My Fellow Cynics
It's amazing how ideas rise and fall, and how certain concepts resound across time whenever power and concentrations of wealth take hold.
Which is how I discovered Cynicism. Be warned, this delves into philosophy, a topic greatly reviled and treated as a matter only for the lazy and those that avoid work.
So, there's been a lot of propaganda over the years from the Romans who effectively have made the word Cynic into a curse. Course, they also kept the curse and hatred alive well into the conversion from Empire into religion, and the idea of the cynic as a fool who will not believe in the goodness of Humanity is repeated again and again.
I discovered this incredibly great Greek Word that Cynics revered though. It's a word that there's no real translation for in english, but it just sounds beautiful. Eudaimonia
First off, a few notes about the word itself. It's a feminine word. As such, the very nature of it would have absolutely riled many in the patriarchal systems. If you don't believe in that, of course, just feel free to walk up to a Catholic Priest and talk about how much you love Goddess.
The best translation that I can find for the word is "Human Flourishing". It's a concept that shouldn't require much thought, but at the same time is rather revolutionary. With all of the desires for power, wealth and control over life that is rife in modern society, where is the growth of the human?
And thus, Cynicism makes sense to me. Of course, I realized that I'd been naturally living a cynical life for quite some time. I certainly never intend to become the Ideal Cynic, living in a barrel and providing a spectacle for the rich... for such a thing completely abandons the point of being a cynic in the first place.
Life of Poverty? Already there, baby.
Loathe arrogance? Yo!
Looking to be good at things you enjoy, love your fellow man, and think that since nobody's gonna help you you might as well help yourself? Wait, aren't we already doing this?
Write satire calling the current morals and behaviors into sharp relief? OOOOK, this is just getting scary now.
Believe in the importance of training the body as well as the mind? Aaaand with my recent desires to do Judo and actually discuss life again... I've completed the checklist apparently.
It's an honorable thing to be a Cynic, descended as it is from the philosophy of Socrates. Perhaps it's time we stop thinking about Philosophy as a subject in a university taught by the dead, but a mental art which requires mental hard work to master. After all, it's harder to keep a prisoner who has multiple methods of escape available.
Comments
Ah yes, Diogenes, the Savage Dog.
Diogenes is one of my favorite characters. Nothing of his writings survive and most of what I know of him comes from reading Laertius, the other Diogenes. The Savage Dog had a remarkable attitude. He was the original smart-ass. I have always admired him.
We wanted decent healthcare, a living wage and free college.
The Democrats gave us Biden and war instead.
Haven't read Lives, but I probably should.
I find it interesting that many of the slurs against cynics were actually accusations of things that the cynics loathed. (Reminds me of many criticisms of athiests these days, to be honest.)
The idea that a cynic had no self control and just thought that nothing was worth believing in would have been roundly laughed at had it not been repeated ad nauseum. Hell, belief has nothing to do with it, IMHO. It's just a system of living that brings joy and happiness.
It's simple, but requires hard work. (That keeps coming up in my philosophical thoughts. The idea of hard work (Any kind, physical or mental) as something to be enjoyed and a progress towards a goal. )
I do not pretend I know what I do not know.
So, I find that I'm less a Diogenes than a Antisthenes
(Did a lot of reading last night. Lives is Fascinating)
I do not pretend I know what I do not know.
By an interesting coincidence
I was just watching a Youtube video titled "Why SJWs suck at writing superhero comics". The premise is that SJWs are self centered, angry people who have no understanding of altruism, self sacrifice - heroism.
I don't see it that way. I see the social justice virus as an outgrowth of the Thatcher/Reagan era. Sometime around 1980 every institution became totally corrupt and/or worthless. Since then we have all been completely on our own. "Heroism"? That's an anacronism for losers. I see SJWs not as angry zelots, but as bitter and broken, and I saw how they became that way.
On to Biden since 1973
Quite possibly.
And I know this is from a Cartoon, but this speech on heroism is simple and honest. Which as a cynic I appreciate.
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rZqXMeQ3Usc]
I do not pretend I know what I do not know.
"SJW" is becoming a general perjorative
Much like "politically correct". Obscure the meaning and you dilute the power.
I tend to agree with the criticism of SJWs in pop culture right now, but it is overgeneralized. Similarly, "progressive" started out as a term to distinguish legitimit... uh, progressivism... from the fact that "liberalism" had become hopelessly corrupt. Now conservatives are using the two words interchangibly. This destroys the point.
On to Biden since 1973
Democrats do it all the time.
It's an equivocation on the word "progressive". Most Democrats call themselves progressives but they mean progressive₁ = practices identity politics as opposed to progressive₂ = MfA, free college and $15 bucks an hour.
We wanted decent healthcare, a living wage and free college.
The Democrats gave us Biden and war instead.
Kudos
Recently came across that word "Eudaimonia" when I came across it in a post on Medium.
https://eand.co/how-economics-failed-the-economy-9f464e0eed9d
"You can't just leave those who created the problem in charge of the solution."---Tyree Scott
Thanks for the link.
Course, I'm of the school of thought that thinks that any philosophy class that doesn't include either booze, pot or exercise isn't taking a huge portion of the human experience into account, and therefore is probably bullshit.
I do not pretend I know what I do not know.