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A dream kills anger, by Dr. Mohammed Dabasheh

A dream kills anger, by Dr. Mohammed Dabasheh
A dream kills anger, by  Dr.  Mohammed Dabasheh

 

Socrates is one of the ancient Greek philosophers born in 470 B.C. in Athens Greece. His research method and philosophical view laid the foundation for the Western system of logic and philosophy, and his life was chronicled from a few sources, for example, the dialogues of Plato and Zantib, his wife, who was treated harshly by him And she had the audacity to publicly reprimand and taunt him in front of his students for his failure to fulfill his family responsibilities and his preoccupation with counseling and guidance without work that he earns from him to spend on her and his children and have mercy on them from bread and lentils every day.

Despite this, Socrates was a dreamer who was not angry, and when his wife asked him about the secret of his dream, he tells her that you are like someone who sets fire to wet wood and smiles, but he tasted the two things in his marital life, yet he said in his late days, advising his students to marry the young man in any case. Sincere, happy tomorrow, and if fate bestows on him an evil quarrelsome wife, he becomes a philosopher.

Among the funny sayings of Socrates about his wife, “I owe this woman, otherwise she would not have learned that wisdom in silence and happiness in sleep. And one of the funny situations that history tells us is that Socrates was sitting with his students at home teaching them and if his wife enters on it and throws words of insult as it is As usual, after that she poured water over him and he wiped the water from his face and said, “We should have expected that it would rain after all these thunders.

They consider her to be one of the most famous naked women in history, she was nervous, irritable and sharp in spite of her well-known beauty, and her stumbling fortune led her to marry Socrates. The genius of Socrates in philosophy, in ethics and in many other fields, and despite being the father of philosophers and the first teacher, she hated it and hated his philosophy and hated his knowledge and hated his books and hated his disciples and did not see him except a crazy man surrounded by a group of crazy people wandering in the streets of Athens without a goal, She sees in him a failed husband because he was unable - with his preoccupation with philosophy and science - to provide her with the needs and needs of her children adequately.

He was ugly in shape and famous for her beauty. The most disheveled hair was walking in the streets of Athena barefoot, and his young disciples were behind him, and from time to time he stopped to ask them a question that came to his mind. This image was seen by the real wife in vain, and what people saw in the dialogues of Socrates was a highly valuable philosophy that she saw as nonsense and a waste of time. Perhaps she was longing for an ordinary husband who would give her and her children a decent life and help her in the work of the home and in studying the lessons for his children, and in the calm of the night the love would knock her and feel her femininity. As soon as the unfortunate geniuses are mentioned in their homes, their name immediately jumps, so they became a example for the authority of the tongue, and Socrates' patience with them and his tolerance of their revolutions also gave examples.

 Hence, it can be said that the one who possesses the dream and avoids the eruptions of anger is the wise person who became a philosopher with his dream, his patience, and endured the revolutions of his angry wife, who was the victim of this violent anger.