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Roslyn Weiss. Socrates Dissatisfied: An Analysis of Plato's Crito. New York: Oxford University Press, 1997. Pp. xii + 187. Cloth, $39.95.
The speech by `the Laws' of the Crito has commonly been understood as a case of Socratic ventriloquism, voicing a doctrine of authoritarian civic obligation that Socrates himself endorses. This, of course, generates the standard problem of reconciling this docile son of Athens with the radically autonomous Socrates of the Apology, a man obedient only to the dictates of his own reason. Roslyn Weiss's book sets out to challenge this mainstream reading.
On Weiss's account, the speech of the Laws is a piece of crafty Socratic rhetoric antithetical to Socrates' own convictions. Its purpose, then, is to convince not the reader but the lawless and unphilosophical Crito that Socrates ought to remain in Athens, using terms that Crito can comprehend (terms that will benefit his soul by making him more law-abiding). Despite this false 'oratory' (50b6-8), however, Socrates' own first allegiance is to `justice and philosophy" (3) whose principles dictate that he suffer the court's judgment, "abiding by the things agreed to" at his trial (Cr. 50a2-3).
Although others have argued for this thesis, this is the first book-length argument of its kind and it supersedes all previous attempts in its persuasiveness and its thorough and detailed treatment: sensitive not only to the dialogue's Greek and argumentative structure,...