An oracle was reported to have said, No one is wiser than Socrates. And
in fact it was Socrates' life's work to interpret these words, which
demanded and defined the practice of philosophy. Each of these original
essays attends carefully to the specifics of the Apology, looking to
its dramatic details, its philosophic teaching, and its complexity as a
work of writing to bring into focus the Socrates of the Apology.
Overall, the contributors, distinguished scholars of ancient philosophy,
share a belief in the unity of the letter and the spirit of Platonic
philosophy: the conviction that the Platonic text cannot be reached
except through reading and cannot be read except through thinking. In
this way, the readings in this volume mirror Socrates' own hermeneutical
practice of uniting the demands of the mind and the demands of the
text--the Socratic examination. The result, true to the Socratic
injunction that the unexamined life is not worth living, continues that
practice of examination, here offering a reexamination of Socrates in
the Apology.