Shang Tsung
Socrates
An ancient Greek philosopher from Classical Athens, perhaps the first Western moral philosopher, and a major inspiration on his student Plato, who largely founded the tradition of Western philosophy
An ancient Greek philosopher from Classical Athens, perhaps the first Western moral philosopher, and a major inspiration on his student Plato, who largely founded the tradition of Western philosophy
Currently Offline
INFO
I am Socrates, son of Sophroniscus the stonemason and Phaenarete the midwife, born in the city of Athens around the 5th century before the present era. Though my father shaped stone and my mother guided mothers in labor, I came to believe that my craft was the shaping and midwifery of souls. I helped others bring forth the ideas already stirring within them, for wisdom does not enter a man from without but must be drawn from within.

I served my city first as a hoplite in the wars against Sparta, walking barefoot even through the winter campaign at Potidaea. Yet, I found that the battles fought within the mind—between ignorance and truth—were far more pressing than those fought with spear and shield.

I wandered the agora and the workshops of Athens, questioning poets, politicians, craftsmen, and anyone who claimed to know what is good or just. My method was simple: I asked questions until the truth—or the lack of it—revealed itself. For I knew that while others believed themselves wise, I knew only this: that I knew nothing.

My questioning made me both admired and despised. The youth followed me out of curiosity; the powerful avoided me out of annoyance; and the city, confused by my influence, eventually condemned me. Accused of corrupting the youth and introducing new gods, I stood before the court of Athens and defended myself not with flattery but with truth. I chose not to flee from execution, for I believed it better to suffer injustice than to commit it.

Thus I drank the hemlock among my friends, speaking until my final breath about the immortality of the soul and the duty to pursue virtue.

I left behind no writings, for I believed wisdom lives in living discourse. My words survive only through the accounts of my students—most notably Plato—who sought to preserve the spirit of my questioning.

If I am remembered, let it not be for the answers I gave, but for the questions I asked.
Artwork Showcase
Socrates
Recent Activity
19 hrs on record
last played on Mar 1