Read the following and do the exercises that follow: Socrates said: “Let us look at it together,Crito;and if you can challenge any of my arguments,do so and I will listen to you;but if you can’t,be a good fellow and stop telling me over and over again that I ought to leave this place without official permission.I am very anxious to obtain your approval before I adopt the course which I have in mind;I don’t want to act against your convictions.Now give your attention to the starting point of this inquiry if you are happy with the way I’ve put it,and try to anwser my questions to the best of your judgement...Do we say that there is no way that one must ever willingly commit injustice,or does it depend upon circumstance?Is it true,as we have often agreed before,that there is no sense in which an act of injustice is good or honourable?Or have we jettisoned all our former convictions in these last few days?Can you and I at our age,Crito,have spent all these years in serious discussions without realizing that we were no better than a pair of children?Surely the truth is just what we have always said.Whatever the popular view is,and whether the consequence is pleasanter than this or even tougher,the fact remains that to commit injustice is in every case bad and dishonourable for the person who does it.Is that our view,or not?” Exercises : Tell whether each of the following statements is T(rue) or F(alse) 1.We can learn from this passage that Socrates is by no means a law-abiding citizen. 2.Socrates thought that old people like himself and Crito are the same as children. 3.Socrates thought it a disgrace to run away without official permission. 4.It turned out that Crito could challenge Socrates’ arguments. 5.The phrase “this place” most probably refers to the jail. 6.The words “adopt the course which I have in mind” most probably mean "drinking some hemlock".