rgraham666
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Feb 19, 2004
- Posts
- 43,724
I prefer to think in terms of guidelines, Charley, rather than boundaries. Although the former can easily be mistaken for the latter.
I'm not much of one for boundaries myself. Wouldn't be a smut writer if I was.
In these terms, guidelines are useful. They orient you to the world. Tell you where you are coming from, where you are going, how far you've traveled. They help identify wrong turns, more efficient or if you're so inclined more scenic routes.
Something with neither guidelines or boundaries would be akin to floating in deep space. The best you can do is flail, you can't affect anything even your own position in the universe.
And it's true, guidelines can become a straight jacket. In such cases I ignore them. But I only ignore them if they are no longer useful, not simply because I can. Doing something because you can is nihilism and I've already let you know what I think of that.
As regards Socrates, you're half right. The Socrates of The Dialogs was a real person. There's ample evidence of his existence; references in contemporary works of literature and history.
The Socrates of The Republic was a fictional character, created to give philosophical cachet to the corporatist dictatorship Plato proposed. The real Socrates, dead for forty years, would have given his former pupil a right tongue lashing for creating something like that and attaching his name to it.
I'm not much of one for boundaries myself. Wouldn't be a smut writer if I was.
In these terms, guidelines are useful. They orient you to the world. Tell you where you are coming from, where you are going, how far you've traveled. They help identify wrong turns, more efficient or if you're so inclined more scenic routes.
Something with neither guidelines or boundaries would be akin to floating in deep space. The best you can do is flail, you can't affect anything even your own position in the universe.
And it's true, guidelines can become a straight jacket. In such cases I ignore them. But I only ignore them if they are no longer useful, not simply because I can. Doing something because you can is nihilism and I've already let you know what I think of that.
As regards Socrates, you're half right. The Socrates of The Dialogs was a real person. There's ample evidence of his existence; references in contemporary works of literature and history.
The Socrates of The Republic was a fictional character, created to give philosophical cachet to the corporatist dictatorship Plato proposed. The real Socrates, dead for forty years, would have given his former pupil a right tongue lashing for creating something like that and attaching his name to it.