The above statement made by Socrates during his trial for “corrupting the youth,” suggests that the essence of being human lies in our capacity for self-reflection and the quest for purpose.
Values involved
Truth-seeking
Rationality
Moral autonomy
Integrity and courage
Wisdom of humility
Freedom of thought
According to him, examination allows us to identify the difference between opinion (Doxa) and knowledge (Episteme). Socrates used a process of “Elenchus” (logical interrogation) to refine our understanding of the word. In his words,
“wisdom starts with the realization that I know nothing.”
For individuals, an examined life helps prevent mindless conformity and harmful habits, thereby protecting personal autonomy, mental health and ethical character. Eg- young person who critically examines online content is less likely to fall for fake news or extremist propaganda.
For society, collective examination enables reform and moral progress. The anti-caste movement led by thinkers like B.R. Ambedkar emerged from questioning inherited social hierarchies.
For civil servants, self-examination prevents mechanical obedience and promotes ethical judgement. Officers like Ashok Khemka exemplify how reflective officials act as guardians of legality and justice rather than mere executors of orders.
For leaders, an examined life restrains the misuse of power and promotes responsible leadership with with foresight, empathy and moral restraint. Eg- Gandhi’s differentiation between evil and evil doer, Nelson Mandela’s efforts for reconciliation.
For a nation, an examined citizenry prevents turning democracy into “mobocracy”. An unexmined citizens turn into superfluous masses as happened in Germany under Nazi party.
Without reflection, life becomes passive, society becomes stagnant, power becomes dangerous and democracy becomes hollow. Examination is the foundation of wisdom, justice and freedom.