• @[email protected]
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    1885 months ago

    According to legend, Alexander the Great came to visit the philosopher Diogenes of Sinope. Alexander wanted to fulfill a wish for Diogenes and asked him what he desired. As told by Diogenes Laërtius, Diogenes replied, “Stand out of my light.”

    One day while he was eating a frugal dish of lentils, he was challenged by the philosopher Aristippus, who, for his part, led a golden life as he was one of the king’s courtiers. Aristippus scornfully told him: “See, if you learned to crawl before the king, you wouldn’t have to settle for rubbish like this vulgar dish of lentils!” Diogenes replied: “If you’d learned to make do with lentils, you wouldn’t have to crawl before the king!”

    Big dick energy. Love this guy.

        • @[email protected]
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          435 months ago

          That also serves as a response to his blabbering.

          “Aren’t you ashamed that you should have worse intentions for yourself than nature had?”

          “My dude, you literally live in a barrel. And cover yourself already.”

      • @[email protected]
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        245 months ago

        He should be ashamed to think nature doesn’t make mistakes. Although, and not to “it was a different time” this, he probably didn’t know about cancer and had some other excuse for birth defects.

        • oce 🐆
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          5 months ago

          You can’t fully extract yourself from your cultural environment, exceptional philosophers like him already managed to do that a lot more than commoners but he missed other things, it’s to be expected. Reminds me of the people who wrote the first Men’s Rights Rights of Man and of the Citizen during the French revolution which was incredible progress and yet they voluntarily ignored women, despite women fighting to be mentioned (like her https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olympe_de_Gouges).

          • @[email protected]
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            45 months ago

            Just a heads up: you put the closing parenthesis and period inside the hyperlink you posted.

            Nbd, and good comment, just letting you know.

            • oce 🐆
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              15 months ago

              UI dependant bug I guess because it looks normal on the default web interface.

        • @[email protected]
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          55 months ago

          He should be ashamed of even believing nature had any sort of will or intentionality. Nature doesn’t care about what Diogenes, or any human for that matter, has to say about nature.

      • @[email protected]
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        135 months ago

        Wow, my opinion of this intentionally abrasive and combative, potentially mentally ill homeless man who was well known for public urination, defecation, and masturbation, and who lived in a society 2400 years divorced from my own, whose understanding of gender and sex that was, as is the case for literally all of us, a product of his environment and upbringing, has never been lower.

        • MacN'Cheezus
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          35 months ago

          Did you actually read those articles? The latter was a biographer of the former (among others – he wrote about pretty much all of the famous Greek philosophers).

          • @[email protected]
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            5 months ago

            Yes, I did read it. I’m going to need a source that says that was written by Diogenes Laertius quoting sometime else, not a quote of him, and he was quoting Diogenes of Sinope and not one of the other “pretty much all of the famous Greek philosophers”.

            Maybe you should brush up on basic logic with Aristotle.

            • MacN'Cheezus
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              5 months ago

              Well lucky for us, the book is so old that it’s long out of copyright, and additionally, the screenshot includes a precise location within that book (6.65, likely referring to Book 6, paragraph 65).

              Here’s the book:

              https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Lives_of_the_Eminent_Philosophers/Book_VI#Diogenes

              Please verify for yourself that paragraph 65 does indeed relay the same story as presented above, so that we can all be safe in the assumption that “he” in that paragraph does indeed refer to Diogenes of Sinope, not Diogenes Laertius.

          • @[email protected]
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            15 months ago

            This comment should be automatically linked to anyone on this platform saying the average Lemmy poster is smarter or less sheepish in their behavior than the average reddit poster. People are legit downvoting you for being right and having sources to back up your argument.

            • MacN'Cheezus
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              15 months ago

              People are the same everywhere you go. Everyone thinks they’re smarter, kinder, and better educated than “those guys over there”. Lemmy is no exception.

      • @[email protected]
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        25 months ago

        I saw the meme as more this specific lesson (above) that he was on about.

        I don’t know any single person I’m willing to listen to completely. People are flawed, ignorant, and often stupid.

      • @MrZweihander
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        165 months ago

        Diogenes: “I feel the same way, bro. I would want to be me too.”

    • @[email protected]
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      55 months ago

      Usually it’s translated as “step/stand out of my sun” (just in case someone is wondering which light is meant)

  • FlashMobOfOne
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    815 months ago

    Diogenes was, by all accounts, a gross-ass motherfucker.

    …but I like his revolutionary spirit.

    • @[email protected]
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      565 months ago

      He was a raving homeless man who frequently masturbated in public and antagonized anyone who would approach him. However, beyond all that he was one of the smartest people in the ancient world and lived life never comporimising his principles.

        • @[email protected]
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          25 months ago

          Little Footnote for the unawares, Nietzsche was NOT a nazi philosopher, a close relative of his converted his writings to nazi ideology and claimed it was him.

          He was actually pretty religious, though, when he wrote “God is Dead” he was actually writing a warning to athiests and unaligned that a world without a central pillar of morality was coming. Ironically, uneducated religious people have been misconstruing his message ever since thinking it was an argument against them instead of for them, lmfao.

      • @[email protected]
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        125 months ago

        Well I think Karl Marx agrees on some way. But when you are BFFs with Engels and enjoy Fox Hunts as a pass time, are you eating the rich or just saying everyone should eat like the rich?

      • @[email protected]
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        5 months ago

        One that I really enjoyed during my pretentious phase was the father of modern philosophy himself, Immanuel Kant. He wrote a lot about ethics and aesthetics but the crux of his work boils down to the idea that space and time are just “forms of intuition” that structure our experience and are just appearances we can comprehend. The true nature of things as they are in themselves is unknowable to us.

        As someone who has always considered themselves very rational and more of an agnostic than an atheist, his ideas really clicked with me.

  • @[email protected]
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    215 months ago

    Yeah… something about the anecdotes told about Diogenes sounds off to me - you don’t see homeless people today live the charmed life they say Diogenes got to live.

    • @MrZweihander
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      5 months ago

      It’s not implausible. Being a famous wit and wacky character can get someone a lot of latitude. I’m reminded of the Emporer of the United States, a locally famous weirdo who lived in San Francisco way back. Among his other notable hijinks, he was unemployed, yet never went hungry because he printed his own alternate currency (which he insisted was the only valid currency). Many of the local shops and restaurants just accepted it like official money even though it was worthless to anyone else, because everyone enjoyed his antics so much.

  • @[email protected]
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    5 months ago

    I always say, eating the rich would be disgusting. My proposition is to ground them up and use them as fertiliser. Preferably we grind them alive.

    • 100_kg_90_de_belin
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      325 months ago

      At least he was also captured and sold as a slave. Moreover, Dio Chrysostom chose him as his anti-slavery champion in Diogenes or On Servants.

      Diogenes argues that it is better not to have slaves at all, observing that:

      … nature has made each man a body that is sufficient for looking after himself. — Dio, Oration 10.10

      • @[email protected]
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        5 months ago

        Also slavery was typically nowhere near as a different sort of brutal in that era. Still brutal and terrible, but not “working people to death and then shipping in more people to work to death” brutal.

        Edit: changed my wording because slavery has always been fucking horrible, e.g. eunuchs

        • @[email protected]
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          45 months ago

          Yeah, you got Sundays off and could keep property. Still not a good practice and I don’t agree that society wouldn’t have been able to function without it (maybe mining)

          • @[email protected]
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            25 months ago

            It’s not about if it would’ve been possible, it’s whether people could imagine that it’d be possible.

  • I Cast Fist
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    115 months ago

    There’s also that another apocrypha of him and Plato. Plato once sarcastically claimed that men were “featherless bipeds”. Diogenes later showed up with a chicken, whose feathers had been plucked, “Here is Plato’s man!”

  • Gormadt
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    85 months ago

    Eat them with all that well deserved spit on their faces?

    Not to kink shame but that’s pretty unsanitary.