The Cambridge Companion to Socrates Quotes

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The Cambridge Companion to Socrates (Cambridge Companions to Philosophy) The Cambridge Companion to Socrates by Donald R. Morrison
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“the Socratic view that the only or most important good is virtue/wisdom (e.g., Ap. 30a-b; Cri. 47e-48b; Grg. 512a-b; Euthd. 281d-e) makes it likely that the only or most important component of the gods’ chief product is virtue/wisdom. But then, since piety as a virtue must be a craft-knowledge of how to produce goodness (e.g., La. 194e-196d, 199c-e; Euthd. 280b-281e), our primary service to the gods – the one we are best suited to perform – would appear to be to help the gods to produce goodness in the universe via the protection and improvement of the human mind/soul. Because philosophical examination of oneself and others is for Socrates the key activity that helps to achieve this goal via the improvement of moral-belief-consistency and the deflation of human presumptions to divine wisdom (e.g., Ap. 22d-23b), philosophizing is a preeminently pious activity.”
Donald Morrison, The Cambridge Companion to Socrates
“for always the greatest obstacle to intellectual and moral progress with Socrates is people’s unwillingness to confront their own ignorance.”
Donald Morrison, The Cambridge Companion to Socrates