The Rudi Connection learns about ourselves, about life and about the world from the death of Socrates

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the Death of Socrates

Yes indeed, Life is Complicated. The fundamental complexity of Life involves our own ignorance about ourselves, about Life and about the World in which we live.

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the Death of Socrates

No Evil Can Befall a Good Man Either Here or Hereafter:

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the Death of Socrates.

The trial and the execution of Socrates continue to pose a problem for Socrates did nothing to oppose the trial and made no attempt to escape from the consequences of the trail and finally executed himself by drinking the poison holding the cup in his own hands.

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the Death of Socrates

Ms. Emily Wilson is the author of the book The Death of Socrates (Harvard, 247 pages, $ 19.95) and it was reviewed by Thomas Meaney and the article with the title The Afterlife of a Skeptic appeared in The Wall Street Journal in its edition of Saturday/Sunday, November 24-25, 2007.

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the Death of Socrates

The book, the Death of Socrates deals with as to how the execution of a philosopher has been reinterpreted for every era. The history of the interpretation of Socrates’ death speaks about the history of philosophy in the West.

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the Death of Socrates

Mr. Meaney begins his book review with the observation that the name of Socrates recalls his death more than his bewilderingly eccentric life.

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the Death of Socrates

Socrates, ancient Athenian philosopher, is best remembered for his admonition to ” KNOW THY SELF “. He laid the philosophical foundations of Western Culture. He made an effort to shore up the ethical dimension of life. He directed philosophical thought toward analyses of the character and conduct of human life.

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the Death of Socrates

As Cicero said, Socrates “brought down philosophy from heaven to earth” – i.e. from the nature speculation of the Ionian and Italian cosmologists to analyses of the character and conduct of human life, which he assessed in terms of an original theory of the soul. Socrates turned philosophy away from a study of the way things are toward a consideration of virtue and the health of the human soul. He was a man of deep piety with the temperament of a mystic. He believed in the soul’s immortality and had claimed that the soul of man partakes of the Divine. Socrates held himself to be an envoy from God. He believed himself charged with a mission from God to make his fellowmen aware of their ignorance and of the supreme importance of knowledge of what is for the soul’s good.

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the Death of Socrates

Socrates redirected philosophy from cosmology to the formulation of a rule of life, to the “practical use of reason”. The specific message from God that Socrates brought to his fellowmen was that of the “care” or “tending” of one’s ” soul, to make one’s soul as good as possible”- “making it like God”, infact – and not to ruin one’s life, as most men do, by putting care for the body or for “possessions” before care for the “soul”; for the “soul” is that which is most truly a man’s self. According to Socrates the soul is the man. He believed that to do wrong is to damage one’s soul. From this it follows that it is always worse to do wrong than to be wronged and that one must never return wrong for wrong. He had also maintained that virtue is knowledge and that all the virtues really amount to knowledge. His self-control and powers of endurance were exemplary. His self-imposed life of hardships and austerity was the price of his spiritual independence.

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the Death of Socrates

Socrates believed that he can teach merely by asking the right questions. He spent his life in conversation with Athenian citizens, seeking true knowledge and exposing the errors of those who claimed to have wisdom. Socrates would challenge anyone with a pretense to knowledge. Socrates had ushered in an age of rational inquiry. According to Socrates, the radical vice of ancient democracy is that of putting society in the hands of men without true insight and with no adequate expert knowledge (and in this regard, Socrates is absolutely correct and even today that is the biggest danger of Democracy!). He had expected that statesmen should act like “physicians of the body politic” and that they should promote ” righteousness and temperance”.

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the Death of Socrates

Socrates was indicted for “impiety”, “corruption of the young” and “neglect of the gods whom the city worships and the practice of religious novelties”. He had elevated virtue over the gods themselves, whose approval was so central to Athenian civil life. Socrates had claimed that he could prick the city into a higher state of self-awareness by disturbing its settled world view. In Plato’s account of the trial, ” The Apology “, Socrates defends himself not as a victim of censorship but as a benefactor of Athens. In an open- air Athenian court room in 399 B.C., the world’s first democracy sentenced one of the world’s first public intellectuals to death for disrespecting the city’s gods and leading its youth astray. His disciples were prepared to help him escape, but Socrates baffled them when he cheerfully swigged his lethal cup of hemlock after praising the city that wanted him gone. Socrates died for choosing the right to speak his conscience.

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the Death of Socrates

In the 18 th and 19 th centuries, Socrates was a hero aswellas a scourge for the best minds of their ages. Nietzsche saw Socrates as a deleterious species of cultural sickness. For him, Socrates marked the beginning of the regrettable triumph of ” naive rationalism “.Socrates’ death was a hostile act that, by championing a deadeningly abstract and unattainable notion of virtue, precluded living authentically in the world. Socrates is described as a radical skeptic. Ms. Wilson in her book concludes her interpretation of Socrates’ death with a curiously banal argument. She charges that Socrates wasn’t a good family man.

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the Death of Socrates

In the closing words of his speech to the jury, Socrates says : ” when my sons grow up, punish them, and pain them in the very same way I pained you, if they seem to you to care about money or anything else before virtue. And if they are reputed to be something when they are nothing, reproach them just as I did you, tell them that they do not care for the things they should, and that they suppose they are something when they are worth nothing “. The man who had been condemned to death for corrupting the sons of the city ends his life by instructing his executioners about how to treat his own children.He goes to his death with his faith in his own reason. After 2,400 years, it is still a resounding epitaph.

I would not describe Socrates as a Skeptic and I would never describe his way of life as Eccentric.

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the death of Socrates. In the Indian tradition, in the epic story of Samudra Manthan or Churning of the Ocean, Lord Shiva is glorified for protecting the humanity from utter destruction by holding a deadly poison in His throat. To a similar extent, Socrates voluntarily consumed poison to save humanity from the poison called Ignorance.

Lord Shiva is like Socrates of 5 Th century B.C. who is claimed to be the father of western thought who implores people to “know thy self.” Socrates states that the unexamined life is not worth living. Shiva guides me to reflect upon life. Shiva encourages introspection, reflecting upon your own mind and thoughts. Shiva is recognized as the God of learning. To commence learning, we respectfully tell Shiva that we are ready and prepared to receive our learning instructions. Shiva ensures that we are willing and obedient before we start the first day of our schooling career. Shiva defines that the purpose of learning is to acquire the ability to think for oneself.  

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the Death of Socrates

I would compare Socrates to Shiva on one hand and on the other, I would compare him to Gautama Buddha who describes desire as the root cause of human suffering and misery . If Jesus Christ, who had written nothing, spent His time talking to people, when put on trial did not defend Himself and made no attempt to protect His personal life and did not return to His earthly parents’ home, could be called The Savior of Mankind, I would most certainly uphold Socrates’ claim that he is a Benefactor of humanity.

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the death of Socrates
The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the Death of Socrates

No Evil Can Befall a Good Man Either Here or Hereafter:

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the Death of Socrates.

The trial and the execution of Socrates continue to pose a problem for Socrates did nothing to oppose the trial and made no attempt to escape from the consequences of the trail and finally executed himself by drinking the poison holding the cup in his own hands.

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the Death of Socrates

Ms. Emily Wilson is the author of the book The Death of Socrates (Harvard, 247 pages, $ 19.95) and it was reviewed by Thomas Meaney and the article with the title The Afterlife of a Skeptic appeared in The Wall Street Journal in its edition of Saturday/Sunday, November 24-25, 2007.

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the Death of Socrates

The book, the Death of Socrates deals with as to how the execution of a philosopher has been reinterpreted for every era. The history of the interpretation of Socrates’ death speaks about the history of philosophy in the West.

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the Death of Socrates

Mr. Meaney begins his book review with the observation that the name of Socrates recalls his death more than his bewilderingly eccentric life.

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the Death of Socrates

Socrates, ancient Athenian philosopher, is best remembered for his admonition to ” KNOW THY SELF “. He laid the philosophical foundations of Western Culture. He made an effort to shore up the ethical dimension of life. He directed philosophical thought toward analyses of the character and conduct of human life.

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the Death of Socrates

As Cicero said, Socrates “brought down philosophy from heaven to earth” – i.e. from the nature speculation of the Ionian and Italian cosmologists to analyses of the character and conduct of human life, which he assessed in terms of an original theory of the soul. Socrates turned philosophy away from a study of the way things are toward a consideration of virtue and the health of the human soul. He was a man of deep piety with the temperament of a mystic. He believed in the soul’s immortality and had claimed that the soul of man partakes of the Divine. Socrates held himself to be an envoy from God. He believed himself charged with a mission from God to make his fellowmen aware of their ignorance and of the supreme importance of knowledge of what is for the soul’s good.

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the Death of Socrates

Socrates redirected philosophy from cosmology to the formulation of a rule of life, to the “practical use of reason”. The specific message from God that Socrates brought to his fellowmen was that of the “care” or “tending” of one’s ” soul, to make one’s soul as good as possible”- “making it like God”, infact – and not to ruin one’s life, as most men do, by putting care for the body or for “possessions” before care for the “soul”; for the “soul” is that which is most truly a man’s self. According to Socrates the soul is the man. He believed that to do wrong is to damage one’s soul. From this it follows that it is always worse to do wrong than to be wronged and that one must never return wrong for wrong. He had also maintained that virtue is knowledge and that all the virtues really amount to knowledge. His self-control and powers of endurance were exemplary. His self-imposed life of hardships and austerity was the price of his spiritual independence.

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the Death of Socrates

Socrates believed that he can teach merely by asking the right questions. He spent his life in conversation with Athenian citizens, seeking true knowledge and exposing the errors of those who claimed to have wisdom. Socrates would challenge anyone with a pretense to knowledge. Socrates had ushered in an age of rational inquiry. According to Socrates, the radical vice of ancient democracy is that of putting society in the hands of men without true insight and with no adequate expert knowledge (and in this regard, Socrates is absolutely correct and even today that is the biggest danger of Democracy!). He had expected that statesmen should act like “physicians of the body politic” and that they should promote ” righteousness and temperance”.

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the Death of Socrates

Socrates was indicted for “impiety”, “corruption of the young” and “neglect of the gods whom the city worships and the practice of religious novelties”. He had elevated virtue over the gods themselves, whose approval was so central to Athenian civil life. Socrates had claimed that he could prick the city into a higher state of self-awareness by disturbing its settled world view. In Plato’s account of the trial, ” The Apology “, Socrates defends himself not as a victim of censorship but as a benefactor of Athens. In an open- air Athenian court room in 399 B.C., the world’s first democracy sentenced one of the world’s first public intellectuals to death for disrespecting the city’s gods and leading its youth astray. His disciples were prepared to help him escape, but Socrates baffled them when he cheerfully swigged his lethal cup of hemlock after praising the city that wanted him gone. Socrates died for choosing the right to speak his conscience.

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the Death of Socrates

In the 18 th and 19 th centuries, Socrates was a hero aswellas a scourge for the best minds of their ages. Nietzsche saw Socrates as a deleterious species of cultural sickness. For him, Socrates marked the beginning of the regrettable triumph of ” naive rationalism “.Socrates’ death was a hostile act that, by championing a deadeningly abstract and unattainable notion of virtue, precluded living authentically in the world. Socrates is described as a radical skeptic. Ms. Wilson in her book concludes her interpretation of Socrates’ death with a curiously banal argument. She charges that Socrates wasn’t a good family man.

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the Death of Socrates

In the closing words of his speech to the jury, Socrates says : ” when my sons grow up, punish them, and pain them in the very same way I pained you, if they seem to you to care about money or anything else before virtue. And if they are reputed to be something when they are nothing, reproach them just as I did you, tell them that they do not care for the things they should, and that they suppose they are something when they are worth nothing “. The man who had been condemned to death for corrupting the sons of the city ends his life by instructing his executioners about how to treat his own children.He goes to his death with his faith in his own reason. After 2,400 years, it is still a resounding epitaph.

I would not describe Socrates as a Skeptic and I would never describe his way of life as Eccentric.

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the death of Socrates. In the Indian tradition, in the epic story of Samudra Manthan or Churning of the Ocean, Lord Shiva is glorified for protecting the humanity from utter destruction by holding a deadly poison in His throat. To a similar extent, Socrates voluntarily consumed poison to save humanity from the poison called Ignorance.

Lord Shiva is like Socrates of 5 Th century B.C. who is claimed to be the father of western thought who implores people to “know thy self.” Socrates states that the unexamined life is not worth living. Shiva guides me to reflect upon life. Shiva encourages introspection, reflecting upon your own mind and thoughts. Shiva is recognized as the God of learning. To commence learning, we respectfully tell Shiva that we are ready and prepared to receive our learning instructions. Shiva ensures that we are willing and obedient before we start the first day of our schooling career. Shiva defines that the purpose of learning is to acquire the ability to think for oneself.  

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the Death of Socrates

I would compare Socrates to Shiva on one hand and on the other, I would compare him to Gautama Buddha who describes desire as the root cause of human suffering and misery . If Jesus Christ, who had written nothing, spent His time talking to people, when put on trial did not defend Himself and made no attempt to protect His personal life and did not return to His earthly parents’ home, could be called The Savior of Mankind, I would most certainly uphold Socrates’ claim that he is a Benefactor of humanity.

The Rudi Connection at Whole Foods has much to learn from the death of Socrates

Published by WholeDude

Whole Man - Whole Theory: I intentionally combined the words Whole and Dude to describe the Unity of Body, Mind, and Soul to establish the singularity called Man.

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