'The children now love luxury; they have bad manners, contempt for authority; they show disrespect for elders and love chatter in place of exercise. Children are now tyrants, not the servants of their households. They no longer rise when elders enter the room. They contradict their parents, chatter before company, gobble up dainties at the table, cross their legs, and tyrannize their teachers.' — ̶S̶̶o̶̶c̶̶r̶̶a̶̶t̶̶e̶̶s̶ ̶ (Kenneth John Freeman, 1907 [thanks to morsch])
like_any_other|11 months ago
If meth became widely used, and someone noted the effect this had on how children are behaving, would we also just quote Socrates at them as 'proof' that nothing has changed, because people have been complaining since forever?
Amezarak|11 months ago
watwut|11 months ago
For all we know, his quote refers to these political conflicts where he preferred hierarchy and young preferred democracy.
morsch|11 months ago
Careful about bogus “ancient” quotations on this topic, though., the article warns.
unknown|11 months ago
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andrepd|11 months ago
Plus, we have hard data about reduced attention spans so this is not even about moral panic.
the__alchemist|11 months ago
arp242|11 months ago
Maybe there's a bit of complaining from old coots throughout the ages, but that doesn't mean there are never any structural problems ever. Maybe there are real problems today. And maybe there were real problems in Socrates' time too. Merely posting this without any thought is just dismissive nonsense.
Certainly for the situation today, there are huge changes to how kids are raised. Maybe that has zero effect. Or maybe it does. Either way, whatever Socrates did or didn't say has absolutely no bearing on it.
vacuity|11 months ago
On this paticular topic, my take is that as technology has advanced, we have gone from the "technology is harmless" side to the "technology is harmful" side sharply. Books and whatnot are great. TV, ehhh. Video games, mobile phones, social media, LLMs: dangerous, or more optimistically, very tricky to get right. I think it's not strange that these three categories I've laid out occupy vastly distinct time spans. It's exactly the power of a technology that ties into both its development and its impact. I certainly don't get similar experiences from reading a book and watching short form video.
amazingamazing|11 months ago
dartharva|11 months ago
Not that you can blame them, honestly, looking at the state of the world despite all wisdom and knowledge being more accessible to everyone than it has ever been...
GeoAtreides|11 months ago
> Worse is the resistance to original thought. What I mean is the reflexive submission of the cheapest cliché as novel insight.
what a world we live in...
doright|11 months ago
I mean the way it's worded just makes you want to strike back at contemptuous kids instead of digging down deeper as to why they might behave this way.