As an infantryman, Socrates showed great physical endurance and courage, rescuing the future Athenian leader Alcibiades during the siege of Potidaea in 432 B.C. His family apparently had the moderate wealth required to launch Socrates’ career as a hoplite (foot soldier). He often referred to God rather than the gods, and reported being guided by an inner divine voice. Plato describes him eagerly acquiring the writings of the leading contemporary philosopher Anaxagoras and says he was taught rhetoric by Aspasia, the talented mistress of the great Athenian leader Pericles.ĭid you know? Although he never outright rejected the standard Athenian view of religion, Socrates' beliefs were nonconformist. As a youth, he showed an appetite for learning. His father Sophroniscus was a stonemason and his mother, Phaenarete, was a midwife. Socrates was born and lived nearly his entire life in Athens.
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