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Socrates would link modern electric cars to ethics by interrogating their true function (Ergon), their impact on justice, and the temperance of the systems that produce them. Rather than accepting the "clean" appearance of an electric vehicle (EV) at face value, he would apply a dialectic approach to uncover the hidden costs of this perceived virtue.The "Ergon" and Virtue of the MachineSocrates would ask whether the EV's purpose is to transport the soul toward the "Good Life" or to serve as a tool for limitless consumption. In Socratic ethics, a machine is not virtuous simply because it follows a code or lacks a tailpipe; it must be integrated into a system that recognizes the "Good" through practical wisdom (Phronesis). He would likely identify a "realism inconsistency"—a moral dissonance where a car is marketed as a "planet-saving savior" while behaving like a "parasite" that relies on extractive expansion.Justice and the "Colonial Shadow"For Socrates, ethics cannot be contained within a car’s immediate environment; it must be traced through its entire value chain. He would link the EV to the following ethical failures:• Green Colonialism: He would view the "fossil-free" status of the Global North as ethically hollow if it is built on "Green Grabbing"—the exploitation of marginalized communities and Indigenous lands for minerals like lithium and cobalt.• The Mining of Souls and Soil: The sources suggest he would highlight the "colonial shadow" of the lithium supply chain, citing the hydrological imbalances in the Atacama, the destruction of habitats in Australia, and the extreme contamination in China as violations of justice.• Distribution of Costs: Socrates would argue that a transition that achieves climate neutrality in one place by poisoning the water or soil of another is not a virtuous evolution but a rebranding of the appetite that caused the crisis in the first place