Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Henry Ford Changes the World, 1908

Henry Ford Changes the World, 1908
At the beginning of the 20th century the automobile was a plaything for the rich. Most models were complicated machines that required a chauffer conversant with its individual mechanical nuances to drive it. Henry Ford was determined to build a simple, reliable and affordable car; a car the average American worker could afford. Out of this determination came the Model T and the assembly line - two innovations that revolutionized American society and molded the world we live in today. Henry Ford did not invent the car; he produced an automobile that was within the economic reach of the average American. While other manufacturers were content to target a market of the well-to-do, Ford developed a design and a method of manufacture that

Henry Ford and his first car
the Quadricycle, which he
built in 1896
steadily reduced the cost of the Model T. Instead of pocketing the profits; Ford lowered the price of his car. As a result, Ford Motors sold more cars and steadily increased its earnings - transforming the automobile from a luxury toy to a mainstay of American society. The Model T made its debut in 1908 with a purchase price of $825.00. Over ten thousand were sold in its first year, establishing a new record. Four years later the price dropped to $575.00 and sales soared. By 1914, Ford could claim a 48% share of the automobile market.
Central to Ford's ability to produce an affordable car was the development of the assembly line that increased the efficiency of manufacture and decreased its cost. Ford did not conceive the concept, he perfected it. Prior to the introduction of the assembly line, cars were individually crafted by teams of skilled workmen - a slow and expensive procedure. The assembly line reversed the process of automobile manufacture. Instead of workers going to the car, the car came to the worker who performed the same task of assembly over and over again. With the introduction and perfection of the process, Ford was able to reduce the assembly time of a Model T from twelve and a half hours to less than six hours.
Developing the Model T
The Ford Motor Company manufactured its first car - the Model A - in 1903. By 1906, the Model N was in production but Ford had not yet achieved his goal of producing a simple, affordable car. He would accomplish this with the Model T. Charles Sorensen - who had joined Henry Ford two years earlier - describes how Ford had him set up a secret room where design of the new car would be carried out:


"Early one morning in the winter of 1906-7, Henry Ford dropped in at the pattern department of the Piquette Avenue plant to see me. 'Come with me, Charlie,' he said, 'I want to show you something.' I followed him to the third floor and its north end, which was not fully occupied for assembly work. He looked about and said, 'Charlie, I'd like to have a room finished off right here in this space. Put up a wall with a door in big enough to run a car in and out. Get a good lock for the door, and when you're ready, we'll have Joe Galamb come up in here. We're going to start a completely new job.'
The room he had in mind became the maternity ward for Model T.
It took only a few days to block off the little room on the third floor back of the Piquette Avenue plant and to set up a few simple power tools and Joe Galamb's two blackboards. The blackboards were a good idea. They gave a king-sized drawing which, when all initial refinements had been made, could be photographed for two purposes: as a protection against patent suits attempting to prove prior claim to originality and as a substitute for blueprints. A little more than a year later Model T, the product of that cluttered little room, was announced to the world. But another half year passed before the first Model T was ready for what had already become a clamorous market...
The summer before, Mr. Ford told me to block off the experimental room for Joe Galamb, a momentous event occurred which would affect the entire automotive industry. The first heat of vanadium steel in the country was poured at the United Steel Company's plant in Canton, Ohio.
Early that year we had several visits from J. Kent Smith, a noted English metallurgist from a country which had been in the forefront of steel development...


The 1908 Model T. Two forward
gears, a 20 horsepower engine
and no driver doors.
They sold like hot cakes
Ford, Wills, and I listened to him and examined his data. We had already read about this English vanadium steel. It had a tensile strength nearly three times that of steels we were using, but we'd never seen it. Smith demonstrated its toughness and showed that despite its strength it could be machined more easily than plain steel. Immediately Mr. Ford sensed the great possibilities of this shock-resisting steel. 'Charlie,' he said to me after Smith left, 'this means entirely new design requirements, and we can get a better, lighter, and cheaper car as a result of it.' It was the great common sense that Mr. Ford could apply to new ideas and his ability to simplify seemingly complicated problems that made him the pioneer he was. This demonstration of vanadium steel was the deciding point for him to begin the experimental work that resulted in Model T...
Actually it took four years and more to develop Model T. Previous models were the guinea pigs, one might say, for experimentation and development of a car which would realize Henry Ford's dream of a car which anyone could afford to buy, which anyone could drive anywhere, and which almost anyone could keep in repair. Many of the world's greatest mechanical discoveries were accidents in the course of other experimentation. Not so Model T, which ushered in the motor transport age and set off a chain reaction of machine production now known as automation. All our experimentation at Ford in the early days was toward a fixed and, then wildly fantastic goal.
By March, 1908, we were ready to announce Model T, but not to produce it, On October 1 of that year the first car was introduced to the public. From Joe Galamb's little room on the third floor had come a revolutionary vehicle. In the next eighteen years, out of Piquette Avenue, Highland Park, River Rouge, and from assembly plants all over the United States came 15,000,000 more."
Birth of the Assembly Line
A few months later- in July 1908 - Sorensen and a plant foreman spent their days off developing the basics of the Assembly Line:
"What was worked out at Ford was the practice of moving the work from one worker to another until it became a complete unit, then arranging the flow of these units at the right time and the right place to a moving final assembly line from which came a finished product. Regardless of earlier uses of some of these principles, the direct line of succession of mass production and its intensification into automation stems directly from what we worked out at Ford Motor Company between 1908 and 1913... As may be imagined, the job of putting the car together was a simpler one than handling the materials that had to be brought to

The old fashioned way - limousines are
assembled at individual stations
by a Pittsburg manufacturer, 1912
it. Charlie Lewis, the youngest and most aggressive of our assembly foremen, and I tackled this problem. We gradually worked it out by bringing up only what we termed the fast-moving materials. The main bulky parts, like engines and axles, needed a lot of room. To give them that space, we left the smaller, more compact, light-handling material in a storage building on the northwest comer of the grounds. Then we arranged with the stock department to bring up at regular hours such divisions of material as we had marked out and packaged.

This simplification of handling cleaned things up materially. But at best, I did not like it. It was then that the idea occurred to me that assembly would be easier, simpler, and faster if we moved the chassis along, beginning at one end of the plant with a frame and adding the axles and the wheels; then moving it past the stockroom, instead of moving the stockroom to the chassis. I had Lewis arrange the materials on the floor so that what was needed at the start of assembly would be at that end of the building and the other parts would be along the line as we moved the chassis along. We spent every Sunday during July planning this. Then one Sunday morning, after the stock was laid out in this fashion, Lewis and I and a couple of helpers put together the first car, I'm sure, that was ever built on a moving line.
We did this simply by putting the frame on skids, hitching a towrope to the front end and pulling the frame along until axles and wheels were put on. Then we rolled the chassis along in notches to prove what could be done. While demonstrating this moving line, we worked on some of the subassemblies, such as completing a radiator with all its hose fittings so that we could place it very quickly on the chassis. We also did this with the dash and mounted the steering gear and the spark coil."
Implementation
The basics of the Assembly Line had been established but it would take another five years for the concept to be implemented. Implementation would await construction of the new Highland Park plant which was purpose-built to incorporate the assembly line. The process began at the top floor of the four-story building where the engine was assembled and progressed level by level to the ground floor where the body was attached to the chassis.


End of the Line. The Model T's body is joined
to its chassis at the Highland Park plant
"By August, 1913, all links in the chain of moving assembly lines were complete except the last and most spectacular one - the one we had first experimented with one Sunday morning just five years before. Again a towrope was hitched to a chassis, this time pulled by a capstan. Each part was attached to the moving chassis in order, from axles at the beginning to bodies at the end of the line. Some parts took longer to attach than others; so, to keep an even pull on the towrope, there must be differently spaced intervals between delivery of the parts along the line. This called for patient timing and rearrangement until the flow of parts and the speed and intervals along the assembly line meshed into a perfectly synchronized operation throughout all stages of production. Before the end of the year a power-driven assembly line was in operation, and New Year's saw three more installed. Ford mass production and a new era in industrial history had begun" References:
   Charles Sorensen's account can be found in: Sorensen, Charles, E., My Forty Years with Ford (1956); Banum, Russ, The Ford Century (2002); Brinkley, Douglas, Wheels for the world: Henry Ford, his company, and a century of progress, 1903-2003 (2003).

The Suicide of Socrates, 399 BC

The Suicide of Socrates, 399 BC
On a day in 399 BC the philosopher Socrates stood before a jury of 500 of his fellow Athenians accused of "refusing to recognize the gods recognized by the state" and of "corrupting the youth." If found guilty; his penalty could be death. The trial took place in the heart of the city, the jurors seated on wooden benches surrounded by a crowd of spectators. Socrates' accusers (three Athenian citizens) were allotted three hours to present their case, after which, the philosopher would have three hours to defend himself.

Socrates
Socrates was 70 years old and familiar to most Athenians. His anti-democratic views had turned many in the city against him. Two of his students, Alcibiades and Critias, had twice briefly overthrown the democratic government of the city, instituting a reign of terror in which thousands of citizens were deprived of their property and either banished from the city or executed. After hearing the arguments of both Socrates and his accusers, the jury was asked to vote on his guilt. Under Athenian law the jurors did not deliberate the point. Instead, each juror registered his judgment by placing a small disk into an urn marked either "guilty" or "not guilty." Socrates was found guilty by a vote of 280 to 220.
The jurors were next asked to determine Socrates' penalty. His accusers argued for the death penalty. Socrates was given the opportunity to suggest his own punishment and could probably have avoided death by recommending exile. Instead, the philosopher initially offered the sarcastic recommendation that he be rewarded for his actions. When pressed for a realistic punishment, he proposed that he be fined a modest sum of money. Faced with the two choices, the jury selected death for Socrates.
The philosopher was taken to the near-by jail where his sentence would be carried out. Athenian law prescribed death by drinking a cup of poison hemlock. Socrates would be his own executioner.
"What must I do?"
Plato was Socrates' most famous student. Although he was not present at his mentor's death, he did know those who were there. Plato describes the scene through the narrative voice of the fictional character Phaedo.


"When Crito heard, he signaled to the slave who was standing by. The boy went out, and returned after a few moments with the man who was to administer the poison which he brought ready mixed in a cup. When Socrates saw him, he said, 'Now, good sir, you understand these things. What must I do?' 'Just drink it and walk around until your legs begin to feel heavy, then lie down. It will soon act.' With that he offered Socrates the cup.
The latter took it quite cheerfully without a tremor, with no change of color or expression. He just gave the man his stolid look, and asked, 'How say you, is it permissible to pledge this drink to anyone? May I?'
The answer came, 'We allow reasonable time in which to drink it.'
'I understand', he said, 'we can and must pray to the gods that our sojourn on earth will continue happy beyond the grave. This is my prayer, and may it come to pass.' With these words, he stoically drank the potion, quite readily and cheerfully. Up till this moment most of us were able with some decency to hold back our tears, but when we saw him drinking the poison to the last drop, we could restrain ourselves no longer. In spite of myself, the tears came in floods, so that I covered my face and wept - not for him, but at my own misfortune at losing such a man as my friend. Crito, even before me, rose and went out when he could check his tears no longer.
Apollodorus was already steadily weeping, and by drying his eyes, crying again and sobbing, he affected everyone present except for Socrates himself.
He said, 'You are strange fellows; what is wrong with you? I sent the women away for this very purpose, to stop their creating such a scene. I have heard that one should die in silence. So please be quiet and keep control of yourselves.' These words made us ashamed, and we stopped crying.

   Jacques-Louis David, 1787
The Death of Socrates
Socrates walked around until he said that his legs were becoming heavy, when he lay on his back, as the attendant instructed. This fellow felt him, and then a moment later examined his feet and legs again. Squeezing a foot hard, he asked him if he felt anything. Socrates said that he did not. He did the same to his calves and, going higher, showed us that he was becoming cold and stiff. Then he felt him a last time and said that when the poison reached the heart he would be gone. As the chill sensation got to his waist, Socrates uncovered his head (he had put something over it) and said his last words: 'Crito, we owe a cock to Asclepius. Do pay it. Don't forget.'
'Of course', said Crito. 'Do you want to say anything else?'
'There was no reply to this question, but after a while he gave a slight stir, and the attendant uncovered him and examined his eyes. Then Crito saw that he was dead, he closed his mouth and eyelids.
This was the end of our friend, the best, wisest and most upright man of any that I have ever known"
References:
   Plato's description appears in: Tredennick, Hugh (translator)The last days of Socrates : Euthyphro, The apology, Crito, Phaedo / Plato (1959); Freeman, Charles, The Greek Achievement (1999); Stone, I.F., The Trial of Socrates (1988).
How To Cite This Article:
"The Suicide of Socrates, 399 BC," EyeWitness to History, www.eyewitnesstohistory.com (2003).

Monday, November 8, 2010

The Doctrine of Socrates: Concepts

The Doctrine of Socrates: Concepts

The traditional belief of the Greeks had been that their cities had received their laws from some divinity, protector of the city, and that good (happiness) consists in conforming one's life to these laws, accepted as divine and eternal. The Sophists shook this faith to its very roots.
As in the case of the problem of knowledge, by defending relativism they ended in Skepticism; so also in the question of morals, by the same subjectivist prejudice they end in utilitarianism and hedonism. Thus, that is good which satisfies one's instincts and passions. The belief in immutable principles upon which ethics may be founded is a prejudice and often an impediment which it is necessary to remove. The good, as experience shows, consists in securing for oneself the greatest possible quantity of possessions, without regard for the means used to attain them; for these goods can satisfy the instincts and the passions in which happiness consists. To strive to strengthen one's personality in order to surpass others in violence and in the contest or struggle for earthly goods -- this is the moral ideal of the Sophist.
The Sophists also violently attack the traditional belief about right -- that derivation from principles based on justice -- and they substitute the concept of force for that of justice. From the moment changed political conditions and the participation of the people in democratic power began to bring about the change of many laws, the Sophists profited from the situation not only to discredit positive and political right, but also natural right as well. They defended natural right, but by nature they did not mean the rational part of man, but his instincts and passions. Hence for them right is that which succeeds in imposing itself through force, or an imposition established by force and violence.
Men by nature are not equal; there are the strong and the weak, and the moment right consists in force it becomes the office of the strong to command and make laws; the weak must obey. The Sophist Thrasymachus, in the first book of Plato's Republic, maintains that natural law "is the right of the stronger." It is the strong man who, despising all laws advanced by the weak in the name of justice, imposes his will, which becomes right, as Callicles maintains in Plato's Gorgias.
Here we are at the same extremism that is indicative of the whole doctrine of the Sophists. Such extremism must have been pleasing to the youth of Athens in the time of Pericles. All young men were anxious to obtain offices which would assure them wealth and pleasure. Sophistic teaching, by battering all the orders of ethics and justice, opened up to men a way that made possible and justified the use of all deception and the most violent passions. Thus is explained the popular favor that surrounded certain Sophists, such as Protagoras, who was received with triumph and entertained as a guest in the homes of the most noted Athenians.
So also is explained the noble mission of Socrates who, to restore the values of a morality sacred and inviolable because based upon reason and not unruly passions, spent his entire existence, and not in vain.
II. General Notions
The Sophists had turned their attention to man, but they had stopped at sensitive impressions, at empirical data. They logically ended in Skepticism. Socrates moves on the same plane as the Sophists, i.e., the study of man, and raises the Delphic motto: "Know thyself" as the standard of his teaching. He does not stop at sensations, at opiniative knowledge; his investigation tended to scrutinize the more intimate part of man, that by which man is man, his reason. It is in this intimacy of reason that he discovers a knowledge which has the characteristics of universality and necessity: the concept. Behold the great Socratic discovery through which philosophy finds its road and later arrives at the greater systems which the human mind has been able to construct.
Socrates, like the Sophists, was not concerned with metaphysics, but excused himself by saying that nature is under the direction of gods. He concentrated all his attention on the search for moral concepts; he was convinced that the practice of morality must be preceded by a concept of justice, and was opposed to that destructive idea which was the basis of Sophistic teaching.
After the great discover of Socrates the Sophists did not entirely disappear; we find them also during the time of Aristotle, but they lose all their influence and importance.
III. Life of Socrates
Socrates (picture) was born in 470 or 469 B.C.E., in Athens, the son of Sophroniscus, a sculptor, and Phaenarete, a midwife. He first learned his father's art, but later dedicated himself to meditation and to philosophic teaching without recompense, notwithstanding his poverty. Conscious of his vocation, which he considered to be a divine mission, he did not allow himself to be distracted by domestic preoccupations and political interests. He married an Athenian woman, Xanthippe, to whom legend attributes many strange whims. Certainly, Xanthippe was not an ideal wife, but it must be admitted that neither was Socrates an ideal husband; he forgot his domestic duties out of his extreme interest in philosophy.
Socrates did not take an active part in politics, although as a youth he had been a soldier and had saved the life of the youth Alcibiades in the battle of Mantinea. He believed that it would be better to serve his country by offering himself as an example of a most perfect man, obedient to its laws, even to the point of sacrifice, and by preparing a wise youth in opposition to that egotistic and power-crazed youth which the Sophists had turned loose upon the nation.
But Socrates' critical and ironic attitude and the consequent education imparted by him gave rise to a general malcontent and to popular hostility and personal enmities against him, notwithstanding his probity. Socrates appears as the head of an intellectual aristocracy, opposed to the popular tyranny and even to certain reactionary elements. This hostile state of mind toward Socrates crystallized and took juridical form in the accusation formulated against him by Meletus, Anytus, and Lycon: of corrupting youth, denying the national gods, and introducing new ones in their stead.
Socrates disdained to defend himself and thus made concessions to the vanity of the judges to the point of humiliating himself before them and more or less excusing his actions. He had, before the eyes of his spirit, not an empirical acquittal for his terrestrial life but, rather, the eternal judgment of reason for immortality. He preferred death. Declared guilty by a small majority, he stood with indomitable spirit before the tribunal, and was condemned to death.
Socrates was obliged to remain in prison for a month before execution. (A law prohibited the carrying out of capital punishment during the absence of the sacred ship sent yearly to Delos.) Socrates' disciple Crito came to him and proposed flight to his master. Socrates refused, however, declaring that he did not wish to fail at any cost in obedience to his country's laws.
He passed his time preparing himself for death by spiritual converse with his disciples. Famous above all was his dialogue on the immortality of the soul, which must have taken place shortly before his death and which is recounted with incomparable art by Plato in the Phaedo. Socrates' last words to his disciples, after quietly taking the deadly draught of hemlock, were: "I owe a cock to Aesculapius." Aesculapius, the god of medicine, had delivered him from the evil of life with the gift of death. It was the year 399 B.C.E., the seventy-first of Socrates' life.
IV. The Doctrine of Socrates: Concepts
The doctrine of Socrates can be summed up in two words: concepts, morality -- or better, moral concepts.
For Socrates, the concept is that of which all think when they speak of a thing. In the rational part of every man there exist some notions which are common to all and hence enjoy universality and necessity, and which form the substratum of true understanding or knowledge. The concept of which the Sophists speak is merely an opinion, a fleeting instant of knowledge. Socrates does not undervalue such knowledge, but neither does he consider it to be full; for knowledge should be well enough established to serve as the foundation of science. True science is universal; that is, it is common to all men and to all times; it is objective, and is not subject to the changes of fortune. True science consists in understanding through concepts, which have the same universal characteristics as science itself.
To arrive at an understanding of such concepts, Socrates used the inductive method of dialogue (Socratic method), the principal parts of which were two: irony and maieutics. In general the process was as follows:
  • Socrates first posed a question -- for example, "What is justice?" Since he had said that he did not himself know what it could be (Socratic ignorance), he asked his pupils what they thought was justice.
  • The pupils, for the greater part Sophists, answered according to the Sophistic method, adducing many examples; e.g., "Zeus is just"; "the gods are just," etc. (Exemplification.) "Oh, how many justices!" answered Socrates. "I asked what is justice, and you answer by bringing me a great number of justices."
  • Thus he passed over to a criticism (irony) of the examples adduced, through which he cleared the disciples' minds of prejudices and false notions about the question proposed.
  • From irony he passed to maieutics -- the art which Socrates said he had learned from his mother; she helped the parts of the body, he aided those of the spirit. (The word is derived from the Greek "maieutikos," pertaining to midwifery. The maieutic method was Socrates' way of bringing out ideas latent in the mind.) Maieutics was the conclusive part of the dialogue, in which Socrates tried to make his disciples see how, by reflecting upon themselves, they could observe the presence of certain elements common and necessary to all justices (the concept of justice).
  • Such elements took concrete form in the definition, which summed up in a few words the characteristics that were judged necessary to the concept of the question proposed.
It is needless to say that the Socratic dialogues did not always succeed in stabilizing the definition. In such cases, the so-called Socratic ignorance which Socrates professed at the beginning of the question was not fictitious. Thus the dialogue was a work of self-criticism, done with the help of the students for the purpose, if possible, of arriving at a concept -- a true understanding of the question proposed.
V. The Doctrine of Socrates: Ethics
In ethics, Socrates did not surpass the prejudice of Greek intellectualism, which made the practice completely dependent upon theory. It is enough to know virtue in order to be virtuous. Everyone wishes to be happy. If he does not attain happiness, it is because he does not know the way that leads to happiness. Consequently, so-called evil men are in reality only ignorant; the evil is reduced to error. As vice is synonymous with ignorance, so knowledge of the good is synonymous with virtue. Thus it is easy to see why Socrates, who intended to form a virtuous youth, restricted his teaching to the search for moral concepts. It is to be noted that moral intellectualism is present in all Greek thought, not excepting the great ethical systems of Plato and Aristotle.
VI. Minor Socratic Schools
The teaching of Socrates had had two main points: the concept and morality or ethics. However, not all Socrates' disciples succeeded in understanding the profundity of the master's teaching. Many of them had first been at the school of the Sophists or of the Eleatics, and they did not succeed in overcoming their initial positions and in grasping the meaning of the Socratic concept in its purity. They believed that the Socratic concept was not much different from Protagoras' "man -- measure-of-all-things," and that the good was the same as the one of Parmenides. The spiritual heir of Socrates is Plato, who in the Academy carried the doctrine of his master to its highest development.
The others, after the death of Socrates, returned to their native cities and opened schools with a teaching which indicates a return to the Sophistic or Eleatic doctrines. These schools were called Minor Socratic Schools: Socratic, because after the example of Socrates they were interested in the knowledge of morality; Minor, because the thought of Socrates was not expounded for its own good but with inclinations toward former positions.
The Minor Schools are four:
  • The Megarian, founded by Euclid of Megara;
  • The Elian, founded by Phaedo;
  • The Cynic; and
  • The Cyrenaic.
We shall explain the principles of the last two. They possess a certain importance since they can be considered as historical and doctrinal antecedents of two other monuments of Grecian thought of major importance -- Stoicism and Epicureanism.
The Cynic School. This school was opened by Antisthenes, who first was a disciple of Gorgias and then of Socrates. He taught in the Cynosarges of Athens, whence the name Cynic. Antisthenes taught that knowledge (cognition) could not pass beyond the data of the senses; and since every sensation is individual, he concluded that only the individual is real. Moreover, as every individual has his own essence and no other, Antisthenes inferred that error is impossible and finally every definition is impossible.
What, then, were the concepts which Socrates had discussed? Simply the names of nouns. In a word, Antisthenes was an empiric nominalist. Of him it is related that in a debate with Plato about concepts, he said: "O Plato, I see the horse, but the horseness -- that I do not see." Plato answered: "You do not see the horseness because you have nothing but the eyes of the body."
In ethics, virtue is not a means to attaining good, but is the good itself. As virtue is the only good, so vice is the sole evil. But in what does virtue consist? In autarchy, i.e., in the possession of one's own reason, that which tells us that pleasures, riches, and everything which is called the civilization of a people is vice, because it is evil to feel the need of them. The Cynic, hence, went apart from society to live as a primitive man with few things, and these few supplied by nature itself. Between nature and society as we know it, with all the comforts of life, there is the same difference as between virtue and vice. To live according to nature understood thus -- such is the model of the Cynic's life.
The most famous Cynic was Diogenes of Sinope. Cynicism is a reaction of the poorer classes against the aristocracy; the reaction was made in the name of nature.
The Cyrenaic School. This school was founded by Cyrene, in those times an enchanting city of Libya, by Aristippus who, before becoming a disciple of Socrates, had heard the lectures of Protagoras.
Regarding cognition, for Aristippus only the subjective sensations are knowable; this implies that the field of knowledge is restricted to the cognition of one state after another which the subject notices in himself as sensations. Thus we are in pure sensism, according to which reality is but a succession of subjective phenomena, with no relation whatsoever to any external object. For Aristippus no metaphysics is possible, since the subject remains closed up in sensations.
Regarding ethics, the Cyrenians, in opposition to the Cynics, affirm that virtue consists in pleasure, and vice in pain. In accordance with their logic, virtue is a pleasing sensation, vice a painful one. The Cyrenians had a theory of sensations: there are three species, pleasant, painful and indifferent. The wise man will seek to keep away the painful or reduce them to the least possible, while he will change the indifferent into pleasant sensations. In a word, virtue consists in procuring for oneself the greatest possible quantity of tender emotions. Hence it is not in the passive, pleasant sensation that virtue consists, but in a supreme effort to secure for oneself the maximum of pleasures. (This is called dynamic hedonism.)
The wise man must preserve mastery over himself while yet living in the midst of pleasures. He must possess them and yet not be possessed by them, as Horace was to say later. In fine, the wise Cyrenian is the happy man who finds a limit only in reason.
The followers of Aristippus developed this rational motive further than that of immediate sensible pleasure and finished by concluding with Theodore the Atheist that nothing exists except pleasure. Others, with Hegesias, the Persuader of death, came to the conclusion that a life is not worth living if it is devoid of pleasure.
Such are two examples of the Minor Socratic Schools. The greatest of the Socratic schools, however, referred to as the Major Socratic School, was the Academy of Plato, which stayed closer to the original intent of the teachings of Socrates.

Life of Socrates

 Life of socrates
The traditional belief of the Greeks had been that their cities had received their laws from some divinity, protector of the city, and that good (happiness) consists in conforming one's life to these laws, accepted as divine and eternal. The Sophists shook this faith to its very roots.
As in the case of the problem of knowledge, by defending relativism they ended in Skepticism; so also in the question of morals, by the same subjectivist prejudice they end in utilitarianism and hedonism. Thus, that is good which satisfies one's instincts and passions. The belief in immutable principles upon which ethics may be founded is a prejudice and often an impediment which it is necessary to remove. The good, as experience shows, consists in securing for oneself the greatest possible quantity of possessions, without regard for the means used to attain them; for these goods can satisfy the instincts and the passions in which happiness consists. To strive to strengthen one's personality in order to surpass others in violence and in the contest or struggle for earthly goods -- this is the moral ideal of the Sophist.
The Sophists also violently attack the traditional belief about right -- that derivation from principles based on justice -- and they substitute the concept of force for that of justice. From the moment changed political conditions and the participation of the people in democratic power began to bring about the change of many laws, the Sophists profited from the situation not only to discredit positive and political right, but also natural right as well. They defended natural right, but by nature they did not mean the rational part of man, but his instincts and passions. Hence for them right is that which succeeds in imposing itself through force, or an imposition established by force and violence.
Men by nature are not equal; there are the strong and the weak, and the moment right consists in force it becomes the office of the strong to command and make laws; the weak must obey. The Sophist Thrasymachus, in the first book of Plato's Republic, maintains that natural law "is the right of the stronger." It is the strong man who, despising all laws advanced by the weak in the name of justice, imposes his will, which becomes right, as Callicles maintains in Plato's Gorgias.
Here we are at the same extremism that is indicative of the whole doctrine of the Sophists. Such extremism must have been pleasing to the youth of Athens in the time of Pericles. All young men were anxious to obtain offices which would assure them wealth and pleasure. Sophistic teaching, by battering all the orders of ethics and justice, opened up to men a way that made possible and justified the use of all deception and the most violent passions. Thus is explained the popular favor that surrounded certain Sophists, such as Protagoras, who was received with triumph and entertained as a guest in the homes of the most noted Athenians.
So also is explained the noble mission of Socrates who, to restore the values of a morality sacred and inviolable because based upon reason and not unruly passions, spent his entire existence, and not in vain.
II. General Notions
The Sophists had turned their attention to man, but they had stopped at sensitive impressions, at empirical data. They logically ended in Skepticism. Socrates moves on the same plane as the Sophists, i.e., the study of man, and raises the Delphic motto: "Know thyself" as the standard of his teaching. He does not stop at sensations, at opiniative knowledge; his investigation tended to scrutinize the more intimate part of man, that by which man is man, his reason. It is in this intimacy of reason that he discovers a knowledge which has the characteristics of universality and necessity: the concept. Behold the great Socratic discovery through which philosophy finds its road and later arrives at the greater systems which the human mind has been able to construct.
Socrates, like the Sophists, was not concerned with metaphysics, but excused himself by saying that nature is under the direction of gods. He concentrated all his attention on the search for moral concepts; he was convinced that the practice of morality must be preceded by a concept of justice, and was opposed to that destructive idea which was the basis of Sophistic teaching.
After the great discover of Socrates the Sophists did not entirely disappear; we find them also during the time of Aristotle, but they lose all their influence and importance.
III. Life of Socrates
Socrates (picture) was born in 470 or 469 B.C.E., in Athens, the son of Sophroniscus, a sculptor, and Phaenarete, a midwife. He first learned his father's art, but later dedicated himself to meditation and to philosophic teaching without recompense, notwithstanding his poverty. Conscious of his vocation, which he considered to be a divine mission, he did not allow himself to be distracted by domestic preoccupations and political interests. He married an Athenian woman, Xanthippe, to whom legend attributes many strange whims. Certainly, Xanthippe was not an ideal wife, but it must be admitted that neither was Socrates an ideal husband; he forgot his domestic duties out of his extreme interest in philosophy.
Socrates did not take an active part in politics, although as a youth he had been a soldier and had saved the life of the youth Alcibiades in the battle of Mantinea. He believed that it would be better to serve his country by offering himself as an example of a most perfect man, obedient to its laws, even to the point of sacrifice, and by preparing a wise youth in opposition to that egotistic and power-crazed youth which the Sophists had turned loose upon the nation.
But Socrates' critical and ironic attitude and the consequent education imparted by him gave rise to a general malcontent and to popular hostility and personal enmities against him, notwithstanding his probity. Socrates appears as the head of an intellectual aristocracy, opposed to the popular tyranny and even to certain reactionary elements. This hostile state of mind toward Socrates crystallized and took juridical form in the accusation formulated against him by Meletus, Anytus, and Lycon: of corrupting youth, denying the national gods, and introducing new ones in their stead.
Socrates disdained to defend himself and thus made concessions to the vanity of the judges to the point of humiliating himself before them and more or less excusing his actions. He had, before the eyes of his spirit, not an empirical acquittal for his terrestrial life but, rather, the eternal judgment of reason for immortality. He preferred death. Declared guilty by a small majority, he stood with indomitable spirit before the tribunal, and was condemned to death.
Socrates was obliged to remain in prison for a month before execution. (A law prohibited the carrying out of capital punishment during the absence of the sacred ship sent yearly to Delos.) Socrates' disciple Crito came to him and proposed flight to his master. Socrates refused, however, declaring that he did not wish to fail at any cost in obedience to his country's laws.
He passed his time preparing himself for death by spiritual converse with his disciples. Famous above all was his dialogue on the immortality of the soul, which must have taken place shortly before his death and which is recounted with incomparable art by Plato in the Phaedo. Socrates' last words to his disciples, after quietly taking the deadly draught of hemlock, were: "I owe a cock to Aesculapius." Aesculapius, the god of medicine, had delivered him from the evil of life with the gift of death. It was the year 399 B.C.E., the seventy-first of Socrates' life.
IV. The Doctrine of Socrates: Concepts
The doctrine of Socrates can be summed up in two words: concepts, morality -- or better, moral concepts.
For Socrates, the concept is that of which all think when they speak of a thing. In the rational part of every man there exist some notions which are common to all and hence enjoy universality and necessity, and which form the substratum of true understanding or knowledge. The concept of which the Sophists speak is merely an opinion, a fleeting instant of knowledge. Socrates does not undervalue such knowledge, but neither does he consider it to be full; for knowledge should be well enough established to serve as the foundation of science. True science is universal; that is, it is common to all men and to all times; it is objective, and is not subject to the changes of fortune. True science consists in understanding through concepts, which have the same universal characteristics as science itself.
To arrive at an understanding of such concepts, Socrates used the inductive method of dialogue (Socratic method), the principal parts of which were two: irony and maieutics. In general the process was as follows:
  • Socrates first posed a question -- for example, "What is justice?" Since he had said that he did not himself know what it could be (Socratic ignorance), he asked his pupils what they thought was justice.
  • The pupils, for the greater part Sophists, answered according to the Sophistic method, adducing many examples; e.g., "Zeus is just"; "the gods are just," etc. (Exemplification.) "Oh, how many justices!" answered Socrates. "I asked what is justice, and you answer by bringing me a great number of justices."
  • Thus he passed over to a criticism (irony) of the examples adduced, through which he cleared the disciples' minds of prejudices and false notions about the question proposed.
  • From irony he passed to maieutics -- the art which Socrates said he had learned from his mother; she helped the parts of the body, he aided those of the spirit. (The word is derived from the Greek "maieutikos," pertaining to midwifery. The maieutic method was Socrates' way of bringing out ideas latent in the mind.) Maieutics was the conclusive part of the dialogue, in which Socrates tried to make his disciples see how, by reflecting upon themselves, they could observe the presence of certain elements common and necessary to all justices (the concept of justice).
  • Such elements took concrete form in the definition, which summed up in a few words the characteristics that were judged necessary to the concept of the question proposed.
It is needless to say that the Socratic dialogues did not always succeed in stabilizing the definition. In such cases, the so-called Socratic ignorance which Socrates professed at the beginning of the question was not fictitious. Thus the dialogue was a work of self-criticism, done with the help of the students for the purpose, if possible, of arriving at a concept -- a true understanding of the question proposed.
V. The Doctrine of Socrates: Ethics
In ethics, Socrates did not surpass the prejudice of Greek intellectualism, which made the practice completely dependent upon theory. It is enough to know virtue in order to be virtuous. Everyone wishes to be happy. If he does not attain happiness, it is because he does not know the way that leads to happiness. Consequently, so-called evil men are in reality only ignorant; the evil is reduced to error. As vice is synonymous with ignorance, so knowledge of the good is synonymous with virtue. Thus it is easy to see why Socrates, who intended to form a virtuous youth, restricted his teaching to the search for moral concepts. It is to be noted that moral intellectualism is present in all Greek thought, not excepting the great ethical systems of Plato and Aristotle.
VI. Minor Socratic Schools
The teaching of Socrates had had two main points: the concept and morality or ethics. However, not all Socrates' disciples succeeded in understanding the profundity of the master's teaching. Many of them had first been at the school of the Sophists or of the Eleatics, and they did not succeed in overcoming their initial positions and in grasping the meaning of the Socratic concept in its purity. They believed that the Socratic concept was not much different from Protagoras' "man -- measure-of-all-things," and that the good was the same as the one of Parmenides. The spiritual heir of Socrates is Plato, who in the Academy carried the doctrine of his master to its highest development.
The others, after the death of Socrates, returned to their native cities and opened schools with a teaching which indicates a return to the Sophistic or Eleatic doctrines. These schools were called Minor Socratic Schools: Socratic, because after the example of Socrates they were interested in the knowledge of morality; Minor, because the thought of Socrates was not expounded for its own good but with inclinations toward former positions.
The Minor Schools are four:
  • The Megarian, founded by Euclid of Megara;
  • The Elian, founded by Phaedo;
  • The Cynic; and
  • The Cyrenaic.
We shall explain the principles of the last two. They possess a certain importance since they can be considered as historical and doctrinal antecedents of two other monuments of Grecian thought of major importance -- Stoicism and Epicureanism.
The Cynic School. This school was opened by Antisthenes, who first was a disciple of Gorgias and then of Socrates. He taught in the Cynosarges of Athens, whence the name Cynic. Antisthenes taught that knowledge (cognition) could not pass beyond the data of the senses; and since every sensation is individual, he concluded that only the individual is real. Moreover, as every individual has his own essence and no other, Antisthenes inferred that error is impossible and finally every definition is impossible.
What, then, were the concepts which Socrates had discussed? Simply the names of nouns. In a word, Antisthenes was an empiric nominalist. Of him it is related that in a debate with Plato about concepts, he said: "O Plato, I see the horse, but the horseness -- that I do not see." Plato answered: "You do not see the horseness because you have nothing but the eyes of the body."
In ethics, virtue is not a means to attaining good, but is the good itself. As virtue is the only good, so vice is the sole evil. But in what does virtue consist? In autarchy, i.e., in the possession of one's own reason, that which tells us that pleasures, riches, and everything which is called the civilization of a people is vice, because it is evil to feel the need of them. The Cynic, hence, went apart from society to live as a primitive man with few things, and these few supplied by nature itself. Between nature and society as we know it, with all the comforts of life, there is the same difference as between virtue and vice. To live according to nature understood thus -- such is the model of the Cynic's life.
The most famous Cynic was Diogenes of Sinope. Cynicism is a reaction of the poorer classes against the aristocracy; the reaction was made in the name of nature.
The Cyrenaic School. This school was founded by Cyrene, in those times an enchanting city of Libya, by Aristippus who, before becoming a disciple of Socrates, had heard the lectures of Protagoras.
Regarding cognition, for Aristippus only the subjective sensations are knowable; this implies that the field of knowledge is restricted to the cognition of one state after another which the subject notices in himself as sensations. Thus we are in pure sensism, according to which reality is but a succession of subjective phenomena, with no relation whatsoever to any external object. For Aristippus no metaphysics is possible, since the subject remains closed up in sensations.
Regarding ethics, the Cyrenians, in opposition to the Cynics, affirm that virtue consists in pleasure, and vice in pain. In accordance with their logic, virtue is a pleasing sensation, vice a painful one. The Cyrenians had a theory of sensations: there are three species, pleasant, painful and indifferent. The wise man will seek to keep away the painful or reduce them to the least possible, while he will change the indifferent into pleasant sensations. In a word, virtue consists in procuring for oneself the greatest possible quantity of tender emotions. Hence it is not in the passive, pleasant sensation that virtue consists, but in a supreme effort to secure for oneself the maximum of pleasures. (This is called dynamic hedonism.)
The wise man must preserve mastery over himself while yet living in the midst of pleasures. He must possess them and yet not be possessed by them, as Horace was to say later. In fine, the wise Cyrenian is the happy man who finds a limit only in reason.
The followers of Aristippus developed this rational motive further than that of immediate sensible pleasure and finished by concluding with Theodore the Atheist that nothing exists except pleasure. Others, with Hegesias, the Persuader of death, came to the conclusion that a life is not worth living if it is devoid of pleasure.
Such are two examples of the Minor Socratic Schools. The greatest of the Socratic schools, however, referred to as the Major Socratic School, was the Academy of Plato, which stayed closer to the original intent of the teachings of Socrates.

Reflexions about great Sokrat

Reflexions about great Sokrat


Sometimes I re-read books for several times. The same thing has happened to me not long ago. I have read all my books that I took in my travel. And I opened the one that I have read for the first time 26 years ago.
It is the special book for me. I did not like to read books at school and to write compositions. I had bad relations with my school. I did not like school, and school did not like me. Sport became my real school. My trainers were my best teachers.
It happened so that I have served not in common troops but in Sports Company of Privoljskiy district. When I was at military service in department near Kazan, I have got into hospital. I was very glad that I have got there. In spite of all my diseases the presence in a hospital was a kind of rest for me. It was a rest from moronic and boring military service that made me crazy.
Why have I remembered my staying in hospital in details? Just there I have got a big start of self-cultivation, personal growth and self-education. I was nineteen at that time. I was dying from crashing bore in the literal sense of the word. I had nothing to do so I went to the library. I saw four tomes of “Platon: Collected works.” Through this book and these crucial works I familiarized myself with great philosopher, brave warrior, wonderful person, who is known worldwide. His name is Socrat.
I am thankful to my fortune that the first book I have read not for exams, not for certificates, diploma but for my own pleasure was the book about Socrat. The whole my life has changed at that moment. I stepped on the way of personality development. It was like as if I was born once again. My school has destroyed all my interest toward knowledge but since that moment my interest has revived. Since then I am looking for the knowledge, collecting it all around the world and with like passionate pupil I am reading wise books.
The next time I read this book 25 years later. When I have read all books I took with me in my travel, I left the book “Socat’s Dialogs” for afters. I opened the first page with some excitement and trepidation, and the book in literal sense of the word has devoured me. I moved on 2.5 thousand years backwards in history in a split second.
Socrat was a great teacher that lived for four hundred years before Christ. His father was a sculptor-stonemason. His mother was a midwife, or speaking the modern language she was an obstetrician. Socrat called himself a midwife, but a spiritual midwife. He helped people to born once again, to wake up. He helped to come into this world spiritually. If a pupil without soul came to him, he even did not talk to such pupil. He knew that vacuousness bring to vacuousness, nothing comes to nothing.
Socrat was the great teacher. He taught the whole world. He disseminated eternal in souls of people. He woke the world. Socrat was poor. It completely devoted his life to serving people: « I neglected my own work and I am patiently sustaining decline of my housekeeping for years. I am always engaged in your work, addressing to everyone privately like father or elder brother, and convincing you to care of virtue?» «After all, the only thing I am doing is that I convince each of you, young and old, to care firstly and mainly not of your bodies or money, but of your soul so to make it better. I am saying you will not have valor from money. But if you have valor you will have money and all other blessings, both in a private life and in public».
He understood that those who sleep hate enlightened people. He distinctly realized all danger of his mission. But he did not think even for a second to stop. Let's listen to what Socrat says: «But may be you, like people who are half awake will strike me and easily kill me, obeying to Anit. And then you will spend all your life sleeping if only god, being sorry for you, will send you somebody else».
Nothing has changed since then. And the eternal struggle between the good and evil, between darkness and light continues.
When Socrat was young he was recognized Delphic Oracle. He was recognized to be wisest person in the world. He was not thirty when he was proclaimed the wisest man among the wisest. He participated in three battles and showed outstanding bravery. He took his companion out from a fight when his friends have trembled and run, throwing up their weapons, seeking safety in flight from persecutors. Socrat receded in full arms carrying his head high. And, as often happens, winners pursued cowards and killed them. But they respected courageous and resolute soldiers.
Socrat did not stop to reflect and analyze even in short minutes of halts between battles. Once upon a time in the evening he stopped and stood still till morning came thinking about something and solving an important problem. When the army went through mountains and everybody shivered with cold and penetrating wind, Socrat cheerfully walked through snow in his thin cape and encouraged his companions.
What was this great philosopher, seeker of truth and great citizen of that time famous for? Even after people recognized him Delphic Oracle and the wisest of the wisest, he told everybody great phrase: « As for me, all I know is that I know nothing. ». Socrat devoted himself not only to search of truth. He thought his main mission was in waking people, saving their souls. He sincerely believed that the most important thing in the person is his soul, his virtues, its aspiration to nobleness and honor.
One government replaced another in Africa, but Socrat was always himself. He outlived both democracy blossoming, and government of thirty tyrants which purpose was to sanguine as much respected citizens as possible. They gave specially tasks to people to make them accomplices of terror and crimes. Tyrants ordered four citizens and Socrat to lead an innocent person on execution. Those who were not obeyed would be executed. Four respected citizens under the pain of death betrayed truth, betrayed virtue and went to execute the unjust. Socrat simply went home, and only falling of tyranny saved him from execution. Neither gold, nor fear of death, or glory could make Socrat to betray eternal human values.
"Wise men" of that time, as Athenians, so the strangers who did not know Socrat, often rose to his fly. When they wished to present themselves very clever and wise, Socrat asked them one question after another almost in crowded places. That was the way to prove them they were fools. Socrat held them up to derision with the help of logic and inductive dialectic method. He made these without rage, without irony. He simply searched for the truth. He summarized: « As for me, all I know is that I know nothing. And they, knowing less, than I know, are mistaken that know everything». This was real entertainment to people to see how self-satisfied, pompous wise men’s faces are changing.
But Socrat’s purpose was not to deride "wise men" and boastful hypocrites. His purpose was to prove to every citizen of Athens that soul, nobleness, honors and dignity were the main things. The main things are eternal human values. During his long life Socrat has destroyed the image of not one wise man, not one governor, not one oligarch.
Grey crowd, a land of Nod does not forgive enlightened people their divine light. Grey crowd always hated bright, real, great people. St. Joan of Arc was burnt on the fire. Later this grey crowd would burn Dzhordano Bruno, would poison great people. But Socrat was the first. Such rare flowering appeared on the earth, such rare star lighted up in Athens! He was lighted up so bright that his beams warm our hearts even in 2,5 thousand years. His words are so strong, so powerful, and loud that in 25 centuries they awake us today as if we live nearby with him.
The trial of dwarfs, Lilliputians, grey mice over a mighty lion was the most dramatic and greatest event which my teacher has experienced. Oligarchs, “wise men-philosophers" broken, dishonored by Socrat, were embodiment of dullness. And dullness is afraid of and hates bright stars. And as it often happen oligarchs and pseudo-wise men have employed the small, insignificant jackals whose canines have been poisoned with lie. Three pettinesses have sailed into a great lion. Even the names of Socrat’s murderers have become a history, because they stood near a great noble star.
Miletus, Anit and Likon have accused Socrat in blasphemy, in God’s disrespect, in intellectual corruption of youth. The court passed then democratically enough. Five hundred elects decided destiny of defendant. Everyone had two stones: one was white, the other was black. They threw white stones in a vessel, voting for the forgiveness of defendant. Throwing a black stone the judges voted for the death execute.
Other defendants, artful dexterous dwarfs made everything to move judges to pity. They brought small kiddies, relatives, old men with themselves. They knelt, cried, humiliated, did everything to cause sympathy to themselves. Everybody did so, but not Socrat. He came along with his head carried high. He continued investigating life. He continued his sermon at court.
He perfectly understood how his speech could end. But he could not be another in his last battle with a pettiness, meanness and slavery. Great Socrat bore away from this most important battle of his life. Dullness and pettiness tried to condemn honor and dignity, but everything was at the contrary. The great philosopher and the soldier won battle. He turned shameful court into a great victory. He rescued our souls by his death.
Socrat called himself "gadfly" of Athens, and Athens he called «a fat well-fad horse that became too choosy, and wallowed in laziness and debauchery». He stung this fat, blasé society with his sharp mind and uncompromising truth. Who will like to hear the truth?! Whom it is pleasant to feel the otioseness, emptiness, negligibility to?! Socrat was like a mirror smooth, beautiful in which all defects of rotting Athens were reflected.
I will cite words of great teacher that he said both on court, and after it. Socrat did not change countenance, not shed a single tear when he heard a death sentence. By the way, outvote of prosecutors was only in 31 voice. Let’s hear what Socrat said: « Really, if you think that by killing people, you keep them from censure you because of your incorrect life you are mistaken. After all this way of self-defense both is not quite possible, and not so good. And here is the most good, and the easiest way: not to close one’s mouth and try to be as better as it possible. Well here, I am leaving you having predicted this to you who have condemned me».
Even having heard death sentence, Socrat continued his sermon. He continued to rescue souls of people: «Oh man, it is easy to escape death, but it is much more difficult to escape moral damage because it comes more quickly, than death».
Mice were going to judge a lion. Dwarfs have tried to judge the ocean of wisdom, nobleness and honor. I have a feeling that many words which Socrat said were addressed personally to me, personally to every one of us, thereby transferring a thread of time, spirituality, force, eternal glory.
Look how beautiful he has compared his work with the work of Olympic champions. And you know how Olympians were honored in ancient Athens! They were bright heroes of that time. Socrat perfectly said about their show. His words are addressed to Olympic champions: « Because such person tries about that you seemed happy. And I try about that you are happy ». There is much in this phrase! Olympic Games are a show that proceeds even today! The large quantity of fans pay thousands of dollars to sit on a tribune, to shout, to cry, to jump, to clap, get themselves in this great show, to forget about problems, about dullness, about emptiness of soul, eventually, to be recharged by energy of Olympians. But all these are only an attempt to escape yourself, your internal happiness.
For many years I devoted myself to karate. There is only one opponent in Karate. It is you: your laziness, your cowardice, your weakness. And you, torturing yourself, through sweat, blood and tears, win yourself. You win coward and slave. Today I am the vice-president of kekusinkai Federation in Russia. Kekusinkai is rather young style created by Ayama. When Ayama has united already about hundred millions sportsmen worldwide, his friend, the former president of Olympic committee Samaranch, persuaded him to make kekusinkai an Olympic kind of sports. It meant that Ayama could receive the world popularity, the state budgetary money for Federation development, glory, possibility to place advertising at competitions. But great Ayama told: «No!» He always said: «No!» He explained to Samaranch, that not a show, not tribunes, not TV, not a sensation is the main idea of karate, but self-cultivation. Ayama defended his position during all his life.
You, probably, often saw, when sportsmen on Olympic Games, winning the contender, boxers or fighters, joyfully jump, beat their breasts like King-Kongs, have fun and exult. Once there was such incident at the beginning of development of kekusinkai: one Frenchman, having won in sparring the contender, begun in the same way as modern sportsmen or showmen, to jump and exult in the same way as modern sportsmen or showmen did. Ayama has frowned and expelled once and for ever this shallow person from kekusinkai Federation. He has explained everybody that such behavior offended the contender, offended karate. Even if you have lost, you should be grateful to your contender because he helped you to overcome yourself. In karate deep respect for the opponent is the basis of self-cultivation. Socrat spoke about it 2,5 thousand years ago. Ayama spoke about it 40 years ago.
Technologies and products will change, but our friendship, our association every year all will be stronger and stronger from year to year. Together we develop our inner world. Work is a tool of development of our inner world. It is a great training apparatus which helps us to develop inner world. After all we strongly differ from all leaders in the world, like giants differ from dwarfs, like fine inaccessible mountains differ from bogs!
I am always teaching on my Master Classes at schools to live the conscious life, to study oneself, to study inner world, behavior, not to drift, and to be the researcher. I teach to reveal your weaknesses. I teach to try to discover dark sides of soul and to stir up divine light of enlightenment by plunging into great boundless space of inner world and studying it. Only conscious person, changing himself, can change the world.
The majority of people, unfortunately, live, like robots, like gears in the huge mechanism called "Business" or "Society" in which the scenario and roles are assigned and everything is classified as in an internal combustion engine in which every gear, every valve knows the place and rotates with the set rhythm. To live unconscious life is not to be born at all. It means not to live at all. To live like gear, or to live like obedient biorobot means to live in darkness. Life in darkness is not a life. It is simply existence.
And again I want to return on 2,5 thousand years ago on this great court on which dwarfs tried to condemn giant. But the giant have given to all dwarfs a lesson which we remember 25 centuries after. Let's listen to Socrat. After the death sentence was pronounced Socrat has said surprising words. This was Socrat. He investigated himself even during death sentence was proclaiming. He made a school of death sentence for the whole world. His great phrase sounded: «As for me, all I know is that I know nothing».
To be afraid of death is neither more nor less than to think, that know what you do not know. After all anybody does not know what the death is. Whether is it is the greatest of blessings for a man. But everybody are afraid of it as though know, probably, that it is the greatest of harms. But whether it is the most shameful ignorance to think, that know what you do not know?» Even in the face of death Socrat studied himself and the death, and gave us a great lesson.
Socrat has been recognized guilty and was sentenced to death with insignificant majority of votes. But he was not executed the next day. Fate decreed that he was imprisoned for some time. The ritual ship with priests should come only in some days. Socrat could be executed only after priests' arrival according to the laws of that time.
Execution was humane at that time. People allowed to drink poison called cicuta. Having drunk this poison, the person died without serious consequences. His body gradually became dumb: at first feet, then hands, then body and life silently left him.
Why Socrat was as though in an imprisonment? It was so because all his friends, all his pupils could come and talk to him. They tried to persuade him to run. They have already bribed all watchmen and guard. He was asked to leave Athens and go to Thessaly or other state where Socrat had many rich pupils and admirers. Each of them was ready to give riches, each of them was ready to give him the finest habitation, comfortable residing. But Socrat was not like others. It was Socrat running true to form.
We were reached many Socrat's dialogues with his pupils begging, persuading him for the sake of children, for the sake of enlightenment, for the sake of wisdom, for the sake of philosophy to leave Athens. But Socrat told everybody: «No!» He did not simply speak about that. He told in his great manner of researcher proving to everybody, that it is impossible to betray the law. This was Socrate. Talking with Criton, he said an interesting phrase about the grey insignificant majority: «My dear Criton, if the majority was capable to do the greatest harm to be capable to do the greatest good! It would be good! But it is capable neither to do that, nor another: it can make the person neither reasonable, nor unreasonable, but does any old thing».
My friends, not only life of this great person, but also his last minutes were the most remarkable. He investigated himself being on the deathbed. His pupils were sitting round him crying. But dying he passionlessly investigated himself. He spoke to them: «I do not feel my feet. My feet have grown dumb. There are no legs but I am alive. I do not feel hands, they have grown dumb too. There are no hands but I am alive. I do not feel my body; there is no body any more. My body has died, and I am alive. That means my body and I we are not the same». He was the great researcher, investigator of life and world till his last gasp, till his last word.
Recently I have bought a book which is called «Last words of great people». This is rather strange book. The author collected agonal statements of great people more than for 20 years. Academician Pavlov, the great physiologist, the founder of modern psychology, the Nobel winner, used the death as the tool of investigation of a person too. Here is his one remarkable answer: «Pavlov is busy now, he is dying».
Pavlov has asked his colleagues to be cool researchers until his last minute. He asked them not to miss such possibility for studying, for ignorance overcoming, for knowledge, as death of the beloved teacher. After pupils have sworn an oath to Павлову, they wrote down everything, that, their teacher dictated them dying. Pavlov liked to say: «I investigate that means I am studying and living». He was the great conscious thinker. For comparison I will give Nikita Sergeevich Khruschev's agonal words: «I would like some salty cucumber with beer».
Do you feel difference between how the great enlightened people and a grey small pettiness passed away?! The first ones had no power, no money, but they had greatness, therefore they did not die, they simply passed in immortality. And do you remember how General Secretary of TsKKPSS died? The person who had an absolute power over 250 million people, over a nuclear bomb, over armies. He possessed the whole resources of the country. His portraits hung everywhere. People went on demonstrations carrying them. Portrait of General Secretary hung in every school. Who recollects today Khruschev?! Who recollects a large quantity of liars, hypocrites, and politicians? Nobody! But everybody will remember enlightened people as long as the earth will exist.
Isaac Newton the great researcher told a very interesting phrase before his death: «I feel myself a boy playing with cockleshells on an ocean coast of knowledge». He has as though repeated great Socrat's phrase: «As for me, all I know is that I know nothing». But he said that phrase so, like he passed it through his own heart.
Today millions companies aspire to receive profit, aspire to win as much money and territories as possible. But no one of these companies, not any person, any leader of these companies (if it is possible to call these biorobots so; those who conduct behind themselves that grey crowd towards riches) do not think of spiritual growth of people, do not think of an enlightenment. They, probably, even do not guess that there is something like that.
The majority of people becomes slaves to money and has ceased to be people. Re-reading Socrat, I feel that great relay race which we, my dear friends, have received from great thinkers, from great heroes of the past. It is so good that we have such teachers. It is so good that we have sensation of greatness, sensation of life fullness! That is why any other so-called leaders cannot compare with our leaders. They are shallow. If someone knock in their soul everyone will hear deaf echo, deaf emptiness inside of them as though you are knocking on a huge clay pot. They are really shallow, and this is their weakness. Forget it. Forget all this weakness, this competitiveness! They do not live at all! How can the gear be alive? How can even the most perfect mechanism be alive? It is impossible!
Taking an opportunity, I want to address to each of you, my dear reader, my dear colleague, friend, and companion. Fill your heart with greatness, straighten shoulders, lift a chin my dear friends! It does not matter if there is not even a cent in your pocket and nobody knows about you in your area, in your country. Probably you were fired yesterday. Probably everybody think you are nothing, you are pettiness, and ignoramus! No, my dear friend! Fill your heart with greatness! Fill it with light!
What defines greatness? Our greatness is defined by our thoughts, our dreams, our purposes, our principles. Believe me, my dear friend, money, glory, riches are all adjectives to your inwardness of greatness and power. You will not even notice how riches will instantly change your life. Your environment will change their life, because they need you to be rich. They need your name sparkle in glory beams. And they will receive it very quickly. You, my dear friend, are getting great at this minute, this second, reading this material, and realizing this great mission, realizing great business we are doing together.
The valor should be the first and then should be the money! The first should be the inner valor. The first there should be internal greatness, awareness causeless, and then glory, riches and great success. Our greatness is inside of us. Light of our hearts already driving away darkness and dullness from our fine blossoming earth!
Yours faithfully Vladimir Dovgan.

Thursday, October 21, 2010

377 dead in African flooding; more than half of Benin under water

377 dead in African flooding; more than half of Benin under water

By the CNN Wires Staff
October 19, 2010 -- Updated 1910 GMT (0310 HKT)
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • At least 377 people have died due to recent flooding in west, central Africa
  • Benin has been especially hard hit, with much of it underwater and 43 dead
  • The United Nations has stepped up its relief efforts in the region
(CNN) -- Torrential rains in recent weeks have led to widespread flooding in central and West Africa, leading to at least 377 deaths and affecting a total of 1.5 million people, according to the United Nations.
Benin has been especially hard hit, as 51 of its 77 municipalities have been deluged by flood waters, UNICEF reported Tuesday. A day earlier, the international agency said at least 43 people had died. In addition, the floods left around 100,000 people homeless, and 800 in the coastal city of Cotonou had contracted cholera because of the flooding.
Water levels began to rise after heavy rainfall starting in September. In recent days, the United Nations has stepped up its crisis management efforts, with UNICEF alone sending 262,000 water purification tablets, 15 water tanks, 100 rolls of tents, 250 latrines backs and 1000 10-liter water containers to the cities of Cotonou and Seme Podji alone.
Chad, northern Cameroon, Niger and Nigeria have also been adversely affected by the rains and floods, a United Nations news release said.

CNN International: 'CNN Today' with Kristie Lu Stout (2009)