He [Heraclitus] was considered a misanthrope given to depression; he was also called "the weeping philosopher", in contrast to Democritus, "the laughing philosopher" — Wikipedia
A later tradition referred to Heraclitus as the "weeping philosopher", as opposed to Democritus, who is known as the "laughing philosopher". This was their reaction to the folly of mankind. — Wikipedia
He [Democritus] was cheerful, and was always ready to see the comical side of life, which later writers took to mean that he always laughed at the foolishness of people — Wikipedia
[Democritus] Popularly known as the Laughing Philosopher (for laughing at human follies), the terms Abderitan laughter, which means scoffing, incessant laughter, and Abderite, which means a scoffer, are derived from Democritus. To his fellow citizens he was also known as "The Mocker". — Wikipedia
Indexicals, man, sometimes folly is funny, sometimes folly is sad.
Also, something can be funny and sad at the same time. — fdrake
Flip sides of the same drachma. Janus masque (pace Graeca). Both Democritus & Heraclitus are favorites of mine (contra Parmenides --> Plato) — 180 Proof
I wonder which of them actually got it right? — TheMadFool
All of the above. People are different and have different needs. Some need Confucianism, others need Buddhism. It seems that what people think is the fundamental aspect of nature or life depends on their personal perspective, rather than any objective truth about the world. — Pinprick
A congenital defect, which I name foolery, to recover from and learn to live with soberly (lucidly-absurdly) through foolosophy praxis. — 180 Proof
This thread reminds me of my favourite quote:
Tragedy is when I cut my finger. Comedy is when you fall into an open sewer and die.
— Mel Brooks — Luke
Any ideas on what human folly actually refers to?
— TheMadFool
This old post. — 180 Proof
Not exhaustive by any means, just a sketch. Also this. We don't know what "the Democritean idea" per se was but, like fish in the sea, all of our lives we're swimming through "human folly" that's too close to see, no?Is the list a through g the Democritean idea of human folly? — TheMadFool
Ironically or not, Socrates thought he was also a fool himself (see "The Clouds" by Aristophanes) and didn't believe it when told the Delphic Oracle had said "there was no man wiser" than Socrates. Thus, he used the elenchus (socratic method) - mug's game for showing other fools that they too are fools, a gadfly's stinger - trying to prove 'the prophesy' wrong, etc ... I also suspect, for consistency sake, that Democritus didn't exempt himself either - for all of his speculative and proto-scientific acuity, the great atomist purportedly believed with deep conviction that the 'earth is flat' having argued, according to legend, forcefully against 'the absurdity of a round earth' :monkey: - from the circus of hilarious human folly. "The laughing philosopher", I'd like to believe, reflectively, self-deprecatingly, laughed at himself as well.Democritus thought humans were stupid and that, to him, was laughable but the mother of all questions is: did Democritus think Socrates was, along with the rest of us, ridiculously stupid?
Yes, exactly.Could we all be fools, just not equally foolish and what we perceive as wisdom is not actually wisdom but just a different, lower, level of idiocy? Reminds me of theater in the old days: cross-gender acting, when a woman actor was not a woman but the most effeminate man :lol:
Not exhaustive by any means, just a sketch. Also this. We don't know what "the Democritean idea" per se was but, like fish in the sea, all of our lives we're swimming through "human folly" that's too close to see, no?
Democritus thought humans were stupid and that, to him, was laughable but the mother of all questions is: did Democritus think Socrates was, along with the rest of us, ridiculously stupid?
Ironically or not, Socrates thought he was also a fool himself (see "The Clouds" by Aristophanes) and didn't believe it when told the Delphic Oracle had said "there was no man wiser" than Socrates. Thus, he used the elenchus (socratic method) - mug's game for showing other fools that they too are fools, a gadfly's stinger - trying to prove 'the prophesy' wrong, etc ... I also suspect, for consistency sake, that Democritus didn't exempt himself either - for all of his speculative and proto-scientific acuity, the great atomist purportedly believed with deep conviction that the 'earth is flat' having argued, according to legend, forcefully against 'the absurdity of a round earth' :monkey: - from the circus of hilarious human folly. "The laughing philosopher", I'd like to believe, reflectively, self-deprecatingly, laughed at himself as well.
Could we all be fools, just not equally foolish and what we perceive as wisdom is not actually wisdom but just a different, lower, level of idiocy? Reminds me of theater in the old days: cross-gender acting, when a woman actor was not a woman but the most effeminate man :lol:
Yes, exactly. — 180 Proof
:up:I'm getting the feeling that wisdom isn't about what but about how, one thinks. — TheMadFool
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