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Description
In condemning Socrates, Athens sought to silence a man-but instead preserved his questions for all of history. In 399 BCE, Athens put one of its own citizens to death-not for treason or violence, but for asking too many questions. Socrates, the man who believed that "the unexamined life is not worth living," became the first philosopher tried and executed by a democracy in defense of itself. His trial marks one of the most enduring confrontations between free thought and political authority.This book reconstructs the world behind that moment: a city still reeling from war, humiliation, and political turmoil. Drawing on Plato's dialogues, Xenophon's accounts, and Athenian legal records, it traces how public suspicion turned philosophy into subversion, and dialectic into danger. Athens feared Socrates not for what he said, but for what his method revealed-a society unsure of its own values.By following the stages of the trial and the reasoning of his accusers, this narrative probes the tension between devotion to truth and loyalty to the state. In Socrates' final words, Western philosophy inherited both a martyr and a mirror-reflecting the peril that awaits any democracy when it fears dissent more than ignorance. Author of English-language books fusing self-transformation, business tactics, and historical depth. Maya equips readers with tools from bygone eras to navigate and excel in today's landscape.
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