Like many Greeks, Socrates believed in the afterlife, that is, that our individual consciousness will survive death, invisibly entering a realm outside of this world for a time before cycling back into a new human body. That must have been a great comfort to him while he was under sentence of death. I think he saw himself as a servant of the gods (my text says "God," but as his people were polytheist, I think the translator took liberties). He expected a reward of some kind or at least a better life after death, poor fellow. The belief has abiding appeal. There are many still today that do what they do because they think their reward will be great in Paradise. And it can be argued that in some cases this seems to be a beneficial illusion. That all illusions are harmful is a difficult argument with an uncertain outcome.
I can't say Socrates feels cheated now that he knows he was wrong, because he doesn't know anything, any more. He is ended. I don't accept the notion that individual consciousness survives death. I don't feel individual consciousness is all that special or deserving of preservation; it's just a complicated, beautiful machine, wondrous in its powers but temporal, fading and dying like a flower never to be seen again in this world. Beautiful things are created anew and destroyed all the time, everywhere. There is really no need in the scheme of things for human beings to be immortal. Reaching the top of the food chain has led to hubris among our people.
Socrates went around questioning people and tripping them up in logical arguments. He seems to have been a show-off and had no shortage of enemies. I don't find his arguments very persuasive, although he does raise good points. In the ancient world, I'm sure his arguments seemed strong, because there wasn't modern science or modern education around to refute them. He probably was a good speaker and a natural extrovert, to get so many followers. Although he disclaimed a desire for power or influence, I think his strongest desire was to appear wise and witty before these young men and to keep them interested. I think pride and his desire for attention and flattery were his downfall. He made political and social mistakes, apparently, because his enemies succeeded in persuading the citizens of Athens to condemn him to death. The sentence was surely unjust, which makes Socrates a martyr for freedom, specifically freedom of inquiry and perhaps freedom of speech.
The thought of science prolonging human life forever is not necessarily a comforting idea. The first people to consume the pills that grant immortality will probably be the worst people. They will seize the technology for their own and want a monopoly upon it, just as people seek sole possession of other treasures and powers.
Blog Archive
-
▼
2013
(330)
-
▼
August
(78)
- Driver's Ed
- Order of Optical Operations (Please Excuse My Dear...
- Instructions
- I Stood Corrected
- Can Humans Handle Marijuana? Let's Hope So!
- Family Game Night Strategy
- Buyback Blues
- Syria
- Sometimes It Sucks to be in Rome
- When in Rome, You Run Over the Geese
- The CAPTCHA Insanity
- Car Stuff: Random Sighting #3
- After You Finish Infinite Jest, You Should Read Ch...
- Twenty Pounds
- This Week in Awesome (8/24/13)
- Ah, rekonq!
- A Sentence Wherein I Give Chase to a Small Pod of ...
- Socrates and the Afterlife
- An Educated Guess as to What I See in My Near Future
- A Question For Your Consideration
- Retro Video Unit (8/23/13)
- Breaking Up Is Hard to Do
- I Correct One of My Shortcomings
- Here's For Bradley Manning
- Back to the Shack
- Mission Accomplished! (Sort of . . .)
- Summer To-Do Review
- Helpful
- A Word to the Wise about Mamoun's Falafel
- Car Stuff: Family History
- Socrates
- An Ode to My Favorite (Politically Incorrect) T-Shirt
- This Week in Awesome (8/17/13)
- Summer of Podcasts
- FGM
- I'm Having Trouble With Step Two
- Closet Annex
- The Manning Trial
- A Deceptive List
- Stars & Barfs
- Old School . . . Blech
- Let's Hear it For Figuring Things Out
- Dog Days
- Coaching! What is it Good For?
- Great Show, But . . .
- Car Stuff: Random Sighting #2
- This One Wasn't as Popular
- Let It Be
- Mr. Selfridge is a Unicorn
- This Week in Awesome (8/10/13)
- This Time I Am Determined to Finish!
- Did You Know?
- Retro Video Unit (8/9/13)
- Silly Monkey
- The Folly of Volunteering
- Some Things SOUND Fun (But They Are Not)
- U.S. Health Care--Doctors Don't Care
- Bezos Takeover of the Washington Post
- Outer Banks Fishing Trip Irony
- Sale Still in Progress
- You Can Say That on Cable
- Dante's Cove and The Lair
- Not Quite a Sniglet
- Patrick O'Brian Not Good with Gays
- Outer Banks Fishing Trip XX
- Car Stuff: Random Sighting #1
- Lies, damned lies, statistics, and statistics that...
- This Week in Awesome (8/3/13)
- Eat at Home
- Every Man Has His Limits
- Reform the Olympics
- I am the Victim of Ironic Netflix Adultery
- Homage to Ibuprofen
- Religion, Liberalism and Progress
- BART Strike?
- The Exception That Proves the Rule
- Fan Fail
- I May Be Running Out of Thoughts
-
▼
August
(78)
Popular Posts
-
I’m really happy with the way CBS is handling The Good Wife . With maybe the exception of Friday Night Lights , I think it’s the best networ...
-
For over a year, Jessica Chastain kept her role in Zero Dark Thirty a secret. Chastain plays Maya, a CIA operative who spends years of her ...
-
In recent years, premium cable channel Showtime has provided meatier roles for women than either Hollywood studios or network television off...
-
A couple years ago, the question which plagued the television landscape was: Can women be funny? Now a more relevant question would be: Wher...
-
Vera Farmiga is one of those actresses that sneaks up on you. She was Oscar-nominated for her role in Up in the Air opposite George Clo...
-
With all of the summer tent pole movies premiering, there's been outcry from audiences (and critics) for the studios to make superhero m...
-
Canonical's decision to embrace Mir and abandon X and Wayland has consequences for Ubuntu derivatives such as Kubuntu, Xubuntu, and Linu...
-
I've been trying to be more aware of potential photo opportunities as I go about my mundane business. It has led to some interesting sho...
-
Can you stand a few more words about shoes? Because I have them. Words. And shoes, duh. I've been lamenting this week's return to su...
-
(In case you're wondering, there was no TWiA this weekend due to a lack of suitable material.) The parking lot of our local Ocean State ...