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Journal Article

Citation

Christensen AB. History of Philosophy Quarterly 2020; 37(4): 309-330.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020)

DOI

10.5406/21521026.37.4.01

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Because the Phaedo characterizes Socrates's death as a punishment by Athens, many scholars argue that he could neither have been responsible for nor have intended his death, so that his death was not suicide. This is no mere semantic quibble: the question turns on issues of responsible and intentional action. I argue that the dialogues portray Socrates as committing suicide. To do so, I use a Platonic account of responsibility and intention to show how Athens and Socrates were jointly responsible for Socrates's death and that his intention was not only to do what justice requires but also to kill himself. © 2020 University of Illinois. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

death; intention; responsibility; Socrates; suicide

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