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Socrates the “Ugly” Public Philosopher

8 min readFeb 8, 2025

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“Alcibades being taught by Socrates” by François-André Vincent
“Alcibiades being taught by Socrates” by François-André Vincent ()

For every philosopher, Socrates (469-399 B.C.) is a model. He is the one who is considered to have given birth to the discipline that we know today as philosophy.

Of course, there were thinkers before Socrates, what we call the pre-Socratic philosophers. They made important contributions to metaphysics, cosmology, and epistemology. However, Socrates made a crucial shift by grounding philosophical inquiry in a broader way. His approach redefined the role of philosophy in public discourse and shaped its trajectory in ways that profoundly influenced later thinkers such as Plato and Aristotle. Thus, there is a before and an after Socrates in the sense that we can say that without Socrates there would be no philosophy as we know it.

But Socrates is largely a mythical figure. He is also one of a few rare cases in history where a philosopher did not write anything. This can be confusing since his name often appears on the cover of books. At your local bookstore, if you find a piece of text with “Socrates” as the author’s name, you can safely assume that someone — a publisher, an author, or someone else — is trying to lure you in.

Everything we know about Socrates has been told to us by someone else. Our best teacher…

Philosophy Today
Philosophy Today

Published in Philosophy Today

Philosophy Today is dedicated to current philosophy, logic and thought.

Romaric Jannel
Romaric Jannel

Written by Romaric Jannel

Philosopher | Academic | Translator | Medium editor and Boost nominator | Also on Substack | |

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