"Unmoved by the claims of justice grounded in his private relationships to friends and family, Socrates appeals to the standards of civic justice imbedded in his relations as a citizen to the Athenian people and to the Athenian system of law. He claims that a citizen is necessarily, given the benefits he has enjoyed under the laws of the city, their slave, justly required to do whatever they ask, and more forbidden to attack them than to violate his own parents. That would be retaliationârendering a wrong for the wrong received in his unjust condemnationâand retaliation is never just. But what if he chose to depart not in an unjust spirit of retaliation, but only in order to evade the ill consequences of the unjust condemnation for himself and his friends and family? As if recognizing that loophole, Socrates also develops a celebrated early version of the social contractâaâcontractâ between the laws or the city and each citizen, not among the citizens themselvesâwith the argument that now, after he is condemned by an Athenian court and has exhausted all legal appeals, he must, in justice to his implicit promise, abide by the lawsâfinal judgment and accept his death sentence."
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John M. Cooper, in Plato's Complete Works (Hackett, 1997), p. 37-38
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Crito
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Crito
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