Yet in typical style, Socrates uses his defense
886
00:51:08,560 --> 00:51:11,753
to sting his fellow Athenians from their moral slumber.
887
00:51:12,680 --> 00:51:15,820
It is a brilliant, audacious speech.
888
00:51:15,820 --> 00:51:18,410
But it's also provocative and arrogant,
889
00:51:18,410 --> 00:51:21,570
and the jurors don't like it one bit.
890
00:51:21,570 --> 00:51:25,480
The city that once fetishized freedom and freedom of speech
891
00:51:25,480 --> 00:51:28,193
could not tolerate freedom to offend.
892
00:51:36,110 --> 00:51:40,130
Socrates was judged by at least 500 men chosen at random
893
00:51:40,130 --> 00:51:43,823
and recruited from all over the traumatized city-state.
894
00:51:45,030 --> 00:51:48,610
The jurors would have used these ballots in a secret vote.
895
00:51:48,610 --> 00:51:52,683
A solid stem for acquittal, a hollow for condemnation.
896
00:52:01,900 --> 00:52:03,150
Found guilty,
897
00:52:03,150 --> 00:52:06,353
a second vote is held to determine his punishment.
898
00:52:07,300 --> 00:52:09,640
Socrates has the chance to avoid execution
899
00:52:09,640 --> 00:52:12,040
by proposing a lesser alternative,
900
00:52:12,040 --> 00:52:13,973
typically a fine or exile.
901
00:52:15,130 --> 00:52:19,380
Instead, by speaking freely, democratically,
902
00:52:19,380 --> 00:52:21,383
he seems to invite martyrdom.
903
00:52:22,800 --> 00:52:24,500
He declares that he's lived his life
904
00:52:24,500 --> 00:52:26,210
for the benefit of the city.
905
00:52:26,210 --> 00:52:29,089
He deserves reward, not retribution.
906
00:52:29,089 --> 00:52:33,853
He suggests dinner in perpetuity at the citizens' expense.
907
00:52:36,630 --> 00:52:40,523
Socrates' irony loses him more support in the second vote.
908
00:52:42,370 --> 00:52:45,700
It seems he takes the news philosophically.
909
00:52:45,700 --> 00:52:48,890
The jury couldn't harm his soul,
910
00:52:48,890 --> 00:52:50,853
but they had harmed their own.
911
00:52:51,807 --> 00:52:54,276
"Now I go to die and you to live.
912
00:52:54,276 --> 00:52:56,887
God only knows which is the better journey."
913
00:53:02,290 --> 00:53:06,763
Socrates didn't fear what he didn't know, including death.
914
00:53:07,810 --> 00:53:11,090
The man the oracle proclaimed to be the wisest
915
00:53:11,090 --> 00:53:12,990
was now on death row
916
00:53:12,990 --> 00:53:15,483
for putting his own philosophy into practice.
917
00:53:18,360 --> 00:53:21,540
One of the things I find so compelling about Socrates
918
00:53:21,540 --> 00:53:25,010
is that even though he lived 25 centuries ago,
919
00:53:25,010 --> 00:53:28,300
in many ways, he saw us coming.
920
00:53:28,300 --> 00:53:30,990
He denounces an obsession with looks,
921
00:53:30,990 --> 00:53:35,307
with material goods, with spin, and with fame.
922
00:53:35,307 --> 00:53:38,430
He wasn't just exploring the meaning of life,
923
00:53:38,430 --> 00:53:41,310
but the meaning of our own lives.
924
00:53:41,310 --> 00:53:42,310
Just listen to this.
925
00:53:43,412 --> 00:53:46,450
"Oh, my friend, why do you,
926
00:53:46,450 --> 00:53:49,910
who are a citizen of the great and wise city of Athens,
927
00:53:49,910 --> 00:53:54,170
care so much about laying up wealth and honor and reputation
928
00:53:54,170 --> 00:53:57,770
and so little about wisdom and truth
929
00:53:57,770 --> 00:53:59,823
and the improvement of the soul?
930
00:54:00,735 --> 00:54:03,157
Are you not ashamed?"
931
00:54:07,920 --> 00:54:11,450
Socrates would have to wait a month for his execution,
932
00:54:11,450 --> 00:54:14,353
a sentence intended to silence him.
933
00:54:15,250 --> 00:54:18,160
But Socrates' death at the hands of the people
934
00:54:18,160 --> 00:54:21,510
provided the perfect ingredients for his resurrection
935
00:54:21,510 --> 00:54:26,510
as an ideological martyr, a kind of blueprint philosopher.
936
00:54:26,820 --> 00:54:29,490
And ironically, what secured his legacy
937
00:54:29,490 --> 00:54:31,900
was the very thing that he'd disregarded
938
00:54:31,900 --> 00:54:35,153
throughout his life, the written word.
939
00:54:36,910 --> 00:54:38,870
His supporters wrote detailed accounts
940
00:54:38,870 --> 00:54:40,721
of his extraordinary life,
941
00:54:40,721 --> 00:54:43,333
immortalizing his ideas and his spirit.
942
00:54:44,170 --> 00:54:45,610
Through their words,
943
00:54:45,610 --> 00:54:49,383
his game-changing, history-making voice endures.
944
00:54:50,400 --> 00:54:53,410
Still asking those probing, universal questions
945
00:54:53,410 --> 00:54:57,170
which, even today, are at the heart of our value systems.
946
00:54:57,170 --> 00:54:58,860
What makes us good?
947
00:54:58,860 --> 00:55:00,650
What is justice?
948
00:55:00,650 --> 00:55:01,993
How can we be happy?
949
00:55:04,090 --> 00:55:08,206
Socrates was the inspiration for Plato and Aristotle,
950
00:55:08,206 --> 00:55:11,140
two giants of philosophy whose ideas
951
00:55:11,140 --> 00:55:15,383
would shape Western and Eastern civilization up until today.
952
00:55:17,848 --> 00:55:18,950
Following Socrates' death,
953
00:55:18,950 --> 00:55:23,270
Plato abandoned his political ambitions in disgust
954
00:55:23,270 --> 00:55:24,880
and set up his Academy,
955
00:55:24,880 --> 00:55:27,090
which would continue as a center of learning
956
00:55:27,090 --> 00:55:29,820
for close on a thousand years.
957
00:55:29,820 --> 00:55:32,040
This building is Athens' modern Academy,
958
00:55:32,040 --> 00:55:34,320
and it's just a couple of miles from the original,
959
00:55:34,320 --> 00:55:38,050
and it's part of a network of academic institutions
960
00:55:38,050 --> 00:55:42,373
right across the globe inspired by that Athenian example.
961
00:55:59,440 --> 00:56:01,800
On the day of Socrates' execution,
962
00:56:01,800 --> 00:56:05,510
his distraught friends and family came here to the agora.
963
00:56:05,510 --> 00:56:08,650
The place where Socrates had once walked freely
964
00:56:08,650 --> 00:56:10,243
was now his cage.
965
00:56:13,460 --> 00:56:14,733
But he is serene.
966
00:56:16,370 --> 00:56:20,034
Calmly he lifts the lethal little cup of hemlock poison
967
00:56:20,034 --> 00:56:21,453
and drinks.
968
00:56:28,700 --> 00:56:30,790
We're told that Socrates' last words,
969
00:56:30,790 --> 00:56:33,110
as the lethal hemlock took effect,
970
00:56:33,110 --> 00:56:36,680
were, "Crito, we owe a cock to Asclepius."
971
00:56:37,600 --> 00:56:41,810
With this cryptic message, even on the brink of death,
972
00:56:41,810 --> 00:56:44,823
he kept his followers and future scholars guessing.
973
00:56:48,320 --> 00:56:50,310
Was he proving himself pious
974
00:56:50,310 --> 00:56:52,866
by invoking one of the city's deities?
975
00:56:52,866 --> 00:56:57,186
Or was he ironically giving thanks to the god of healing
976
00:56:57,186 --> 00:57:00,703
for relieving him of the sickness of existence?
977
00:57:02,270 --> 00:57:05,350
Socrates might have been infuriating.
978
00:57:05,350 --> 00:57:09,470
But his tenacious questioning of what it means to be human
979
00:57:09,470 --> 00:57:12,608
still has absolute resonance.
980
00:57:12,608 --> 00:57:15,960
By stating that the ultimate evil is ignorance
981
00:57:15,960 --> 00:57:19,310
and that a good life is within our reach,
982
00:57:19,310 --> 00:57:24,143
he challenges us all never to be thoughtless.
983
00:57:28,180 --> 00:57:31,833
The unexamined life is not worth living.
984
00:57:35,320 --> 00:57:38,728
With his head covered, no one saw the final moment
985
00:57:38,728 --> 00:57:41,830
when Socrates' precious soul
986
00:57:41,830 --> 00:57:46,830
slipped from that ugly, satirical, unforgettable face.
987
00:57:52,706 --> 00:57:55,539
(dramatic music)
78807
Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.