24 January 2005 - evening
Socrates: "I enjoy talking with the very old, for we should ask them, as we might ask those who have travelled a road that we too will probably have to follow, what kind of road it is, whether rough and difficult or smooth and easy." (Plato, Republic)
How much pleasure I get from reading these words! You know, I am used to telling others that I have no friends except for those who are a part of my immediate family (all of whome are older than me), but lately I have made a new friend. Sure, he may be dead physically, but his spirit lives on, at least in me it does. I consider myself very lucky to find such a friend, one that can reason with me. There are times when I have thought that I was alone in appreciating the experience the old have to offer us, but I'm no longer alone! Sadly, now-a-days, it appears as though the majority believes it is always right. Then again, this, I have learned, is not a new phenomenon. Socrates, my dear friend, was sentenced to death by this majority. And what is, possibly, most shocking of all is that it was done in the name of Justice! What is Justice? Is it that which is determined by the Polis? My friend felt that he had to respect the "judgement" of the city, of the majority. I say: how can you respect that which is wrong? Can that which is just sometimes be unjust? Perhaps there is a difference between what "is" and what "ought to be"....Not too long ago, a girl I know called my friend an "idealistic old fool". I think he was a good-hearted genious. He made an agreement and he kept his word. "Most" thought he lost by being sentenced to death. He did not think so. "I go to die, he said, you go to live. Which of us goes to the better lot is known to no one, except the god." (Plato, Apology)
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