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In “Letter from Birmingham Jail,” Martin Luther King, Jr., cites Socrates as a model for the kind of “constructive, nonviolent tension which is necessary for growth.” In at least 150 words, compare the two men and the methods they used to change society. Use evidence from the text to support your answer.

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King argued in his letter that “…one has a moral responsibility to disobey unjust laws.” and that “An unjust law is no law at all.” Knowing that King felt this way, I was surprised that he would refer to Socrates, a man who believed quite the opposite, when arguing for his cause. Like King, Socrates was imprisoned largely for standing up for beliefs that others around him disagreed with. However, though he had numerous opportunities to do so, Socrates refused to break any laws, even though he knew that his imprisonment and condemnation were unjust. To him, breaking any of the laws of Athens would cause harm to all laws, and not even the injustice of the laws could justify harming them. Socrates believed that if individuals could obey or disobey the laws as they pleased, the laws would no longer be effective, and the government would fall into a state of chaos. He concluded that the only just way for him to leave prison and avoid death would be to convince the legal system of its own injustice.

User Charles Brandt
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King argued in his letter that “…one has a moral responsibility to disobey unjust laws.” and that “An unjust law is no law at all.” Knowing that King felt this way, I was surprised that he would refer to Socrates, a man who believed quite the opposite, when arguing for his cause. Like King, Socrates was imprisoned largely for standing up for beliefs that others around him disagreed with. However, though he had numerous opportunities to do so, Socrates refused to break any laws, even though he knew that his imprisonment and condemnation were unjust. To him, breaking any of the laws of Athens would cause harm to all laws, and not even the injustice of the laws could justify harming them. Socrates believed that if individuals could obey or disobey the laws as they pleased, the laws would no longer be effective, and the government would fall into a state of chaos. He concluded that the only just way for him to leave prison and avoid death would be to convince the legal system of its own injustice.
User Jadar
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