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Socrates' Trial: How Democracy and Philosophy Clashed in Ancient Athens

Published 2 days, 11 hours ago
Description
What if democracy's greatest weakness is that it lets everyone vote on things they don't understand? In this episode, Casey reveals how a 70-year-old philosopher's trial exposed a pattern that still haunts us today: the clash between expertise and popular opinion. 🎯 What You'll Learn: • Why 501 Athenian citizens voted to execute their greatest thinker (and how close that vote actually was) • How Aristophanes' comedy "The Clouds" turned public opinion against Socrates years before his trial • The real reason Athens needed a scapegoat after losing the Peloponnesian War • Why Plato's Cave allegory was his direct response to his mentor's death 👤 Perfect for: lifelong learners and anyone passionate about personal growth who wants to understand how ancient power struggles still shape modern debates about truth and authority. 📍 Chapters: [00:00] Casey introduces the trial that changed philosophy forever [01:45] The surprising math behind Socrates' conviction [03:30] How a comedy ruined a philosopher's reputation [05:15] Athens after defeat: looking for someone to blame [07:00] The real charges vs. the hidden motivations [08:45] Plato's cave: when the wise seem crazy to the masses [10:30] Why this pattern keeps repeating in modern politics 🔔 Never miss an episode: Follow Pattern Break on Spotify or Apple Podcasts and turn on notifications. New episodes drop daily, your next favorite insight is one tap away. 🔍 Topics: Socrates trial, ancient Athens, democracy vs expertise, Plato's cave, historical patterns

Catch every episode at Pattern Break

------------- Keywords: historical analysis, behavioral patterns, historical cycles

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