Socrates believed in eternal laws as demonstrated by his allegory of the cave. He thought that everyone had an innate knowledge of justice, freedom, etc. and that they needed to "birth" these ideas (he often refers to himself as the midwife of ideas) His reasoning was that because everyone has innate understanding of "natural and eternal" laws, there must be absolute truth.
The sophists were relativists, and believed that everyone is right. If you think a room is hot, and someone else thinks its cold you're both right because truth is based off of your own construction of reality. They believed the only thing you can obtain is skill relative to another person, and the sophists were well known for teaching debate and speaking techniques for money.
Sophists believed that there was no absolute right or wrong that what was right for one might be wrong for another. Socrates believed that an absolute truth existed and that all real knowledge was within a person.
Socrates also invented the Socratic method which is still used today.
He asked pointed questions and forced his pupils to use their reason and to see things for themselves.
Hope I helped :)What tell me please
that sophists thought that knowledge was a way to improve ur life and Socrates thought that there was an absolute right or wrong
Socrates believed that absolute standards of the good, true, and just exist objectively and can be known through reason, while the Sophists believed that these concepts are relative and subject to individual interpretation. Socrates argued that there are universal truths that are not mere products of opinion or persuasion, unlike the Sophists who emphasized rhetoric and persuasion to sway opinions rather than seeking objective truth.
The meaning of these things was not relative
How did the sophists and Socrates advance the tradition of reason and humanis
Sophists focused on rhetoric and persuasive speech to win arguments, emphasizing practical skills and relativism. Socrates, on the other hand, promoted critical thinking and the search for objective truth through dialogue and questioning, prioritizing ethics and virtue. Both advanced the tradition of reason by challenging traditional beliefs and encouraging individuals to think for themselves.
Socrates was an opponent of the Sophists. He believed that the Sophists only taught opinions instead of teaching students to find the truth for themselves.
he taught for free
What tell me please
They weren't. The Sophists were condemned by Socrates, according to Plato. Aristophanes, on the other hand, claims that Socrates was himself a Sophist no different from any other one.
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Sophists did not like Socrates because he criticized their teachings that emphasized rhetoric and persuasion over seeking truth and knowledge. Socrates believed in pursuing objective truths through dialectic reasoning, which challenged the relativism and skepticism that the sophists promoted.