Euthyphro Prosecutes a Human Rights Violation

Philosophy and Literature 38 (2):510-527 (2014)
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Abstract

Socrates encounters Euthyphro as both are on their way to court, Socrates as a defendant against charges of blasphemy and Euthyphro as a prosecutor of his father for negligently causing the death of a slave—a human rights violation. While I argue that piety and pollution supply a productive way of thinking about human rights crime and punishment, Euthyphro is a very troubling model for the human rights prosecutor, since he is an almost paradigmatically unattractive character. Reading the Euthyphro leads to appropriately troubling and ambivalent feelings about contemporary human rights prosecutions.

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Eugene Garver
University of Chicago (PhD)

Citations of this work

Wrong Turns in the Euthyphro.Paul Woodruff - 2019 - Apeiron 52 (2):117-136.

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