Boethius
Today's Story on SELF DEVELOPMENT: Our mind works in a most peculiar way, and I don't think I need to remind you of that. We can smile at that very contemplation. But why do we allow it to do this? In WISDOM and PRACTICAL PHILOSOPHY we cannot prevent our mind operating in these peculiar ways, but we can limit it by acknowledging its grip and preventing the turmoil that follows. You can be assured that our pattern of thought is determined by our state of mind. If we are ever in the mood of revenge, then you can be sure some bizarre thoughts and actions will follow. So bizarre in fact that another time you'll be embarrassed to tell the tale. Do you ever find yourself justifying your actions? Consider why you justify? You do it in the hope that your actions will be understood. Why? You hope within your explanation that your actions that now appear wrong can have some sort of good intention. The best explanation of your actions however, is that they were made in a high emotional state. The justification appears almost as if you are in a court of law. If you find you have to explain your decisions, the very implication is that they were not done from a sound and logical frame of mind. What is this telling us? That we ARE most definitely controlled by our emotional state of mind. Our good intentions, our sensible head, our intellectual deliberations all mean nothing during the throws of a high emotion. We need our feet firmly on the ground and we need to interrupt by SEEING what is happening, before we can expect any degree of sense to arise from the so called madness that takes over. Forgive me as I would need to describe this emotional control to an extreme to drive the point home. Today's story is about a man who looses sight of reality and finds he is making decisions during a period of depression. While ever he stays in this deep and dark emotional state he'll not SEE. WISDOM is not always about helping yourself. If you practice the skill on other people as did the child in this story, you'll find an understanding that will help direct your own life. DADDY DEAREST I laid there in bed, thinking. It had been three years since my dad was lively and happy. A terrible bout with depression was taking a toll on him, and thus our family, over that time span. Lucky for me, I went to college out of town. I came home on breaks, as well as weekends when I could, but I had my own life now. And every time I went home, I would build up walls and keep myself at a distance from all the problems in the family, because I didn't think I could take it. This particular summer, I had arranged for a job near school, so I could escape the emotions of returning to an unhappy home. As I laid there in my childhood bed, the night before returning to my apartment for the summer, I broke down in tears. How could I be so selfish? How could I leave my mom and dad all alone to deal with this? How could I pretend that I didn't need to bear some of the responsibility of helping out? The years of denial came out in my tears that night, and I knew I couldn't continue on pretending. I was going to help as much as I could, even if that was only a small baby-step. That next day, I told my dad over breakfast, firmly, that we were going to clean his room, and I was going to help him. My mom had been begging him for a year to clean his room, because it was in such disarray. The doctors said taking proactive steps like that would help him feel better about himself, and maybe chip away at what was wrong with him. But he never wanted to listen. Stubbornly, he never actually took those steps. Much to my surprise, he actually smiled, and said "Ok, " to my suggestion. That day we went through years of old trash and documents. Newspapers from 10 years ago, computer games from elementary school. We worked together the entire day. All he needed was a firm kick in the butt to get him moving, and then he was able to take charge, looking happier than I had seen in months. By the time the day was over, his room was sparkling. Now we could all go back there and watch television together, just like childhood. though that would unfortunately have to wait until my next visit home. More importantly, now my dad had done something to help himself, and was a little happier. And I had helped him. It was time to leave though. I had a great job lined up, and had already given up a good night's rest on the first day of work by helping my dad all afternoon. I really hugged my dad as I said goodbye, for the first time in years. And as I hugged my mom goodbye, she whispered "Thank you so much" in my ear. This is still a story in progress, so I can't report that everything is all better now. But my fingers are crossed because now there is a lot more hope, and hope is very powerful. (Matt Blass, 2002, all rights reserved) QUOTE: "No lions are ever caught in mousetraps. To catch lions you must think in terms of lions, not in terms of mice. Your mind is always creating traps of one kind or another, and what you catch depends on the thinking you do. It is your thinking that attracts to you what you receive.' (Thomas Dreier, Author)
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Boethius News
Timeless Absurdity - CounterPunch
7 May 2012 at 10:56am CounterPunch ?The Consolation of Philosophy?, a hard-cover tome by Boethius keeps emerging physically in ridiculous situations, including a violent attack in a bathroom and a high school porno ring. It's that askew craziness that makes reading this book such pure ... |
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Timeless Absurdity - Counter Punch
7 May 2012 at 10:54am ?The Consolation of Philosophy?, a hard-cover tome by Boethius keeps emerging physically in ridiculous situations, including a violent attack in a bathroom and a high school porno ring. It?s that askew craziness that makes reading this ...Read more...
Chaucer study inspires memories of medieval music - St. George Daily Spectrum
29 Apr 2012 at 5:03am St. George Daily Spectrum He would have studied hymns and prayers and the works of Latin poets such as Ovid, Cato, Juvenal, Boethius and Horace, for indeed we see their shadows in his works. Chaucer, the father of English poetry, was born when feudalism was in its autumnal ... and more » |
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Samhället uppmuntrar till fascism - Sourze
24 Apr 2012 at 10:02pm Sourze 2011 radade upp ett koppel med skribenter såsom Rasmus Fleicher, Ellinor Brenning, Maria-Pia Boethius, Jackie Jakubowski, Anna Ritter med flera som jagade efter eller klampade på Sanningsrörelsen. Den ena demonhistorien löste av den andra. |
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Shoo Shoos präsentieren skurrile Reise mit der Bahn - suedkurier.de
22 Apr 2012 at 6:09pm suedkurier.de Die drei Sängerinnen Juliane Hollerbach, Anna Boethius und Dina Salak glänzten mit ausdrucksvollem Gesang, mal stimmgewaltig, dann wieder mit leisen Tönen voller Melancholie. Tanz und Pantomime beherrschen sie ebenso perfekt. |
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Consolations of philosophy by boethius?
Hi, i've got an english assignment on a book called the consolations of philosophy by boethius. The question is are there clear distinctions between fortune, fate and providence in this book and if so what are they?? I really do not get this book at all and my assignment is due tomorrow....please help if you know!! Thanks!
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Criticisms of boethius in relation to free will and omniscience?
what are the main criticisms and who are the main critics of boethius theory that God stands outside of time and sees all past present and future as one?
bumping for great knowledge
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What are you doing to wake up your friends, your loved ones, your children and our their future generations?
England and the world is controlled by the MIC Military Industrial Complex as part of Black Ops, MK ULTRA, Brainwashing and harassment programs to shut people up who know too much about the NWO/mass depopulation objectives. All media is dis-information and counter-intelligence designed to distract the gullible people from the (elite zionists) plans. Their plans are inter-generational.
I could tell you more but probably shouldn't. The masonic players are global and we are their slaves, cattle or pawns.
Look up Glen Kealey and Alan Watt. They cover all the secret societies and how they interlink back to troglodytes of pre-iceage right up to todays high priests of the Lucifean Creed/Palladian Rite, Synagog of Satan, Thule Society, Ordo Templis Orientis, Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, Knights Templar, Opus Dei, Priory of Sion, Assassins etc plus the forms of masons/Grand Orient, Rosicrucian's, fabians, Club of rome, WRM, Nihilism, Humanism, Darwinism etc.
Don't expect to learn your true history on the History Channel or BBC CBS CBC ABC or any other 'alphabet' channel or organisation as these are all funded by the foundations, trusts or ideology Of these people. Also research DuPont's Rockefeller's, Rothschild's etc they plan and fund EVERY WAR, create our languages and religions.etc.
The majority of people will not be able to accept this information because of conditioning/fear. The above isn't something you prove to others. This knowledge is 'a way of seeing' which only comes through individual questioning and reasoning.
I read the works of Albert Pike's military blueprint 1859-71, Weishaupt 1770-76, Bertrand Russell, Carroll Quigley, Francis Bacon, William Shakespeare, Plato, Lenin, Karl Marx, George Bernard Shaw, Blavatsky, Wanaker, Thomas Malphus, Mazzini, Seneca Paracelsus, Hermes, Trismegistus, Giordano Bruno, Boethius, Corneelius Agrippa, Kant, Maslow, Pascal, Schoppehauer, Ayn Rand, Hegel, Hobbes, Heidegger, Wittgenstein, Adorno Derrida.
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Why Many Philosophers had commited Suicide?
The documented history of philosophy is often said to begin with the notable death of Socrates. Since that time, there have been many other noteworthy deaths of philosophers.
* 435 BCE According to legend, Empedocles leapt to his death into the crater of Etna.
* 420 BCE According to some reports, Protagoras died in a shipwreck.
* 399 BCE Socrates, condemned to death for corrupting the young, drank hemlock amongst his friends as described in Plato?s Phaedo.
* 338 BCE According to legend, Isocrates starved himself to death.
* 323 BCE Accounts differ regarding the death of Diogenes of Sinope. He is alleged to have died from eating raw octopus, from being bitten by a dog, and from holding his breath. He left instructions for his corpse to be left outside the city walls as a feast for the animals and birds.
* 320 BCE Ancient sources tell us that Nicocreon the tyrant had Anaxarchus pounded to death in a mortar with iron pestles; Anaxarchus is said to have made light of the punishment.
* 270 BCE Epicurus died of kidney stones.
* 207 BCE Chrysippus is said to have died from laughter after giving wine to his donkey and seeing it attempt to eat figs.
* 52 BCE Lucretius is alleged to have killed himself after being driven mad by taking a love potion.
* 65 CE Seneca was forced to commit suicide after falling out with Emperor Nero.
* 415 Hypatia was killed by a mob of Christians.
* 430 St. Augustine died in Hippo while the city was under siege by Vandals
* 526 Boethius was strangled on the orders of the Ostrogoth king Theodoric by whom he was employed.
* 1141 Judah Ha-Levi was killed on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem.
* 1180 Abraham Ibn Daud was martyred.
* 1277 Peter of Spain was killed by the collapse of a roof.
* 1284 Siger of Brabant was stabbed to death by his clerk.
* 1415 John Hus was executed at the Council of Constance.
* 1535 Thomas More was executed by beheading in 1535 after he had fallen out of favour with King Henry VIII.
* 1572 Girolamo Maggi was executed by strangulation on the orders of a prison captain in Constantinople; Maggi had been incarcerated after being arrested during the Turkish siege of Famagusta.
* 1572 Peter Ramus was killed in the St. Bartholomew?s Day Massacre.
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Did Boethius abandon Christianity for Paganism?
As one of the great philosphers of early Christianity, if Boethius did reject it for paganism on his deathbed would that make paganism superior to Christianity?
@mrglass08 Momigliano in "The Conflict Between Paganism and Christianity in the Fourth Century" argues that "Boethius turned to paganism. His Christianity collapsed ? it collapsed so thoroughly that perhaps he did not even notice its disappearance."
Indeed, his "consolation of philosophy" makes only superficial reference to God, and seems to me to be the work of a man with a very clear idea about philosophy, but a much more open view of theology, perhaps he was changing his beliefs as he wrote it. Either way, mine is a hypothetical question.
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