Socrates Without Tears
By Alan Jacobs
()
About this ebook
SOCRATES WITHOUT TEARS is a beautifully written Novella which reveals the exciting discovery of the long lost Dialogues of Socrates by his devoted pupil Aeschines. They give us a totally different picture of Socrates' great wisdom told with amusement and irony. It shows Socrates connection with Eastern Non Dual Thought and portrays the mildly camp atmosphere of the Symposium in graphic form .It will appeal to all seekers after truth in a palatable form and as the title says 'without tears'.
Alan Jacobs
Alan Jacobs is professor of English at Wheaton College in Illinois. He is the author of several books, including most recently The Narnian, a biography of C. S. Lewis. His literary and cultural criticism has appeared in a wide range of periodicals, including the Boston Globe, The American Scholar, First Things, Books & Culture, and The Oxford American.
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Socrates Without Tears - Alan Jacobs
Socrates
without Tears
The Lost Dialogues of Aeschines Restored
Socrates
without Tears
The Lost Dialogues of Aeschines Restored
Alan Jacobs
Winchester, UK
Washington, USA
First published by O-Books, 2011
O-Books is an imprint of John Hunt Publishing Ltd., Laurel House, Station Approach,
Alresford, Hants, SO24 9JH, UK
www.o-books.com
For distributor details and how to order please visit the ‘Ordering’ section on our website.
Text copyright: Alan Jacobs 2011
ISBN: 978 1 84694 568 7
All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical articles or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publishers.
The rights of Alan Jacobs as author have been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
Design: Lee Nash
Printed in the UK by CPI Antony Rowe
Printed in the USA by Offset Paperback Mfrs, Inc
We operate a distinctive and ethical publishing philosophy in all areas of our business, from our global network of authors to production and worldwide distribution.
Prelude
Socrates
Sage of Wisdom! all who hear you must admit,
Your words carry the wind-swift speed of civic wit.
You’ve mastered every weather in your speech,
Fierce nipping words that coldly freeze yet teach.
You shower sharp arrow-barbs, sent to defy
Opponents beneath the stormy winter sky.
Before you, all contenders are bound to fall,
While your bright Sun of Wisdom shines light on all.
After Thucydides
Chapter 1
The Momentous Discovery of Dr. Ernest R. Sekers
My most revered colleague and life long friend, the late Dr. Ernest R. Sekers (1949-2009), gave me written permission, before his recent, sudden and tragic death, well before his time, to write a full account of his greatest discovery, and publish, albeit posthumously his valuable findings.
Dr. Ernest R. Sekers, as we all know, was universally acknowledged as the leading and most respected Classical Greek Scholar of his generation. He was overjoyed to have discovered some of the missing Socratic Dialogues and Memorabilia recorded by Aeschines Socraticus (c.400 BC) which had been missing for over fifteen hundred years and were presumed to have been lost since ancient times.
While on a well earned Academic Sabbatical in Cairo, where it was his custom to take frequent exploratory voyages up and down the River Nile, in search of Classical Greek Inscriptions, a momentous event happened. These ancient inscriptions were generally left on artefacts, and were inscribed during the Greek occupation, at the time of the decaying Egyptian Civilisation.
On his last but fateful visit, Ernest was solicited by an itinerant Bedouin labourer. The man had recently been employed on one of the many archaeological excavations sponsored by the Egyptian Ministry of Culture and Antiquities. As Ernest related this momentous event to me, the man, whom he vaguely recognised from previous visits, had approached him with words which amounted to Esteemed and worthy Sir, I have been waiting for you, and I knew you would one day come, I have found some very ancient Greek papyri for you, they are most important, please, I beg of you, do take your time and have a good look!
Dr.Sekers was mildly intrigued; he always followed up these unsolicited approaches, but never expected to find anything of much importance. He had been offered many manuscripts before which invariably turned out to be the household accounts of some nobleman, civil servant or minor military official. Anyhow, Dr.Sekers conscientiously and carefully opened the packet well wrapped up and tied. He saw tattered sheaves of papyri with somewhat faded and eroded Greek inscriptions written on them in an educated hand. Scanning them quickly, he caught sight of the word Socrates and asked the Arab where he had found them. The Bedouin said that that they had been deeply buried in a small amphora and tightly sealed. They had come to light when he and other workers were excavating near the site of what had once been the Great Library of Alexandria. This caught Dr. Sekers’s interest and after some hard bargaining decided to buy the packet for what he considered to be a very small sum, that same afternoon.
Returning to his hotel room in Cairo, he carefully perused the contents and was convinced that these papyri definitely contained a number of Socratic Dialogues. He could tell that stylistically they were written neither by Plato, Xenophon nor Aristophanes. Then he realised with a sudden shock that he must be holding none other than some of the missing dialogues of no less a figure than Aeschines Socraticus. I remember years ago, Earnest telling me what a tragedy it was that the Aeschines Socraticus’ Dialogues had all been lost, presumably forever. It seemed, intuitively he had felt that they would reveal a very different picture than those of the widely accepted and obviously sanitised Platonic records. It was if Plato was always trying to establish his own ambition to forge a reputation as a Philosopher for the benefit of his planned Academy, rather than faithfully transmit the spirit and content of Socrates’ Dialogues precisely. Aeschines, was known to lean the other way and was reputed by contemporaries to be more trenchant and honest, if sometimes ribald in his handling of exchanges, as well as wryly humorous. Perhaps somewhat closer to Xenophon’s rather more robust characterisation of the Master. Aeschines was known to colourfully display Socrates irony and sardonic wit. which Plato, with his mock seriousness, tended to underplay.
From my own researches, most of what we know about Aeschines (425-350 BC) better known as Aeschines Socraticus of Sphettus, comes from the reliable Diogenes Laertes in his book ‘The Lives of Eminent Philosophers’. Aeschines is not to be confused with the famous Attic orator, of the same name (389-314 BC), the son of Atrometus. In Chapter VII Diogenes tells us that Aeschines Socraticus, was the son of Charinus, the Sausage Maker; but according to some other accounts he was the son of Lysanius. He was however, definitely a pupil of Socrates. There is also a recorded trial proceeding concerning Aeschines which tells us that at one time he fell into financial difficulties and incurred a debt while working as a perfume vendor and was unable to pay it back.
The famed Dr. Benjamin Jowett, the translator of all Plato’s Dialogues, wrote about Aeschines Socraticus. From the account of Diogenes Laertes, he appears to have been a familiar friend of his great master who said that ‘of the sausage-seller’s son, only he knew how to honour him.’ The same writer has preserved the trusted tradition that it was actually Aeschines, and not Crito, who offered to assist Socrates in an escape from imprisonment.
Aeschines seems to have spent the greater part of his life in what we could call ‘small poverty’, which gave rise to Socrates advising him ‘to borrow money from himself, instead of from others, by diminishing his daily wants.’ He assisted his father in Sausage Manufacture before his own business failure as A Perfume Vendor. He then retired to the Syracusan Court where his friendship with Aristipus was reciprocated because of their common dislike of Plato. He stayed there until the expulsion of one of his friends, the younger Dionysius, and returned to Athens where he gave private lectures on Philosophy. Plato falsely accused him of being a Sophist because he received money for this instruction. The three scant Dialogues which have survived are not considered genuine by contemporary scholars, as they do not contain the fullness of Socratic irony nor are they are elegant in style. Dr.Seker’s important discovery, however, reveals some further Dialogues and Memorablia which are very different in character, and contain many new insights about Socrates which were, for some obscure reason, concealed by Plato and Xenophon. The recorders of all the Dialogues worked mainly from memory with some notes. Accounts therefore, vary considerably, and each reporter imposed his own gloss on what Socrates and others actually said. Although the events here are approximately the same as Xenophon’s and in the case of Ion, Plato’s account, they are more risqué, and also seem to show a clear link with the Non-Dual Brahmin Philosophers who the Roman Historian Josephus records as having visited Athens at that time. Many scholars have suggested that Socrates must have known some of the content of the Upanishads. There was considerable cultural and