Socrates says that those in the constant press of business, like lawyers, policy-makers, mortgage brokers and hedge fund managers, become ”bent and stunted” and they are compelled “to do crooked things.” The pettifogger is undoubtedly successful, wealthy and extraordinarily honey-tongued, but, Socrates adds, “small in his soul and shrewd and a shyster.” The philosopher, by contrast, is free by virtue of his or her otherworldliness, by their capacity to fall into wells and appear silly.The title of the post is "What Is a Philosopher?" and I'm thinking somebody who pretends to be self-deprecating while running down people who make more money than he does.
Monday, May 17, 2010
The new NYT philosophy blog gets started by calling lawyers small-souled shysters.
Simon Critchley writes:
Labels:
class politics,
commerce,
law,
lawyers,
philosophy,
Simon Critchley,
Socrates
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