VOTING POWER100.00%
DOWNVOTE POWER100.00%
RESOURCE CREDITS100.00%
REPUTATION PROGRESS0.00%
Net Worth
0.050USD
STEEM
0.000STEEM
SBD
0.032SBD
Effective Power
5.001SP
├── Own SP
0.632SP
└── Incoming DelegationsDeleg
+4.369SP
Detailed Balance
| STEEM | ||
| balance | 0.000STEEM | STEEM |
| market_balance | 0.000STEEM | STEEM |
| savings_balance | 0.000STEEM | STEEM |
| reward_steem_balance | 0.000STEEM | STEEM |
| STEEM POWER | ||
| Own SP | 0.632SP | SP |
| Delegated Out | 0.000SP | SP |
| Delegation In | 4.369SP | SP |
| Effective Power | 5.001SP | SP |
| Reward SP (pending) | 0.033SP | SP |
| SBD | ||
| sbd_balance | 0.000SBD | SBD |
| sbd_conversions | 0.000SBD | SBD |
| sbd_market_balance | 0.000SBD | SBD |
| savings_sbd_balance | 0.000SBD | SBD |
| reward_sbd_balance | 0.032SBD | SBD |
{
"balance": "0.000 STEEM",
"savings_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
"reward_steem_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
"vesting_shares": "1029.144507 VESTS",
"delegated_vesting_shares": "0.000000 VESTS",
"received_vesting_shares": "7114.515299 VESTS",
"sbd_balance": "0.000 SBD",
"savings_sbd_balance": "0.000 SBD",
"reward_sbd_balance": "0.032 SBD",
"conversions": []
}Account Info
| name | dgshepard |
| id | 396909 |
| rank | 641,713 |
| reputation | 571884029 |
| created | 2017-10-05T18:29:12 |
| recovery_account | steem |
| proxy | None |
| post_count | 10 |
| comment_count | 0 |
| lifetime_vote_count | 0 |
| witnesses_voted_for | 0 |
| last_post | 2017-10-15T19:55:00 |
| last_root_post | 2017-10-15T19:55:00 |
| last_vote_time | 2017-10-15T10:28:12 |
| proxied_vsf_votes | 0, 0, 0, 0 |
| can_vote | 1 |
| voting_power | 0 |
| delayed_votes | 0 |
| balance | 0.000 STEEM |
| savings_balance | 0.000 STEEM |
| sbd_balance | 0.000 SBD |
| savings_sbd_balance | 0.000 SBD |
| vesting_shares | 1029.144507 VESTS |
| delegated_vesting_shares | 0.000000 VESTS |
| received_vesting_shares | 7114.515299 VESTS |
| reward_vesting_balance | 67.865955 VESTS |
| vesting_balance | 0.000 STEEM |
| vesting_withdraw_rate | 0.000000 VESTS |
| next_vesting_withdrawal | 1969-12-31T23:59:59 |
| withdrawn | 0 |
| to_withdraw | 0 |
| withdraw_routes | 0 |
| savings_withdraw_requests | 0 |
| last_account_recovery | 1970-01-01T00:00:00 |
| reset_account | null |
| last_owner_update | 1970-01-01T00:00:00 |
| last_account_update | 2018-08-11T08:25:57 |
| mined | No |
| sbd_seconds | 0 |
| sbd_last_interest_payment | 1970-01-01T00:00:00 |
| savings_sbd_last_interest_payment | 1970-01-01T00:00:00 |
{
"id": 396909,
"name": "dgshepard",
"owner": {
"weight_threshold": 1,
"account_auths": [],
"key_auths": [
[
"STM51ZiE2AY2cyxoTkGRFaaAhsJGhmjCMF4ubY2xxWLr7dnzG7hYn",
1
]
]
},
"active": {
"weight_threshold": 1,
"account_auths": [],
"key_auths": [
[
"STM889L1ehvCoGypKVvSStN8oqtvf8w6ooRvc2qoZt5hPLSVs1bjX",
1
]
]
},
"posting": {
"weight_threshold": 1,
"account_auths": [
[
"dtube.app",
1
]
],
"key_auths": [
[
"STM6HASCoBBmTDfh4e17dVPVqtUJMmX9u9xqm8vThZinXgAydqrEC",
1
]
]
},
"memo_key": "STM89vTRKo2AsLY9vVfLVh8v7PDm4W1k7Cuh4AALgbkZtBU73ps3h",
"json_metadata": "{\"profile\":{\"name\":\"David G Shepard\",\"about\":\"Amateur Woodworker and Existentialist\",\"location\":\"Oxford, United Kingdom\",\"profile_image\":\"https://i.imgsafe.org/30/30d6a5d05f.jpeg\",\"website\":\"https://twitter.com/dgshepard\"}}",
"posting_json_metadata": "{\"profile\":{\"name\":\"David G Shepard\",\"about\":\"Amateur Woodworker and Existentialist\",\"location\":\"Oxford, United Kingdom\",\"profile_image\":\"https://i.imgsafe.org/30/30d6a5d05f.jpeg\",\"website\":\"https://twitter.com/dgshepard\"}}",
"proxy": "",
"last_owner_update": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
"last_account_update": "2018-08-11T08:25:57",
"created": "2017-10-05T18:29:12",
"mined": false,
"recovery_account": "steem",
"last_account_recovery": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
"reset_account": "null",
"comment_count": 0,
"lifetime_vote_count": 0,
"post_count": 10,
"can_vote": true,
"voting_manabar": {
"current_mana": "8143659806",
"last_update_time": 1779060450
},
"downvote_manabar": {
"current_mana": 2035914951,
"last_update_time": 1779060450
},
"voting_power": 0,
"balance": "0.000 STEEM",
"savings_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
"sbd_balance": "0.000 SBD",
"sbd_seconds": "0",
"sbd_seconds_last_update": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
"sbd_last_interest_payment": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
"savings_sbd_balance": "0.000 SBD",
"savings_sbd_seconds": "0",
"savings_sbd_seconds_last_update": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
"savings_sbd_last_interest_payment": "1970-01-01T00:00:00",
"savings_withdraw_requests": 0,
"reward_sbd_balance": "0.032 SBD",
"reward_steem_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
"reward_vesting_balance": "67.865955 VESTS",
"reward_vesting_steem": "0.033 STEEM",
"vesting_shares": "1029.144507 VESTS",
"delegated_vesting_shares": "0.000000 VESTS",
"received_vesting_shares": "7114.515299 VESTS",
"vesting_withdraw_rate": "0.000000 VESTS",
"next_vesting_withdrawal": "1969-12-31T23:59:59",
"withdrawn": 0,
"to_withdraw": 0,
"withdraw_routes": 0,
"curation_rewards": 0,
"posting_rewards": 65,
"proxied_vsf_votes": [
0,
0,
0,
0
],
"witnesses_voted_for": 0,
"last_post": "2017-10-15T19:55:00",
"last_root_post": "2017-10-15T19:55:00",
"last_vote_time": "2017-10-15T10:28:12",
"post_bandwidth": 0,
"pending_claimed_accounts": 0,
"vesting_balance": "0.000 STEEM",
"reputation": 571884029,
"transfer_history": [],
"market_history": [],
"post_history": [],
"vote_history": [],
"other_history": [],
"witness_votes": [],
"tags_usage": [],
"guest_bloggers": [],
"rank": 641713
}Withdraw Routes
| Incoming | Outgoing |
|---|---|
Empty | Empty |
{
"incoming": [],
"outgoing": []
}From Date
To Date
steemdelegated 4.369 SP to @dgshepard2026/05/17 23:27:30
steemdelegated 4.369 SP to @dgshepard
2026/05/17 23:27:30
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | dgshepard |
| vesting shares | 7114.515299 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #106142498/Trx a883236859358d0c96aadaff4b28ee21bdd91102 |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "a883236859358d0c96aadaff4b28ee21bdd91102",
"block": 106142498,
"trx_in_block": 1,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2026-05-17T23:27:30",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "dgshepard",
"vesting_shares": "7114.515299 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 2.703 SP to @dgshepard2026/05/12 00:37:30
steemdelegated 2.703 SP to @dgshepard
2026/05/12 00:37:30
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | dgshepard |
| vesting shares | 4402.304894 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #105971861/Trx 2c01eeb5a6f1057b41497e26c9948cf7e1b5aeeb |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "2c01eeb5a6f1057b41497e26c9948cf7e1b5aeeb",
"block": 105971861,
"trx_in_block": 3,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2026-05-12T00:37:30",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "dgshepard",
"vesting_shares": "4402.304894 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 4.377 SP to @dgshepard2026/04/25 22:49:42
steemdelegated 4.377 SP to @dgshepard
2026/04/25 22:49:42
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | dgshepard |
| vesting shares | 7127.031055 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #105510174/Trx 86350ca2392d79cfadd5dc3d1a318adcf5eaaca5 |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "86350ca2392d79cfadd5dc3d1a318adcf5eaaca5",
"block": 105510174,
"trx_in_block": 1,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2026-04-25T22:49:42",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "dgshepard",
"vesting_shares": "7127.031055 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 2.729 SP to @dgshepard2026/01/23 05:39:54
steemdelegated 2.729 SP to @dgshepard
2026/01/23 05:39:54
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | dgshepard |
| vesting shares | 4443.851713 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #102849248/Trx bcbca0d35fc69a6d8c620eb48e1d21a73377f2ab |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "bcbca0d35fc69a6d8c620eb48e1d21a73377f2ab",
"block": 102849248,
"trx_in_block": 1,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2026-01-23T05:39:54",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "dgshepard",
"vesting_shares": "4443.851713 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 2.830 SP to @dgshepard2024/12/17 00:59:39
steemdelegated 2.830 SP to @dgshepard
2024/12/17 00:59:39
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | dgshepard |
| vesting shares | 4608.070910 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #91295671/Trx ba77f54035313c2cffc454a1072a986a0768fc0d |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "ba77f54035313c2cffc454a1072a986a0768fc0d",
"block": 91295671,
"trx_in_block": 12,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2024-12-17T00:59:39",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "dgshepard",
"vesting_shares": "4608.070910 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 2.934 SP to @dgshepard2023/11/13 16:43:09
steemdelegated 2.934 SP to @dgshepard
2023/11/13 16:43:09
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | dgshepard |
| vesting shares | 4777.204442 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #79849898/Trx fe083d2043c10737cfbfa495d528dd3b3ab5c9c0 |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "fe083d2043c10737cfbfa495d528dd3b3ab5c9c0",
"block": 79849898,
"trx_in_block": 0,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2023-11-13T16:43:09",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "dgshepard",
"vesting_shares": "4777.204442 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 4.737 SP to @dgshepard2023/09/21 20:53:33
steemdelegated 4.737 SP to @dgshepard
2023/09/21 20:53:33
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | dgshepard |
| vesting shares | 7714.483228 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #78346706/Trx 785270228028aec4c8c54ef6a2ecb700d3212215 |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "785270228028aec4c8c54ef6a2ecb700d3212215",
"block": 78346706,
"trx_in_block": 6,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2023-09-21T20:53:33",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "dgshepard",
"vesting_shares": "7714.483228 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 4.873 SP to @dgshepard2022/11/03 10:48:36
steemdelegated 4.873 SP to @dgshepard
2022/11/03 10:48:36
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | dgshepard |
| vesting shares | 7936.164666 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #69112195/Trx 02d88d035f2bfab80e8bc10bfb20f93453a8f2d4 |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "02d88d035f2bfab80e8bc10bfb20f93453a8f2d4",
"block": 69112195,
"trx_in_block": 0,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2022-11-03T10:48:36",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "dgshepard",
"vesting_shares": "7936.164666 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 5.009 SP to @dgshepard2022/01/17 10:08:54
steemdelegated 5.009 SP to @dgshepard
2022/01/17 10:08:54
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | dgshepard |
| vesting shares | 8156.697897 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #60808449/Trx 1d246f3bec812825d08c48ba39ce858160ecded4 |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "1d246f3bec812825d08c48ba39ce858160ecded4",
"block": 60808449,
"trx_in_block": 21,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2022-01-17T10:08:54",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "dgshepard",
"vesting_shares": "8156.697897 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 5.122 SP to @dgshepard2021/06/14 00:06:06
steemdelegated 5.122 SP to @dgshepard
2021/06/14 00:06:06
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | dgshepard |
| vesting shares | 8340.466555 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #54606877/Trx 39d61abb8d148e36dd1b031e74a18b37be4a180b |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "39d61abb8d148e36dd1b031e74a18b37be4a180b",
"block": 54606877,
"trx_in_block": 2,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2021-06-14T00:06:06",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "dgshepard",
"vesting_shares": "8340.466555 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 5.237 SP to @dgshepard2020/12/11 10:26:18
steemdelegated 5.237 SP to @dgshepard
2020/12/11 10:26:18
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | dgshepard |
| vesting shares | 8527.888529 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #49354371/Trx 7d0e866f5b0a18b4fae73d1805e8e4a6c8051f28 |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "7d0e866f5b0a18b4fae73d1805e8e4a6c8051f28",
"block": 49354371,
"trx_in_block": 0,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2020-12-11T10:26:18",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "dgshepard",
"vesting_shares": "8527.888529 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 1.174 SP to @dgshepard2020/12/06 04:03:33
steemdelegated 1.174 SP to @dgshepard
2020/12/06 04:03:33
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | dgshepard |
| vesting shares | 1912.543513 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #49205934/Trx 936ef4c0653138c2fd235c792b5187cc8062e6c5 |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "936ef4c0653138c2fd235c792b5187cc8062e6c5",
"block": 49205934,
"trx_in_block": 3,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2020-12-06T04:03:33",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "dgshepard",
"vesting_shares": "1912.543513 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 5.241 SP to @dgshepard2020/12/05 12:00:36
steemdelegated 5.241 SP to @dgshepard
2020/12/05 12:00:36
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | dgshepard |
| vesting shares | 8534.255168 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #49187041/Trx b33c834fb484410d43810913de2eedad6a1333dd |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "b33c834fb484410d43810913de2eedad6a1333dd",
"block": 49187041,
"trx_in_block": 0,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2020-12-05T12:00:36",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "dgshepard",
"vesting_shares": "8534.255168 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 1.179 SP to @dgshepard2020/11/02 14:08:42
steemdelegated 1.179 SP to @dgshepard
2020/11/02 14:08:42
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | dgshepard |
| vesting shares | 1920.017158 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #48256045/Trx 4a485888a8fe58fd3a738752abb3fd37a1ec79b0 |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "4a485888a8fe58fd3a738752abb3fd37a1ec79b0",
"block": 48256045,
"trx_in_block": 1,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2020-11-02T14:08:42",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "dgshepard",
"vesting_shares": "1920.017158 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 5.365 SP to @dgshepard2020/05/09 04:59:51
steemdelegated 5.365 SP to @dgshepard
2020/05/09 04:59:51
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | dgshepard |
| vesting shares | 8736.901742 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #43216169/Trx e3bb15e4006ee972fcb35032c629a9f136ec89df |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "e3bb15e4006ee972fcb35032c629a9f136ec89df",
"block": 43216169,
"trx_in_block": 9,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2020-05-09T04:59:51",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "dgshepard",
"vesting_shares": "8736.901742 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 1.199 SP to @dgshepard2020/05/08 08:29:27
steemdelegated 1.199 SP to @dgshepard
2020/05/08 08:29:27
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | dgshepard |
| vesting shares | 1953.311140 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #43192137/Trx c269eecfd2fb97c4df57100602ba4d0db5c22dae |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "c269eecfd2fb97c4df57100602ba4d0db5c22dae",
"block": 43192137,
"trx_in_block": 3,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2020-05-08T08:29:27",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "dgshepard",
"vesting_shares": "1953.311140 VESTS"
}
]
}steemdelegated 5.431 SP to @dgshepard2019/11/01 07:23:39
steemdelegated 5.431 SP to @dgshepard
2019/11/01 07:23:39
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | dgshepard |
| vesting shares | 8843.300825 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #37787655/Trx bb65aed70732e7a161cce5af568e083b8c756c66 |
View Raw JSON Data
{
"trx_id": "bb65aed70732e7a161cce5af568e083b8c756c66",
"block": 37787655,
"trx_in_block": 11,
"op_in_trx": 0,
"virtual_op": 0,
"timestamp": "2019-11-01T07:23:39",
"op": [
"delegate_vesting_shares",
{
"delegator": "steem",
"delegatee": "dgshepard",
"vesting_shares": "8843.300825 VESTS"
}
]
}2019/10/05 19:37:21
2019/10/05 19:37:21
| parent author | dgshepard |
| parent permlink | ex-nihilo-nihil-fit-nothing-from-nothing |
| author | steemitboard |
| permlink | steemitboard-notify-dgshepard-20191005t193720000z |
| title | |
| body | Congratulations @dgshepard! You received a personal award! <table><tr><td>https://steemitimages.com/70x70/http://steemitboard.com/@dgshepard/birthday2.png</td><td>Happy Birthday! - You are on the Steem blockchain for 2 years!</td></tr></table> <sub>_You can view [your badges on your Steem Board](https://steemitboard.com/@dgshepard) and compare to others on the [Steem Ranking](https://steemitboard.com/ranking/index.php?name=dgshepard)_</sub> ###### [Vote for @Steemitboard as a witness](https://v2.steemconnect.com/sign/account-witness-vote?witness=steemitboard&approve=1) to get one more award and increased upvotes! |
| json metadata | {"image":["https://steemitboard.com/img/notify.png"]} |
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}steemdelegated 5.552 SP to @dgshepard2018/11/26 17:14:42
steemdelegated 5.552 SP to @dgshepard
2018/11/26 17:14:42
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | dgshepard |
| vesting shares | 9040.776202 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #28043635/Trx bb4c0a803d07c5dd522eac7117614cd9334c824d |
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}2018/10/05 19:20:51
2018/10/05 19:20:51
| parent author | dgshepard |
| parent permlink | ex-nihilo-nihil-fit-nothing-from-nothing |
| author | steemitboard |
| permlink | steemitboard-notify-dgshepard-20181005t192050000z |
| title | |
| body | Congratulations @dgshepard! You have received a personal award! [](http://steemitboard.com/@dgshepard) 1 Year on Steemit <sub>_Click on the badge to view your Board of Honor._</sub> **Do not miss the last post from @steemitboard:** <table><tr><td><a href="https://steemit.com/steemitboard/@steemitboard/introducing-steemitboard-ranking"><img src="https://steemitimages.com/64x128/https://cdn.steemitimages.com/DQmfRVpHQhLDhnjDtqck8GPv9NPvNKPfMsDaAFDE1D9Er2Z/header_ranking.png"></a></td><td><a href="https://steemit.com/steemitboard/@steemitboard/introducing-steemitboard-ranking">Introducing SteemitBoard Ranking</a></td></tr></table> > Support [SteemitBoard's project](https://steemit.com/@steemitboard)! **[Vote for its witness](https://v2.steemconnect.com/sign/account-witness-vote?witness=steemitboard&approve=1)** and **get one more award**! |
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}andraheryupvoted (100.00%) @dgshepard / the-truthfulness-of-socrates2018/09/17 04:37:18
andraheryupvoted (100.00%) @dgshepard / the-truthfulness-of-socrates
2018/09/17 04:37:18
| voter | andrahery |
| author | dgshepard |
| permlink | the-truthfulness-of-socrates |
| weight | 10000 (100.00%) |
| Transaction Info | Block #26029641/Trx a7dd2bcc203068b4c97d43158174f9e08e9ebded |
View Raw JSON Data
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}andraheryupvoted (100.00%) @dgshepard / the-truthfulness-of-socrates2018/09/17 03:06:15
andraheryupvoted (100.00%) @dgshepard / the-truthfulness-of-socrates
2018/09/17 03:06:15
| voter | andrahery |
| author | dgshepard |
| permlink | the-truthfulness-of-socrates |
| weight | 10000 (100.00%) |
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}2018/09/01 06:52:21
2018/09/01 06:52:21
| required auths | [] |
| required posting auths | ["dgshepard"] |
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| Transaction Info | Block #25571743/Trx 75e7e304244ea4748fbc43f621f5fdf33c1b0c83 |
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}steemdelegated 18.026 SP to @dgshepard2018/08/11 10:42:54
steemdelegated 18.026 SP to @dgshepard
2018/08/11 10:42:54
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | dgshepard |
| vesting shares | 29355.002271 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #24971804/Trx b5b7d355c5251ea6575286cf4092b2c6cb61bd68 |
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}2018/08/11 08:26:06
2018/08/11 08:26:06
| required auths | [] |
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| id | follow |
| json | ["follow",{"follower":"dgshepard","following":"dtube","what":["blog"]}] |
| Transaction Info | Block #24969069/Trx df0ccfe82736514db863bfe4c20423698b28f9d4 |
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}dgshepardupdated their account properties2018/08/11 08:25:57
dgshepardupdated their account properties
2018/08/11 08:25:57
| account | dgshepard |
| posting | {"weight_threshold":1,"account_auths":[["dtube.app",1]],"key_auths":[["STM6HASCoBBmTDfh4e17dVPVqtUJMmX9u9xqm8vThZinXgAydqrEC",1]]} |
| memo key | STM89vTRKo2AsLY9vVfLVh8v7PDm4W1k7Cuh4AALgbkZtBU73ps3h |
| json metadata | {"profile":{"name":"David G Shepard","about":"Amateur Woodworker and Existentialist","location":"Oxford, United Kingdom","profile_image":"https://i.imgsafe.org/30/30d6a5d05f.jpeg","website":"https://twitter.com/dgshepard"}} |
| Transaction Info | Block #24969066/Trx 5f5ec0acf0f237a982ac508fd3dd7991f7faedbb |
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}steemdelegated 5.616 SP to @dgshepard2018/05/16 20:14:00
steemdelegated 5.616 SP to @dgshepard
2018/05/16 20:14:00
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | dgshepard |
| vesting shares | 9145.054401 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #22489781/Trx c1e4db1f0e4846ac0fd95717cfbb0fab6ab557ba |
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}steemdelegated 18.194 SP to @dgshepard2018/02/21 23:05:45
steemdelegated 18.194 SP to @dgshepard
2018/02/21 23:05:45
| delegator | steem |
| delegatee | dgshepard |
| vesting shares | 29627.872075 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #20076545/Trx a2f055b3ac1511a6db6b40f1d4957da5999f2148 |
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}dgshepardreceived 0.009 SBD, 0.011 SP author reward for @dgshepard / re-cotarelo-quote-of-the-day-advertising-20171015t100613516z2017/10/22 10:06:15
dgshepardreceived 0.009 SBD, 0.011 SP author reward for @dgshepard / re-cotarelo-quote-of-the-day-advertising-20171015t100613516z
2017/10/22 10:06:15
| author | dgshepard |
| permlink | re-cotarelo-quote-of-the-day-advertising-20171015t100613516z |
| sbd payout | 0.009 SBD |
| steem payout | 0.000 STEEM |
| vesting payout | 18.508866 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #16549811/Virtual Operation #3 |
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}dgshepardreceived 0.012 SBD, 0.015 SP author reward for @dgshepard / re-mountainwashere-late-stage-capitalism-and-historical-prophecies-20171015t095810433z2017/10/22 09:58:12
dgshepardreceived 0.012 SBD, 0.015 SP author reward for @dgshepard / re-mountainwashere-late-stage-capitalism-and-historical-prophecies-20171015t095810433z
2017/10/22 09:58:12
| author | dgshepard |
| permlink | re-mountainwashere-late-stage-capitalism-and-historical-prophecies-20171015t095810433z |
| sbd payout | 0.012 SBD |
| steem payout | 0.000 STEEM |
| vesting payout | 24.678496 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #16549651/Virtual Operation #8 |
View Raw JSON Data
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}dgshepardreceived 0.011 SBD, 0.015 SP author reward for @dgshepard / re-ghasemkiani-translation-snippet-0320-20171015t080716341z2017/10/22 08:07:18
dgshepardreceived 0.011 SBD, 0.015 SP author reward for @dgshepard / re-ghasemkiani-translation-snippet-0320-20171015t080716341z
2017/10/22 08:07:18
| author | dgshepard |
| permlink | re-ghasemkiani-translation-snippet-0320-20171015t080716341z |
| sbd payout | 0.011 SBD |
| steem payout | 0.000 STEEM |
| vesting payout | 24.678593 VESTS |
| Transaction Info | Block #16547433/Virtual Operation #3 |
View Raw JSON Data
{
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}2017/10/16 17:10:30
2017/10/16 17:10:30
| voter | mountainwashere |
| author | dgshepard |
| permlink | re-mountainwashere-late-stage-capitalism-and-historical-prophecies-20171015t095810433z |
| weight | 10000 (100.00%) |
| Transaction Info | Block #16385567/Trx 8ec0f0d5e689ae11786e60a5d4bf6823c7ac266b |
View Raw JSON Data
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}dgshepardpublished a new post: ex-nihilo-nihil-fit-nothing-from-nothing2017/10/15 19:55:00
dgshepardpublished a new post: ex-nihilo-nihil-fit-nothing-from-nothing
2017/10/15 19:55:00
| parent author | |
| parent permlink | philosophy |
| author | dgshepard |
| permlink | ex-nihilo-nihil-fit-nothing-from-nothing |
| title | Ex nihilo nihil fit (Nothing from nothing) |
| body | <html> <p>It is a delusion that something can come out of nothing: a powerful, ancient delusion that has ruined countless gamblers and eats at the fabric of all human destiny. Every human being is the incarnation of their ancestry. Everyone represents the accumulated achievements, failures and characteristics comprising the instinctive genius of a single line of individuals preceding them, whose cultural heritage they now incarnate. Everything good we find in a person is the result of selection: it has been identified, willed and accumulated; everything beautiful in a person has been paid for through the sacrifices to selfishness made by their ancestors, who disciplined themselves, who deferred their own gratification, who in order that they might have something they lacked or treasured, paid a price and did not let themselves go. From this process of personal accretion through the generations, an order of rank inevitably develops which differentiates and distinguishes individuals.</p> <p>Our basic values and moral judgements reflect certain facts about our physiology and from a person’s judgements one can make inferences about their entire constitution and condition. Someone who judges life and the world to be meaningless and worthy of condemnation, is actually condemning and denying the value of their own body; acknowledging their own fruitlessness and denying their own abortive reality. The overall valuation of life offered by the majority has always been a complaint, a condemnation, a No – and in fact since the conception of so many people is a willing or unwilling gamble taken by incompatible parents, the majority of people are ill-bred, tepid and fatefully indecisive in their judgements, perhaps rising to the heights of their insight with the judgement that life is bittersweet.</p> <p>However, the belief that people are inherently good is a fatal and fateful error. The majority will take moral instruction from the popular singers of the moment and would rather have power over fools than listen to men of sense. As with everything, few are good, most are bad. Unfortunately those ingrates of life whose judgements befoul the world do not stop there – they are preoccupied with revenge, darkening the skies for everyone with bitter brooding, hatching new evil works and machinations for ‘improving’ others after their own fashion, increasing the amount of suffering in the world and devising new means for persecuting and discouraging the rare, good few whose judgements are actually worth something because they are well constituted beings. The good are made to suffer a bad conscience for the fact they exist, for being exceptions. Modern sensibility claims to prize fairness and decency but it abhors hierarchy and imposes a ‘genetic inheritance tax’ of bad conscience on anyone with good breeding, on anyone who is ‘in possession’ of themselves.</p> <p>To acquiesce in the false presumption that men are basically good and of equal value is to throw filth on that feeling of reverence before oneself that above all else is necessary in order for nobility to exist. It is to denounce those who determine their own virtue, and to put out the eyes of those who strive for personal excellence. It is to precipitately release the great longing that pulls back the bow of humanity – so that it fails to shoot the arrow of its will out over the people of today and tomorrow and into the future – it is the prerequisite for mob rule. It is disbelief in higher men – disbelief that people exist who are actually capable of telling the truth about the most important things – that makes us slaves to the mob. Woe to the people when the mob comes to believe that its virtues alone are virtue – for this heralds the beginning of the end for all higher culture, which is always the prime target for intemperate mob hatred, which now sacrifices the whole human future in payment for ‘injustice’, ’inequality’, for that fact it suffers today.</p> </html> |
| json metadata | {"tags":["philosophy","virtue"],"app":"steemit/0.1","format":"html"} |
| Transaction Info | Block #16360063/Trx e75c5f6c0fe2f68648a68a3d3a9583611d7d701e |
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"body": "<html>\n<p>It is a delusion that something can come out of nothing: a powerful, ancient delusion that has ruined countless gamblers and eats at the fabric of all human destiny. Every human being is the incarnation of their ancestry. Everyone represents the accumulated achievements, failures and characteristics comprising the instinctive genius of a single line of individuals preceding them, whose cultural heritage they now incarnate. Everything good we find in a person is the result of selection: it has been identified, willed and accumulated; everything beautiful in a person has been paid for through the sacrifices to selfishness made by their ancestors, who disciplined themselves, who deferred their own gratification, who in order that they might have something they lacked or treasured, paid a price and did not let themselves go. From this process of personal accretion through the generations, an order of rank inevitably develops which differentiates and distinguishes individuals.</p>\n\n<p>Our basic values and moral judgements reflect certain facts about our physiology and from a person’s judgements one can make inferences about their entire constitution and condition. Someone who judges life and the world to be meaningless and worthy of condemnation, is actually condemning and denying the value of their own body; acknowledging their own fruitlessness and denying their own abortive reality. The overall valuation of life offered by the majority has always been a complaint, a condemnation, a No – and in fact since the conception of so many people is a willing or unwilling gamble taken by incompatible parents, the majority of people are ill-bred, tepid and fatefully indecisive in their judgements, perhaps rising to the heights of their insight with the judgement that life is bittersweet.</p>\n\n<p>However, the belief that people are inherently good is a fatal and fateful error. The majority will take moral instruction from the popular singers of the moment and would rather have power over fools than listen to men of sense. As with everything, few are good, most are bad. Unfortunately those ingrates of life whose judgements befoul the world do not stop there – they are preoccupied with revenge, darkening the skies for everyone with bitter brooding, hatching new evil works and machinations for ‘improving’ others after their own fashion, increasing the amount of suffering in the world and devising new means for persecuting and discouraging the rare, good few whose judgements are actually worth something because they are well constituted beings. The good are made to suffer a bad conscience for the fact they exist, for being exceptions. Modern sensibility claims to prize fairness and decency but it abhors hierarchy and imposes a ‘genetic inheritance tax’ of bad conscience on anyone with good breeding, on anyone who is ‘in possession’ of themselves.</p>\n\n<p>To acquiesce in the false presumption that men are basically good and of equal value is to throw filth on that feeling of reverence before oneself that above all else is necessary in order for nobility to exist. It is to denounce those who determine their own virtue, and to put out the eyes of those who strive for personal excellence. It is to precipitately release the great longing that pulls back the bow of humanity – so that it fails to shoot the arrow of its will out over the people of today and tomorrow and into the future – it is the prerequisite for mob rule. It is disbelief in higher men – disbelief that people exist who are actually capable of telling the truth about the most important things – that makes us slaves to the mob. Woe to the people when the mob comes to believe that its virtues alone are virtue – for this heralds the beginning of the end for all higher culture, which is always the prime target for intemperate mob hatred, which now sacrifices the whole human future in payment for ‘injustice’, ’inequality’, for that fact it suffers today.</p>\n</html>",
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}dgshepardupdated their account properties2017/10/15 17:40:09
dgshepardupdated their account properties
2017/10/15 17:40:09
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}cotareloupvoted (25.00%) @dgshepard / re-cotarelo-quote-of-the-day-advertising-20171015t100613516z2017/10/15 15:48:24
cotareloupvoted (25.00%) @dgshepard / re-cotarelo-quote-of-the-day-advertising-20171015t100613516z
2017/10/15 15:48:24
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}dgshepardfollowed @riskdebonair2017/10/15 10:28:18
dgshepardfollowed @riskdebonair
2017/10/15 10:28:18
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}dgshepardupvoted (100.00%) @riskdebonair / the-cult-of-anti-intellectualism2017/10/15 10:28:12
dgshepardupvoted (100.00%) @riskdebonair / the-cult-of-anti-intellectualism
2017/10/15 10:28:12
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2017/10/15 10:28:06
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| permlink | re-riskdebonair-the-cult-of-anti-intellectualism-20171015t102802253z |
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| body | May I suggest the root of this problem is universal addiction to morality. |
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2017/10/15 10:20:36
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}dgshepardupvoted (100.00%) @arckrai / i-think-thefore-i-am-the-works-of-descartes2017/10/15 10:20:33
dgshepardupvoted (100.00%) @arckrai / i-think-thefore-i-am-the-works-of-descartes
2017/10/15 10:20:33
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2017/10/15 10:16:36
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}dgshepardfollowed @daydreams4rock2017/10/15 10:15:33
dgshepardfollowed @daydreams4rock
2017/10/15 10:15:33
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}dgshepardupvoted (100.00%) @daydreams4rock / your-know-it-s-true-lao-tzu-is-the-rockstar-philosopher2017/10/15 10:15:24
dgshepardupvoted (100.00%) @daydreams4rock / your-know-it-s-true-lao-tzu-is-the-rockstar-philosopher
2017/10/15 10:15:24
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}2017/10/15 10:13:42
2017/10/15 10:13:42
| parent author | diabolika |
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| author | dgshepard |
| permlink | re-diabolika-the-only-way-does-not-exist-20171015t101342002z |
| title | |
| body | Where exactly are you quoting Nietzsche from in your opening attribution? Incidentally the philosophy of Bruce Lee is that 'the way' is to have 'no way'. |
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}2017/10/15 10:06:15
2017/10/15 10:06:15
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| author | dgshepard |
| permlink | re-cotarelo-quote-of-the-day-advertising-20171015t100613516z |
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| body | An advertiser laments he can't find the staff. Very well but make no mistake advertising is currently the great formative influence on earth. More pervasive and insidious than politics and religion even. |
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}2017/10/15 10:02:51
2017/10/15 10:02:51
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| body | Congratulations @dgshepard! You have completed some achievement on Steemit and have been rewarded with new badge(s) : [](http://steemitboard.com/@dgshepard) You made your First Vote [](http://steemitboard.com/@dgshepard) You made your First Comment Click on any badge to view your own Board of Honor on SteemitBoard. For more information about SteemitBoard, click [here](https://steemit.com/@steemitboard) If you no longer want to receive notifications, reply to this comment with the word `STOP` > By upvoting this notification, you can help all Steemit users. Learn how [here](https://steemit.com/steemitboard/@steemitboard/http-i-cubeupload-com-7ciqeo-png)! |
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2017/10/15 10:01:03
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}dgshepardfollowed @mountainwashere2017/10/15 09:58:51
dgshepardfollowed @mountainwashere
2017/10/15 09:58:51
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2017/10/15 09:58:12
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| author | dgshepard |
| permlink | re-mountainwashere-late-stage-capitalism-and-historical-prophecies-20171015t095810433z |
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| body | The 'end of history' indeed. History is eternal. |
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}dgshepardfollowed @gamesjoyce2017/10/15 09:45:15
dgshepardfollowed @gamesjoyce
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}dgshepardfollowed @old-joe-hill2017/10/15 09:40:48
dgshepardfollowed @old-joe-hill
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}dgshepardupvoted (100.00%) @old-joe-hill / welcome-to-god-incorporated2017/10/15 09:40:39
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}dgshepardupvoted (100.00%) @tarazkp / freedom-and-responsibility2017/10/15 09:36:42
dgshepardupvoted (100.00%) @tarazkp / freedom-and-responsibility
2017/10/15 09:36:42
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}2017/10/15 08:07:18
2017/10/15 08:07:18
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| body | Life itself is valuation and contention over values. Might and force cannot logically exclude violence. It seems to me that in this quote Gandhi advocates an alternative method for struggle - a surreptitious, more feminine form of violence. |
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}dgshepardupvoted (100.00%) @gavvet / the-south-african-border-war-the-80-s-begins2017/10/15 07:44:09
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}dgshepardupdated their account properties2017/10/15 07:20:03
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}steemdelegated 18.320 SP to @dgshepard2017/10/13 05:11:54
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}ohreallyupvoted (1.00%) @dgshepard / philosopher-s-virtues2017/10/07 10:58:00
ohreallyupvoted (1.00%) @dgshepard / philosopher-s-virtues
2017/10/07 10:58:00
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}dgshepardpublished a new post: philosopher-s-virtues2017/10/07 10:31:00
dgshepardpublished a new post: philosopher-s-virtues
2017/10/07 10:31:00
| parent author | |
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| author | dgshepard |
| permlink | philosopher-s-virtues |
| title | Philosopher's virtues |
| body | In no form of experience do reason and feeling operate independently. In order to form an understanding of something, reason and feeling are combined by the imagination. However, the ‘methods’ of reason and feeling are opposed and this presents an obstacle to the intellect in its search for knowledge. Reason discovers differences, analyses its object into distinct parts and qualities, above all it postpones judgement regarding the whole. Feeling originates in a judgement concerning the whole, invests its object with qualities and proceeds by fabricating similarities among the parts. Thus those who are intense and passionate are prone to error because they lack restraint and are incapable of deferring judgement, those who are cold and dispassionate because they are paralysed with fear of misplacing their feeling. The primary virtues of the man of knowledge (Philosopher’s virtues, if you will) are therefore self-control and courage. If as a man of knowledge the Philosopher is also a sceptic, he may well reserve suspicions regarding Virtue as such and his measure of these two qualities he will call his temperament. |
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"body": "In no form of experience do reason and feeling operate independently. In order to form an understanding of something, reason and feeling are combined by the imagination. However, the ‘methods’ of reason and feeling are opposed and this presents an obstacle to the intellect in its search for knowledge. Reason discovers differences, analyses its object into distinct parts and qualities, above all it postpones judgement regarding the whole. Feeling originates in a judgement concerning the whole, invests its object with qualities and proceeds by fabricating similarities among the parts. Thus those who are intense and passionate are prone to error because they lack restraint and are incapable of deferring judgement, those who are cold and dispassionate because they are paralysed with fear of misplacing their feeling. The primary virtues of the man of knowledge (Philosopher’s virtues, if you will) are therefore self-control and courage. If as a man of knowledge the Philosopher is also a sceptic, he may well reserve suspicions regarding Virtue as such and his measure of these two qualities he will call his temperament.",
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}dgshepardpublished a new post: the-truthfulness-of-socrates2017/10/06 19:57:36
dgshepardpublished a new post: the-truthfulness-of-socrates
2017/10/06 19:57:36
| parent author | |
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| permlink | the-truthfulness-of-socrates |
| title | The truthfulness of Socrates |
| body | Socrates is an enigma. Like Jesus of Nazareth he never wrote a thing of his own. In such cases it is always advisable to draw on gloves; we cannot know who we are really dealing with and in examining their histories one cannot be sufficiently circumspect. As we shift away the dust and accretions of time, the bold outlines of these figures nonetheless emerge in relief and we are able to discern and identify their types by the outlines of their methods. In the case of Jesus, the method he modelled was a way of living, an extreme egocentrism whereby the inner world is transformed into the kingdom of heaven, the outside world relegated to a painful dream: in short, the heart is sacred, what feels good is good. In the case of Socrates the method he teaches is Scepticism. He is not interested in knowledge of the world as such and disdains the fervour of fellow Sophists for physical philosophy. His concern is the right way of living and he applies scepticism as the basis for moral philosophy. In the same way that through his revolt against the Jewish Church, Jesus goaded the Pharisees into having him crucified, Socrates by using dialectics to discredit the hitherto prevailing knowledge and culture goaded the Athenians into handing him a poison cup. Socrates was found guilty of refusing to recognise the gods acknowledged by the state, importing strange divinities of his own and further of corrupting the young. It is remarkable that in his Memorabilia, Xenophon (a contemporary Athenian historian and our best source for historical facts about Socrates) contests each of these charges, quite incredulous that Socrates should be persecuted for his ideal of the enlightened good man. In this Xenophon characterises himself as a biographer and theorist rather than a psychologist or politician and it is to Aristophanes that we must turn for insight into the cultural and philosophical significance of this sage. The importance of Aristophanes’ testimony cannot be overestimated. This noble and timeless comic genius satirises Socratic wisdom mercilessly, judging the relationship of Socrates not only to society but to truth to be sufficiently wanting in taste to provide material for an entire comedy, The Clouds. None other than Friedrich Nietzsche, – who judged that Greek culture post Socrates is in decline – said the fact they produced an Aristophanes excuses the Greeks (he actually refers to him as holy Aristophanes at one point). Quoted by Plato in ‘The death of Socrates’ he (Socrates) says “[ I teach ]…not to take thought for your persons or your properties, but and chiefly to care about the greatest improvement of the soul…that virtue is not given by money, but that from virtue comes money and every other good of man, public as well as private.” Naturally this sort of idealising, armchair philosophizing and process of abstracting virtue and goodness was found contemptible by those actually in possession of power. Aristophanes lampoons Socrates as a man in stasis, hoisted above the ground in a basket, removed from life and suspended in contemplation. He describes Socrates’ disciples as pale and emaciated creatures. The ‘improvement of the soul’ – a truly astonishing inversion of perspectives whereby the value of an action was separated from the consequences of the action and projected onto the soul, the intention, the conscious motives for the action. Hitherto actions had been judged solely for their consequences. A man pays and suffers for his imprudence but the cause of his wrongdoings was to be sought in the gods: to them were attributed the guilt for atrocities and evil, equally the merit for all human achievements and greatness. What freedom of soul such a self unconscious age must have enjoyed, what mysteries and untapped human potential the future must have promised when it was still possible to be seduced, kidnapped, raped, cajoled, deceived and beguiled by a god. The Socratic interpretation of the maxim ‘Know yourself’ was an insult that slammed the door shut in the faces of the gods and marks the end of the ‘pre-moral’ era of western civilisation. Socrates claimed to be guided in his conduct by an inner voice. Albeit with some embarrassment, practically everyone will recall their own suggestibility; an occasion when their ‘mind has been made up’ regarding a matter, based on some such ‘signs’ or ‘voices in their head’. In all you encounter you seek what is yours, what you alone can make use of, discarding the larger part of what is presented to your senses. The flight or cry of birds, the utterances of others, chance meetings, every coincidence and happenstance merely metaphors, occasions for extending self awareness, for illuminating aspects of your own reality by the light of your consciousness. However, that Socrates before the Athenians should insist to the end that such promptings are ‘something divine’ and ‘the god’ betrays the turmoil of his instincts; that it was the whirlwind that ruled him and not Zeus. It confirmed the effeteness of his self preservative instincts that should have brought him to his senses and silenced the chattering in his head long enough for him to distinguish between reason and reality. The prerequisite for mastery is harmony between reason and instinct. When force is released into activity without resistance or deliberation, the will is inexorable. The mind is a mirror for the body, its purpose to serve and support the body’s will with good reasons, but mind is a product of the body. As an effect of the body mind cannot produce action, it cannot cause anything: what is present in the spirit is an afterglow of events taking place in the senses and the body. People are always saying, intending, or promising one thing and doing another, both before witnesses and themselves alone. By way of explanation, those who believe that reality is spirit and spirit cause say the spirit is willing but the flesh is weak; a clear indication that they understand the world as if it were upside down. The mind conceives the multiplicity of your being as a unity, as ego. To you it seems this unified subject, your ego is the seat of your judgement, but your body rules your mind and prompts the conceptions of your ego. For the game of life a team is assembled within you; many subsidiary competing powers aggregated in the reality of your body to form a perspective for valuation. By this incarnate will you strive to become the person you are. This is all your fate – not enlightenment, but personal empowerment, practical self realisation. Thoughts and feelings, principles, faith – these are all a subtext, a foreground of attitude behind which the instincts actually control activity. Self knowledge is counteractive: this is the revelation of Prince Hamlet, that the serpent of knowledge eats its own tail – its power is self destructive. “O cursed spite! That ever I was born to set it right”. Morality sets the individual an impossible task, it demands the unnatural, the unreal, it negates the actual and lies like a curse upon it. Nature runs its course, it cannot be otherwise. How hollow ring the platitudes of the contemptible chatterer Polonius in such an ignominious death. There are dark pockets of reality just beyond the pale where no precepts suffice, to get lost and flounder about these labyrinths in search of reason induces madness, the stark horror of bottomless pits of absurdity leads to insanity. Xenophon inadvertently hits on the truth regarding Socrates with his observation that this most self-controlled of men can only have been a corrupting influence if the cultivation of goodness is a form of corruption. Through the continuation of Socratism via Platonism and Christianity the concept of the Good was made absolute. God has step by step been distilled into the opposing principle to your actual and irredeemable personal instincts. No small indication of the aforementioned corruption. When self doubt and bad conscience is interweaved with natural inclinations, the disharmony of instincts confers a general agitation over the person; – instability, ill temperedness, inhibition and weakness of will, – one forfeits self assurance, vitality is suppressed, one is surreptitiously made sick with a sinister sickness, with man’s suffering from himself, the heart is transformed into a dangerous wilderness. When Hamlet asks himself, ‘To be or not to be?…Whether ‘tis nobler in the mind…’ we know it is all over with him, he is infected, a shadow, just like Ophelia his innocence is now a dream. What Presocratic Greece shows, what all history shows is that those whose concern is to hold on to power believe in the gods but trust only their own entrails. Why then would Socrates choose self violation, self defilement on principle? Not to rejoice in oneself as a fate, not to learn to shoot the arrow from one’s own bow but to brand oneself with a criticism, a contradiction, a contempt of a soul voluntarily divided against itself. To live in conscious opposition to your natural inclinations and instincts, to live as an actor of life, to continually affect a cheerful temperance through the gritted teeth of self constraint, this heroic disposition is the definition of a life of suffering and a recipe for the dissolution of others. The condition for the value of the unegoistic is the will to mistreat the self. Selflessness, self-denial, self-sacrifice are the ideals of the cruel heart that pleasures in cruelty to the self. His natural inclinations must have presented him with an even greater danger. He may have been combating an urge for self annihilation; he was teaching that virtue leads to happiness, his suffering must have convinced him of his own evil. He knew the bounty of his instincts was misery, that he needed to calculate his every move, that if he were to stop reflecting for a moment and let himself go, his natural inclinations would bound forth like uncaged tigers and he would be reprehended and ruined by his own conduct. The fateful ignominy of this faithful soldier and servant of Athens would have stirred in him a hatred for the young aristocrats: a desire for revenge on those unprincipled, idiotic, arrogant rich kids who hardly gave a thought to what they did, so high and mighty on their father’s shoulders and horses, so impressively good looking, served hand and foot, conducting themselves with the utmost levity and hardly putting a foot wrong, while he suffered a life of poverty, privation and self denial yet denied honour, regarded with suspicion, notoriety, a spectacle, living within narrow, regular constraints without reprieve from the danger of succumbing to some humiliating and dishonourable indiscretion. How mercilessly he must have gone about hacking down those noble trees – how he must have delighted in their humiliation, confusion and tears. In the marketplace of ideas, where people are prepared to pay for their opinions to prevail and where blood is the strongest currency, the demagogue prevails and the opinions of whoever argues loudest and most impetuously. Here the noble qualities of a man are rendered useless: – will, self control, taciturn reserve and silence are of no avail – here you are under constant assault, it is up to you to prove you are not an idiot, here the unscrupulous smooth talker with a handful of pointed questions can reduce to a confused and stammering wreck even the worthiest giant of courage and noble honesty and completely ruin his credibility. Those who bear responsibility for the future and act with the necessity of fate are mistrustful of argumentation and dialectics; they are aware of their own authority and their will for the future is already determined. Authority does not demean itself by arguing, it does not give reasons, it commands. Among those capable of keeping their word and their promises, it is understood the less doubt the less philosophy. Socrates claims to seek an authority before which to yield but through him we come to know ourselves grossly ignorant – he in fact denies authority as such. The important point about the Sophists is not, as we are told that they resorted to false reasoning to argue their cause, rather it is that against them no reverence could be defended. Socrates before all others knew that whatever reasons were given to justify a morality, he could show them to be sophistical: no matter what point was made against him in an argument, he could deny he was defeated, attain his purpose and convince those who had seen him overcome. At a time when in Greece men were still the fairer sex, his sheer ugliness had even won him such disputes before. Socrates was the most skilful interlocutor in Greece at a time when rationality and the development of the intellect came to dominate higher education while public communication and oratory became increasingly the means and authority whereby power was to be attained and disputed within the institutions of the state. The Sophists as sceptics emerge as the higher teachers of Greece, representatives of a clear sighted, unsentimental honesty that cleared away large tracts of religious dogma and superstition in natural philosophy, focusing and advancing knowledge in many practical subjects. The Sophists are the first to see through morality, to understand that life itself is dispute over value and valuation, the first to actually represent the view that moral prerogatives are the rights taken by the victor. At this point, when what was needed most was solidarity in suspicion of morality itself, to conduct a careful examination of what the relativism of morality means, Socrates instead places the question mark against self determination, he adopts a scepticism regarding himself as a principle. It was least of all for his eccentric and impractical fidelity to ‘truth’ that Socrates exercised such fascination in aristocratic circles. It was their ambition that drew them to him. To be formidable in debate, to be unrivalled in the arts of speech and disputation, greed for gain in the new domain of ideas: even Xenophon is sure this is why Alcibiades and Critias for instance kept company with Socrates and not their love of truth exactly. Through his self effacing example Socrates demonstrates that truthfulness is actually a tendency ultimately inimical to life. He was not a martyr for the sake of intellectual conscience, in the first place the idea is a contradiction. That which your ancestors did and liked doing you too find natural and enjoyable. Socrates was the son of a sculptor; the Greeks were to be his marble – he promised to teach them what is good, what evil. True integrity would have seen Socrates rather turn his back on the city saying, ‘It is better to play dice with children than play politics with you’ as did Heraclitus, who showed by the example of his life that wisdom is set apart from all things and let death take care of itself. |
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"body": "Socrates is an enigma. Like Jesus of Nazareth he never wrote a thing of his own. In such cases it is always advisable to draw on gloves; we cannot know who we are really dealing with and in examining their histories one cannot be sufficiently circumspect. As we shift away the dust and accretions of time, the bold outlines of these figures nonetheless emerge in relief and we are able to discern and identify their types by the outlines of their methods. In the case of Jesus, the method he modelled was a way of living, an extreme egocentrism whereby the inner world is transformed into the kingdom of heaven, the outside world relegated to a painful dream: in short, the heart is sacred, what feels good is good. In the case of Socrates the method he teaches is Scepticism. He is not interested in knowledge of the world as such and disdains the fervour of fellow Sophists for physical philosophy. His concern is the right way of living and he applies scepticism as the basis for moral philosophy. In the same way that through his revolt against the Jewish Church, Jesus goaded the Pharisees into having him crucified, Socrates by using dialectics to discredit the hitherto prevailing knowledge and culture goaded the Athenians into handing him a poison cup. Socrates was found guilty of refusing to recognise the gods acknowledged by the state, importing strange divinities of his own and further of corrupting the young. It is remarkable that in his Memorabilia, Xenophon (a contemporary Athenian historian and our best source for historical facts about Socrates) contests each of these charges, quite incredulous that Socrates should be persecuted for his ideal of the enlightened good man. In this Xenophon characterises himself as a biographer and theorist rather than a psychologist or politician and it is to Aristophanes that we must turn for insight into the cultural and philosophical significance of this sage. The importance of Aristophanes’ testimony cannot be overestimated. This noble and timeless comic genius satirises Socratic wisdom mercilessly, judging the relationship of Socrates not only to society but to truth to be sufficiently wanting in taste to provide material for an entire comedy, The Clouds. None other than Friedrich Nietzsche, – who judged that Greek culture post Socrates is in decline – said the fact they produced an Aristophanes excuses the Greeks (he actually refers to him as holy Aristophanes at one point).\nQuoted by Plato in ‘The death of Socrates’ he (Socrates) says “[ I teach ]…not to take thought for your persons or your properties, but and chiefly to care about the greatest improvement of the soul…that virtue is not given by money, but that from virtue comes money and every other good of man, public as well as private.” Naturally this sort of idealising, armchair philosophizing and process of abstracting virtue and goodness was found contemptible by those actually in possession of power. Aristophanes lampoons Socrates as a man in stasis, hoisted above the ground in a basket, removed from life and suspended in contemplation. He describes Socrates’ disciples as pale and emaciated creatures. The ‘improvement of the soul’ – a truly astonishing inversion of perspectives whereby the value of an action was separated from the consequences of the action and projected onto the soul, the intention, the conscious motives for the action. Hitherto actions had been judged solely for their consequences. A man pays and suffers for his imprudence but the cause of his wrongdoings was to be sought in the gods: to them were attributed the guilt for atrocities and evil, equally the merit for all human achievements and greatness. What freedom of soul such a self unconscious age must have enjoyed, what mysteries and untapped human potential the future must have promised when it was still possible to be seduced, kidnapped, raped, cajoled, deceived and beguiled by a god. The Socratic interpretation of the maxim ‘Know yourself’ was an insult that slammed the door shut in the faces of the gods and marks the end of the ‘pre-moral’ era of western civilisation.\nSocrates claimed to be guided in his conduct by an inner voice. Albeit with some embarrassment, practically everyone will recall their own suggestibility; an occasion when their ‘mind has been made up’ regarding a matter, based on some such ‘signs’ or ‘voices in their head’. In all you encounter you seek what is yours, what you alone can make use of, discarding the larger part of what is presented to your senses. The flight or cry of birds, the utterances of others, chance meetings, every coincidence and happenstance merely metaphors, occasions for extending self awareness, for illuminating aspects of your own reality by the light of your consciousness. However, that Socrates before the Athenians should insist to the end that such promptings are ‘something divine’ and ‘the god’ betrays the turmoil of his instincts; that it was the whirlwind that ruled him and not Zeus. It confirmed the effeteness of his self preservative instincts that should have brought him to his senses and silenced the chattering in his head long enough for him to distinguish between reason and reality. The prerequisite for mastery is harmony between reason and instinct. When force is released into activity without resistance or deliberation, the will is inexorable. The mind is a mirror for the body, its purpose to serve and support the body’s will with good reasons, but mind is a product of the body. As an effect of the body mind cannot produce action, it cannot cause anything: what is present in the spirit is an afterglow of events taking place in the senses and the body. People are always saying, intending, or promising one thing and doing another, both before witnesses and themselves alone. By way of explanation, those who believe that reality is spirit and spirit cause say the spirit is willing but the flesh is weak; a clear indication that they understand the world as if it were upside down. The mind conceives the multiplicity of your being as a unity, as ego. To you it seems this unified subject, your ego is the seat of your judgement, but your body rules your mind and prompts the conceptions of your ego. For the game of life a team is assembled within you; many subsidiary competing powers aggregated in the reality of your body to form a perspective for valuation. By this incarnate will you strive to become the person you are. This is all your fate – not enlightenment, but personal empowerment, practical self realisation. Thoughts and feelings, principles, faith – these are all a subtext, a foreground of attitude behind which the instincts actually control activity. Self knowledge is counteractive: this is the revelation of Prince Hamlet, that the serpent of knowledge eats its own tail – its power is self destructive. “O cursed spite! That ever I was born to set it right”. Morality sets the individual an impossible task, it demands the unnatural, the unreal, it negates the actual and lies like a curse upon it. Nature runs its course, it cannot be otherwise. How hollow ring the platitudes of the contemptible chatterer Polonius in such an ignominious death. There are dark pockets of reality just beyond the pale where no precepts suffice, to get lost and flounder about these labyrinths in search of reason induces madness, the stark horror of bottomless pits of absurdity leads to insanity. Xenophon inadvertently hits on the truth regarding Socrates with his observation that this most self-controlled of men can only have been a corrupting influence if the cultivation of goodness is a form of corruption. Through the continuation of Socratism via Platonism and Christianity the concept of the Good was made absolute. God has step by step been distilled into the opposing principle to your actual and irredeemable personal instincts. No small indication of the aforementioned corruption. When self doubt and bad conscience is interweaved with natural inclinations, the disharmony of instincts confers a general agitation over the person; – instability, ill temperedness, inhibition and weakness of will, – one forfeits self assurance, vitality is suppressed, one is surreptitiously made sick with a sinister sickness, with man’s suffering from himself, the heart is transformed into a dangerous wilderness. When Hamlet asks himself, ‘To be or not to be?…Whether ‘tis nobler in the mind…’ we know it is all over with him, he is infected, a shadow, just like Ophelia his innocence is now a dream. What Presocratic Greece shows, what all history shows is that those whose concern is to hold on to power believe in the gods but trust only their own entrails. Why then would Socrates choose self violation, self defilement on principle? Not to rejoice in oneself as a fate, not to learn to shoot the arrow from one’s own bow but to brand oneself with a criticism, a contradiction, a contempt of a soul voluntarily divided against itself. To live in conscious opposition to your natural inclinations and instincts, to live as an actor of life, to continually affect a cheerful temperance through the gritted teeth of self constraint, this heroic disposition is the definition of a life of suffering and a recipe for the dissolution of others. The condition for the value of the unegoistic is the will to mistreat the self. Selflessness, self-denial, self-sacrifice are the ideals of the cruel heart that pleasures in cruelty to the self. His natural inclinations must have presented him with an even greater danger. He may have been combating an urge for self annihilation; he was teaching that virtue leads to happiness, his suffering must have convinced him of his own evil. He knew the bounty of his instincts was misery, that he needed to calculate his every move, that if he were to stop reflecting for a moment and let himself go, his natural inclinations would bound forth like uncaged tigers and he would be reprehended and ruined by his own conduct. The fateful ignominy of this faithful soldier and servant of Athens would have stirred in him a hatred for the young aristocrats: a desire for revenge on those unprincipled, idiotic, arrogant rich kids who hardly gave a thought to what they did, so high and mighty on their father’s shoulders and horses, so impressively good looking, served hand and foot, conducting themselves with the utmost levity and hardly putting a foot wrong, while he suffered a life of poverty, privation and self denial yet denied honour, regarded with suspicion, notoriety, a spectacle, living within narrow, regular constraints without reprieve from the danger of succumbing to some humiliating and dishonourable indiscretion. How mercilessly he must have gone about hacking down those noble trees – how he must have delighted in their humiliation, confusion and tears. In the marketplace of ideas, where people are prepared to pay for their opinions to prevail and where blood is the strongest currency, the demagogue prevails and the opinions of whoever argues loudest and most impetuously. Here the noble qualities of a man are rendered useless: – will, self control, taciturn reserve and silence are of no avail – here you are under constant assault, it is up to you to prove you are not an idiot, here the unscrupulous smooth talker with a handful of pointed questions can reduce to a confused and stammering wreck even the worthiest giant of courage and noble honesty and completely ruin his credibility. Those who bear responsibility for the future and act with the necessity of fate are mistrustful of argumentation and dialectics; they are aware of their own authority and their will for the future is already determined. Authority does not demean itself by arguing, it does not give reasons, it commands. Among those capable of keeping their word and their promises, it is understood the less doubt the less philosophy. Socrates claims to seek an authority before which to yield but through him we come to know ourselves grossly ignorant – he in fact denies authority as such. The important point about the Sophists is not, as we are told that they resorted to false reasoning to argue their cause, rather it is that against them no reverence could be defended. Socrates before all others knew that whatever reasons were given to justify a morality, he could show them to be sophistical: no matter what point was made against him in an argument, he could deny he was defeated, attain his purpose and convince those who had seen him overcome. At a time when in Greece men were still the fairer sex, his sheer ugliness had even won him such disputes before. Socrates was the most skilful interlocutor in Greece at a time when rationality and the development of the intellect came to dominate higher education while public communication and oratory became increasingly the means and authority whereby power was to be attained and disputed within the institutions of the state. The Sophists as sceptics emerge as the higher teachers of Greece, representatives of a clear sighted, unsentimental honesty that cleared away large tracts of religious dogma and superstition in natural philosophy, focusing and advancing knowledge in many practical subjects. The Sophists are the first to see through morality, to understand that life itself is dispute over value and valuation, the first to actually represent the view that moral prerogatives are the rights taken by the victor. At this point, when what was needed most was solidarity in suspicion of morality itself, to conduct a careful examination of what the relativism of morality means, Socrates instead places the question mark against self determination, he adopts a scepticism regarding himself as a principle. It was least of all for his eccentric and impractical fidelity to ‘truth’ that Socrates exercised such fascination in aristocratic circles. It was their ambition that drew them to him. To be formidable in debate, to be unrivalled in the arts of speech and disputation, greed for gain in the new domain of ideas: even Xenophon is sure this is why Alcibiades and Critias for instance kept company with Socrates and not their love of truth exactly. Through his self effacing example Socrates demonstrates that truthfulness is actually a tendency ultimately inimical to life. He was not a martyr for the sake of intellectual conscience, in the first place the idea is a contradiction. That which your ancestors did and liked doing you too find natural and enjoyable. Socrates was the son of a sculptor; the Greeks were to be his marble – he promised to teach them what is good, what evil. True integrity would have seen Socrates rather turn his back on the city saying, ‘It is better to play dice with children than play politics with you’ as did Heraclitus, who showed by the example of his life that wisdom is set apart from all things and let death take care of itself.",
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}2017/10/05 23:07:21
2017/10/05 23:07:21
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| body | Congratulations @dgshepard! You have completed some achievement on Steemit and have been rewarded with new badge(s) : [](http://steemitboard.com/@dgshepard) You published your First Post Click on any badge to view your own Board of Honor on SteemitBoard. For more information about SteemitBoard, click [here](https://steemit.com/@steemitboard) If you no longer want to receive notifications, reply to this comment with the word `STOP` > By upvoting this notification, you can help all Steemit users. Learn how [here](https://steemit.com/steemitboard/@steemitboard/http-i-cubeupload-com-7ciqeo-png)! |
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}dgshepardpublished a new post: able-to-wait2017/10/05 20:08:45
dgshepardpublished a new post: able-to-wait
2017/10/05 20:08:45
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}dgshepardpublished a new post: able-to-wait2017/10/05 20:08:06
dgshepardpublished a new post: able-to-wait
2017/10/05 20:08:06
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}dgshepardpublished a new post: able-to-wait2017/10/05 20:06:54
dgshepardpublished a new post: able-to-wait
2017/10/05 20:06:54
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| body | <html> <p> </p> <p><em>Does the caterpillar envy the butterfly and ponder how he might change and improve himself to be more like a butterfly?</em></p> <p>The greatness of Ajax is plain to see. His valor and fearsome strength in battle, acclaimed by the Greek Chieftains and Trojans alike; The awe and love of his kinsmen. Yet this god-like man disgraced his name and destroyed himself. Why did this happen? It happened because Ajax would not yield to reason and restrain his passion. He dishonoured the divine principle personified by the goddess Athena, who embodies and reifies the civic virtues. The fatality of Ajax however was his very character – what could he have done to improve himself? https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:The_Belvedere_Torso_depicting_Ajax.jpg#/media/File:The_Belvedere_Torso_depicting_Ajax.jpg</p> <p>He could have fought as the champion and protector of his own people, not independently for his own enrichment and glory. Then he would have stopped fighting in good time - but to gain immortality through the exploits of war, that was what he really lived for. He could have yielded to his friends, honoured the vote of the Greek chieftains who awarded Achilles’ armour to one less worthy than he, and thereby upheld their authority and the will of the collective, whereby his people were protected and prospered. Yet the purity of his character, the uncompromising <em>will </em>nourishing all his virtue and heroism was outraged and violated by the lying, cheating cunning of his political superiors. </p> <p>In truth he was superior and the deserving victor. He could have waited in his tent, endured the disgrace and allowed time and the comforts of home, family and friends to blunt the ignominy and reconcile him with life again - but what meaning life had for him was destroyed. The injustice of his subjugation burned his guts and heart like acid. The insult to his nature burdened him with a shame that would only deepen over time. In the end, as all along, Ajax was true to himself and in his case <em>that</em> amounts to a tragedy. </p> <p>Here, nature, without mercy, destroys one of its highest types. Questionable, relentless, cruel Nature is unveiled – a sight to blind a man. We have only to ask Sophocles but he offers also a redemption from the horror and disgust at existence that the tragedy evokes. A redeeming, tragic wisdom is revealed, formulated by Odysseus, in the concluding action of the play: ‘He wins the victory who yields to his friends’ he says and ‘I cannot recommend a rigid spirit’. The defeat, shame and death of Ajax is redeemed by offering it as a sacrifice by means of which tragic wisdom is demonstrated. Odysseus is shown to have Athena on his side, he speaks and acts wisely and if the viewer takes heed he stand to profit. As for Ajax – to live greatly is to suffer greatly. He cannot be asked to have improved himself. His greatness and goodness was all behind him and could never be renewed.</p> </html> |
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"body": "<html>\n<p> </p>\n<p><em>Does the caterpillar envy the butterfly and ponder how he might change and improve himself to be more like a butterfly?</em></p>\n<p>The greatness of Ajax is plain to see. His valor and fearsome strength in battle, acclaimed by the Greek Chieftains and Trojans alike; The awe and love of his kinsmen. Yet this god-like man disgraced his name and destroyed himself. Why did this happen? It happened because Ajax would not yield to reason and restrain his passion. He dishonoured the divine principle personified by the goddess Athena, who embodies and reifies the civic virtues. The fatality of Ajax however was his very character – what could he have done to improve himself? https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:The_Belvedere_Torso_depicting_Ajax.jpg#/media/File:The_Belvedere_Torso_depicting_Ajax.jpg</p>\n<p>He could have fought as the champion and protector of his own people, not independently for his own enrichment and glory. Then he would have stopped fighting in good time - but to gain immortality through the exploits of war, that was what he really lived for. He could have yielded to his friends, honoured the vote of the Greek chieftains who awarded Achilles’ armour to one less worthy than he, and thereby upheld their authority and the will of the collective, whereby his people were protected and prospered. Yet the purity of his character, the uncompromising <em>will </em>nourishing all his virtue and heroism was outraged and violated by the lying, cheating cunning of his political superiors. </p>\n<p>In truth he was superior and the deserving victor. He could have waited in his tent, endured the disgrace and allowed time and the comforts of home, family and friends to blunt the ignominy and reconcile him with life again - but what meaning life had for him was destroyed. The injustice of his subjugation burned his guts and heart like acid. The insult to his nature burdened him with a shame that would only deepen over time. In the end, as all along, Ajax was true to himself and in his case <em>that</em> amounts to a tragedy. </p>\n<p>Here, nature, without mercy, destroys one of its highest types. Questionable, relentless, cruel Nature is unveiled – a sight to blind a man. We have only to ask Sophocles but he offers also a redemption from the horror and disgust at existence that the tragedy evokes. A redeeming, tragic wisdom is revealed, formulated by Odysseus, in the concluding action of the play: ‘He wins the victory who yields to his friends’ he says and ‘I cannot recommend a rigid spirit’. The defeat, shame and death of Ajax is redeemed by offering it as a sacrifice by means of which tragic wisdom is demonstrated. Odysseus is shown to have Athena on his side, he speaks and acts wisely and if the viewer takes heed he stand to profit. As for Ajax – to live greatly is to suffer greatly. He cannot be asked to have improved himself. His greatness and goodness was all behind him and could never be renewed.</p>\n</html>",
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}steemcreated a new account: @dgshepard2017/10/05 18:29:12
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1
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[
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1
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"posting": {
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"json_metadata": "",
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]
}Manabar
Voting Power100.00%
Downvote Power100.00%
Resource Credits100.00%
Reputation Progress0.00%
{
"voting_manabar": {
"current_mana": "8143659806",
"last_update_time": 1779060450
},
"downvote_manabar": {
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},
"rc_account": {
"account": "dgshepard",
"rc_manabar": {
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"last_update_time": 1779060450
},
"max_rc_creation_adjustment": {
"amount": "2020748973",
"precision": 6,
"nai": "@@000000037"
},
"max_rc": "10164408779"
}
}Account Metadata
| POSTING JSON METADATA | |
| profile | {"name":"David G Shepard","about":"Amateur Woodworker and Existentialist","location":"Oxford, United Kingdom","profile_image":"https://i.imgsafe.org/30/30d6a5d05f.jpeg","website":"https://twitter.com/dgshepard"} |
| JSON METADATA | |
| profile | {"name":"David G Shepard","about":"Amateur Woodworker and Existentialist","location":"Oxford, United Kingdom","profile_image":"https://i.imgsafe.org/30/30d6a5d05f.jpeg","website":"https://twitter.com/dgshepard"} |
{
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"about": "Amateur Woodworker and Existentialist",
"location": "Oxford, United Kingdom",
"profile_image": "https://i.imgsafe.org/30/30d6a5d05f.jpeg",
"website": "https://twitter.com/dgshepard"
}
},
"json_metadata": {
"profile": {
"name": "David G Shepard",
"about": "Amateur Woodworker and Existentialist",
"location": "Oxford, United Kingdom",
"profile_image": "https://i.imgsafe.org/30/30d6a5d05f.jpeg",
"website": "https://twitter.com/dgshepard"
}
}
}Auth Keys
Owner
Single Signature
Public Keys
STM51ZiE2AY2cyxoTkGRFaaAhsJGhmjCMF4ubY2xxWLr7dnzG7hYn1/1
Active
Single Signature
Public Keys
STM889L1ehvCoGypKVvSStN8oqtvf8w6ooRvc2qoZt5hPLSVs1bjX1/1
Posting
Single Signature
Public Keys
STM6HASCoBBmTDfh4e17dVPVqtUJMmX9u9xqm8vThZinXgAydqrEC1/1
App Permissions
@dtube.app1/1
Memo
STM89vTRKo2AsLY9vVfLVh8v7PDm4W1k7Cuh4AALgbkZtBU73ps3h
{
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1
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},
"active": {
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"posting": {
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"key_auths": [
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1
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"memo": "STM89vTRKo2AsLY9vVfLVh8v7PDm4W1k7Cuh4AALgbkZtBU73ps3h"
}Witness Votes
0 / 30
No active witness votes.
[]