Ayuda necesito dos argumentos para defender a Sócrates , como si fuera su abogado. por fis ayuden
Respuestas
Question:
Charges Socrates turns to the formal legal charges that he
"does injustice by corrupting the young, and by not believing in the gods in whom the city believes, but in other daimonia that are novel"
(24b-c). He undertakes to examine "each one of the parts of this charge," and, accordingly, some of the questions in his cross-examination of Meletus are directed to each of the charge's two specifications (18b-c). "Daimonia" is the translator's spelling in English letters of the plural form of the Greek word that is the root of our word "demon" (from French demon, derived from Latin daemon, derived from Greek daimon). For us, "demon" means primarily an evil spirit, but the original meaning of daimon (plural, daimonia) carried no necessary connotation of malevolence; it meant only a secondary divinity, a being who was ranked between gods and men.
Explication: