Friday, November 16, 2018

Franz Kafka and the Doll

Franz Kafka and the Doll


"The picture is so profound just as the story behind it".

Franz Kafka, the story goes, encountered a little girl in the park where he went walking daily. She was crying. She had lost her doll and was desolate.

Kafka offered to help her look for the doll and arranged to meet her the next day at the same spot.

Unable to find the doll he composed a letter from the doll and read it to her when they met.
‘Please do not mourn me, I have gone on a trip to see the world. I will write you of my adventures.’

This was the beginning of many letters. When he and the little girl met he read her from these carefully composed letters the imagined adventures of the beloved doll. The little girl was comforted.

When the meetings came to an end Kafka presented her with a doll. She obviously looked different from the original doll. An attached letter explained ‘My travels have changed me.’

Many years later, the now grown girl found a letter stuffed into an unnoticed crevice in the cherished replacement doll.

In summary it said:
‘Every thing that you love, you will eventually lose, but in the end, love will return in a different form.’


— Kafka and the Doll, The Pervasiveness of Loss




Sunday, November 11, 2018

The story on the classical Greek philosopher - Socrates

(Courtesy : The post From Darkness Unto Light appeared first on Safal Niveshak. This is only the Story part from the Post)

The story on the classical Greek philosopher, Socrates, who was tried and executed in 399 BC. He was tried on two charges – corrupting the youth, and impiety (perceived lack of proper respect for something considered sacred). 

Socrates had done no such thing. What he had done was educate the youth, teaching them to challenge arguments from authority and question what they believed to be true.
In the process, he frustrated and embarrassed many powerful people with his constant line of questioning, known today as the Socratic method.
Another Greek philosopher Plato wrote an account of the speech Socrates made at his trial, called The Apology.
In The Apology, Plato wrote that the oracle at Delphi had pronounced Socrates the wisest man in Athens. No one was more astonished and disbelieving than Socrates himself. So he immediately set out to disprove the oracle by finding a wiser man. ....

Wednesday, October 31, 2018