About This Book
A brief Socratic conversation records an encounter outside a magistrate's court where one interlocutor is prosecuting his father and Socrates is awaiting trial; they seek a general definition of piety. Through a sequence of proposed definitions—piety as prosecuting wrongdoers, as what is pleasing to the gods, and as service to the gods—Socrates exposes contradictions and solicits refinements, highlighting tensions between divine approval and moral standards. The discussion uses question-and-answer refutation and ends without a definitive definition, leaving central questions about holiness and divine morality unresolved.
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