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فسيلة - transplant
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هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات
It is a digital library containing thousands of Arabic videos in all fields.
قوائم تشغيل فسيلة
https://www.dailymotion.com/fasela/playlists
Category
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LearningTranscript
00:11music
00:12Good evening, Mr. Fawzi
00:14Where are you from?
00:15Coming from the supermarket
00:21Why don't you bring your oatmeal cox every time?
00:24Did you stop eating?
00:25not a bit
00:26I just decided to go keto
00:27And you, what's wrong with you?
00:29What can I say, Professor Fawzi?
00:32Who was the puppet you were seeing the day before yesterday?
00:36Oh, that's my cousin's daughter.
00:37mettle
00:38Umm Haya, cousin
00:56What did you order?
00:57And all the philosophers of the two groups without
00:59It doesn't mean I have to wear something to avoid hatred.
01:01Wadi Hadani Kretin
01:03That made a big difference
01:04Okay, let's stay in Roas Awad's position.
01:05Oh Khalid, be shocked if they said
01:07Did you hear this talk?
01:09His time was in Jacques, and we didn't benefit from his knowledge.
01:11His knowledge and wisdom
01:12The time of the humans was special
01:14Do you think so?
01:15Oh Fawz Bey
01:16Every philosopher has a doorman inside him.
01:19Every doorman has a philosopher inside him.
01:22Breaking questions
01:24what i do
01:25Philosophers did it before
01:28I'm so sorry, Awad
01:30I didn't know you were a real philosopher
01:34I apologize to you
01:37It's all good, Fawz Bey
01:39The one who tells me it's true
01:42He was confused, Baja
01:43I can give you my account number right away.
01:45And you watch yourself
01:53Welcome to the new episode of Al-Daheeh program
01:57On a day in the year 399 BC
01:59I used a random draw to select five hundred males from our group.
02:04They are over thirty years old and have no criminal record.
02:07Hey Abu Hamad, are you going out in a Hummer or what?
02:08Countries, my dear, are jurors in a trial.
02:10He was freed in Athens when he was raising a case
02:12They were bringing in the plaintiff who filed the case.
02:14And they answer the defendants
02:16The ruler among them was a group of Athenians.
02:18The conditions I told you about
02:19They listen to both sides and evaluate each side's argument.
02:22And they decide in the end
02:23Just like you see in movies
02:24Is this person a hypocrite or not?
02:25Abu Hamad, don't you notice that the number is a bit large?
02:28I see it in movies, they're sitting there, slapping a pot
02:30It would only be 500 if everyone ordered tea.
02:32The court will go bankrupt
02:32First of all, my dear, the number needs to be large.
02:34So that the group is large enough
02:36And this has a good reason: it will represent the masses of the people.
02:39And at the same time, we avoid the temptation of bribery.
02:41Do you want to send 500 people?
02:42The 500 bribe is preferable; she needs to apply for a job at a tank company.
02:45What else, my dear?
02:46500 people you don't like
02:49This is because the vote is by majority.
02:51Therefore, the number in the group must remain odd.
02:53Because there is no longer any possibility of the vote ending in a tie.
02:56The important thing, my dear, is that these 500 people were gathered
02:58So that he can be involved in a new case.
02:59But my dear, it's not a trivial matter.
03:01This is the most important and famous trial
03:04This, my dear, is like many things in my episodes.
03:06It will change human history.
03:07The trial of the philosopher Socrates
03:09My dear Skrati was born in Fetina in the year 496 BC
03:12He will live 70 years in the same city
03:14He's looking for an answer to the question, "How do we live?"
03:17And my dear, that's the question that put him in the dock.
03:21Why are they judging him based on such a basic and naive question?
03:24Perhaps, my dear, because Scrat was asking all of our questions.
03:27But in a special way
03:28A unique, ingenious, and annoying method
03:31Is this the same teacher I'm talking about?
03:32But I removed the unique and genius theme from it.
03:34My dear, let me explain more about Scrat
03:36In one of his dialogues, Socrates describes himself as a midwife, the son of a midwife.
03:39What? My dear, let me explain.
03:41He says that his mother was a midwife whose profession was helping people give birth.
03:44He is also a midwife because he helps people generate their ideas.
03:47Oh my brother, Abu Qurst is on Plato, oh my brother
03:49Oh, this philosophy! May the Stoics burn! Stoicism, Stoicism!
03:52Scrat says that just as childbirth is accompanied by severe pain
03:55Socrates' method of generating ideas from people was also accompanied by considerable annoyance.
03:59Just as childbirth is a difficult and painful process, it also produces life.
04:02Socrates' method of generating ideas from people was also accompanied by considerable annoyance.
04:06Birth complications, a method called Elnex
04:08This is a Greek word meaning restriction or refutation.
04:11Scrat, my dear, he would find anyone who was minding their own business, happy, content
04:22It takes the form of a dialogue. My dear Scratty goes to her friend's house. He genuinely wants to learn. But if the answers he hears don't convince him, he refutes them.
04:28And it's a mistake. He said, "The deficiency." So most of the dialogues of the two sides are incapable of reaching the truth. But they reach an important understanding. That we. Listen to this. What
04:36We don't know the truth. And we're aware of our ignorance. Instead of thinking we knew. Oh Abu Ahmed, what's the point of these questions?
04:42Oh Abu Ahmad, I was sitting there, not shouting
04:44In the bliss of ignorance, and the seeker of knowledge. Why do you bring people out and then bring them back to consciousness from its sweetness? My dear, the questions were not intended for that purpose.
04:51Humiliation. Its purpose isn't just to expose the falsity of knowledge that people often possess. But you were looking for...
04:56Wisdom or knowledge. It might reside within people, but they are unaware of it. We need to search and inquire until we reach it. When
05:02Scrat was asking about something. He wasn't satisfied with the first answer he received. It was as if Scrat, in his quest to extract this wisdom, was seeking peace.
05:08These people need to test themselves. They need to examine the logic of their beliefs. And through them, we arrive at true wisdom. We discover that these beliefs are incorrect. We learn.
05:16However, this claim isn't very strong. In both cases, they come out of the attempt a winner. For example, one day he'll meet someone named
05:22Euthyphro. Euthyphro, my dear, was demanding his father's execution because his father indirectly caused the death of one of their slaves. My dear Scratch.
05:28He was amazed by Euthyphro's piety and strength. He saw that we could learn.
05:31Something from this man. He was pleased with him and engaged him in what is known as the Euthyphro dialogue. Scracter asked him, "I have heard that you are a pious man."
05:37Tell me what piety is. Euthyphro says piety is pursuing the wrongdoer even if that wrongdoer is your own father. Like
05:43That's exactly what I did. Scrat will say something very nice. Excellent. But I'm asking you about the definition of piety, not an example of piety.
05:49Euthyphro says that piety is doing the deeds that you love. Scrat says that these are the Greek gods.
05:55And each one notices in a day, in my opinion
05:56You find that God does not see that a certain action is a violation of power.
05:59And God will see it as a sin.
06:01Is it permissible for a certain action to remain both a source of strength and a sin at the same time?
06:04Now you see why many people don't like philosophy?
06:06Zero, my dear, will start to get bored and realize, just like you, why people hate philosophy.
06:09He'll tell him, "You're right, Ouse Scrat."
06:11Power here remains the actions that all gods love.
06:14Her sister will say "health" to him
06:15Or let's assume you are healthy
06:17But why was he accused?
06:18If a certain person does something, the gods will love him.
06:20Because they love him, they decided to consider him a force.
06:22Does this mean that their love for him is what made him a force?
06:26Is this act itself a form of power?
06:28That's why they love him.
06:30This means that this act is considered a power, regardless of whether the gods love him.
06:34That's why I'm going to ask you again, Wathfara, are these actions power?
06:37Because the gods love her?
06:38And the gods don't love her because she is powerful?
06:41And he will tell him that perhaps the gods like these actions.
06:43Because it is inherently a force
06:45Socrates, my dear, will ask him again.
06:47What if these actions are a force in themselves?
06:49Apart from the gods
06:50So here we still need to understand what makes it a force in itself.
06:53Right or wrong, Wathfara?
06:54And he will tell him the good news that you are right
06:56The news is that we are suffocating from you and those who brought you into this world?
06:58Oh Daya, son of the midwife
06:59Please, just leave and let me execute my father in peace.
07:02I am a man who practices force
07:03We didn't reach the meaning of her mother, but he lets me practice power.
07:05This, my dear, is the secretarial method by which Scrat likened himself to the daya.
07:09He draws people in with his questions, generating idea after idea, and then subtly introduces them to them.
07:13And that's something people hate.
07:14I'm just a den, don't mess with my logic.
07:16The truth, my dear, is that it's just like he's saying
07:18Like many people who are drunk, many people are also drunk.
07:20As a result, Scrat continues to bother people with questions.
07:23He will face serious charges
07:24They will accuse him, my dear, of not wanting it and of disbelieving in the mechanism of our salvation.
07:27He calls for the worship of new gods.
07:29And the minds of young people
07:30So that the most important event can begin, my dear
07:32The trial of Scrat
07:35court
07:36May God, Abu Hamad, be with those who are waiting for you.
07:39They need to witness this joy
07:40When I take my dear eye, don't be too proud to ask the cupper.
07:42Now let us begin the trial of Socrates
07:44To gather the five hundred and one person who killed you on them
07:46And Scrat, as the defendant, will begin his defense.
07:48He will describe himself as an old man of seventy
07:50First time standing in court
07:51And he's not a skilled speaker at the top of his game.
07:53Like the people who accuse these
07:54But he has something they don't.
07:56the truth
07:56Scrat said that people have been fabricating accusations for a long time.
07:58He will use his trial to respond to the old charges.
08:01Those whose owners are not currently present
08:02And he will be ignorant of some of the current defendants.
08:05Scrat was telling people that he was being accused of asking too many questions.
08:07It's all sophistry.
08:08The word "dhi azizi" comes from the Sophists.
08:10These countries, my dear, are a class of teachers who give money.
08:12And what will they teach people?
08:13A simple need
08:14The art of argumentation
08:15In this country, how can you be so domineering and stubborn, responding to one word with ten?
08:18The sophists, my dear, will teach the masses
08:20How to win arguments, whether right or wrong
08:23He's like a lawyer arguing verbally.
08:24This is the origin from which it came
08:25Which we use to express complex and intricate things
08:29Sovereign
08:29Scrat, my dear, will defend himself and say
08:31I have never spoken about the topics of the Sophists
08:33I didn't even take money from people like they did.
08:35You'll definitely tell him
08:36There's no expecting me, public, without fire.
08:37Everyone is complaining about you
08:38There really must be a reason why people accuse me of all these young men
08:41And Aziz Socrates will tell a wondrous tale.
08:43It will lose its symbolic significance in the history of philosophy.
08:45Scrat will tell a story about his friend Sherifon
08:47A person who greatly admires his wisdom
08:49To the point that he will go to the Temple of Delphi
08:51One of the oldest Greek temples, Sheriffon
08:53He will go and ask the temple oracle.
08:54Is there anyone wiser than my friend Scrat?
08:57Her response was
08:58Scrat was very surprised by the fortune teller's response.
09:00So he decided to make sure her answer was correct.
09:02He'll go, my dear, looking for anyone
09:04He seems to know something
09:06And he asks him about this thing
09:07To make sure if this person actually has the knowledge
09:09This is just nonsense.
09:10If no one is wiser than him, then divination is wrong.
09:13And what you saw, my dear, in dialogues like the Euthyphron dialogue
09:15You will find that Socrates emerges from his search for this wisdom.
09:18In conclusion, deterring Abdelali is simple and dangerous.
09:20Simply because Scrat couldn't find anyone who possessed the wisdom he claimed.
09:23And it's dangerous because he didn't find anyone who admitted their ignorance.
09:25Scrat will say in court
09:27The only valid opinion of the fortune teller is that she is the wisest.
09:29I am the only one who admits his ignorance
09:31Oh, you who are so cruel, come here, you father!
09:33Oh Kari, my brother
09:34Scrat would say that his journey to test concepts
09:36People repeat it without testing it.
09:38This trip is what made him neglect the pleasures of life.
09:40He lives like that, barefoot and always in a rags
09:41On an endless journey of questioning
09:43After that, Scrat will finally decide.
09:45He is responding to his current charges.
09:46The call to a new god and the corruption of our youth
09:48Scrat will address his words to the plaintiffs
09:50Ironically, my dear, he will begin to defend himself.
09:52In the same annoying way of questioning
09:54He then goes to a plaintiff named Miletus and says to him
09:56Why am I being a young man?
09:57Whose order is it that benefits them?
09:58Meletus will tell him
09:59The laws that bear all the responsibility
10:01Scrat will ask him again
10:02I mean, who among humanity will benefit them?
10:04Miletus Herd says to him
10:05People who know the laws and apply them
10:07Like all the people who rule us
10:09Scrat will ask him again
10:10That's roughly it
10:11The people of the town are all beneficial to the youth.
10:13And I'm the only one who's angry with them
10:14Miletus Herd in the
10:15And he tells him
10:15Oh, right.
10:16Why do you want to get there?
10:17Scrat will tell him again
10:18Okay, let's give an example.
10:19Needing something close to the level of intelligence
10:21For example, the horse
10:22Is that reasonable?
10:22We see
10:23That all people benefit from horses
10:25Just one person
10:25He's the one who looks for horses
10:26Not the information
10:27The one everyone knows
10:28That which benefits horses
10:29It's just one person.
10:30He is their coach
10:31That's right, Professor Militos.
10:32Oh, young men of our time
10:33It benefits everyone
10:34Except for the one who harms them
10:35It's easy, I swear, it's solved.
10:36Scrat will complete
10:37And he faces more and more
10:38So what do you think?
10:39What's best for me?
10:40I live among good people
10:42And there is no life or learning, its contents are ruined.
10:43Miletus will tell them
10:44Among good people
10:46Scrat will ask
10:46So how did I intentionally make the young men angry?
10:48While I live among them
10:50They understood if he remained and the youth were deviant
10:52And I was sitting with them in Athens
10:53They hurt me
10:54Oh, you who remain for me and for the rest, and I am the one who is in my heart.
10:55Honestly, my dear, you're starting to sympathize with Professor Militos.
10:58And we came, and young men came
10:59Scrat will continue and tell him
11:00Didn't you say that I am an infidel?
11:02Why did you come to us?
11:02And I am an atheist, I have nothing left of you, right?
11:04Meletus will tell him
11:05Yes
11:05You don't worship the sun, and the matter is like ours.
11:07And she says that this sun will turn to stone
11:08And it's just a little dust.
11:09Scrat will tell him
11:10Okay, take this
11:10Whoever said that the sun and the earth are ordinary bodies
11:13He didn't say it
11:13Anaxagers
11:14Not me
11:14Anaxagoras, my dear
11:15He was one of the Sephists
11:16Scrat will confirm that this is not my statement.
11:18And all the judges know this.
11:20So what you're saying
11:21It is considered a mockery of the judiciary itself.
11:23And from their level of culture
11:24Of course, my dear
11:24Not all judges and not all people
11:26They knew that Anaxagoras
11:27He's the one who said this.
11:28But Scrat was deliberately embarrassing the plaintiffs.
11:31Those who are afraid to show their ignorance
11:32Do it like this, my dear
11:33Just as he embarrasses you, tell him
11:34As you know, Istanbul is the capital of Türkiye.
11:36She tells him, of course
11:37Specifically, the answer is correct.
11:38It is Ankara
11:39But you're too embarrassed to say you don't know.
11:40Scrat will complete his Melitos and say to him
11:42You're saying no, I don't want to
11:43And I resort to divine magical power.
11:44But how am I going to do that?
11:46And how could I be an unbeliever in the gods?
11:47That's why the gods are helping me.
11:48The gods are against me
11:49After Socrates theoretically learned to skillfully refute his opponents' arguments using logic
11:52He decided he didn't need to say anything more to the plaintiffs.
11:55Scrat began addressing all the people who were present around him.
11:58Scrat said he wasn't afraid
11:59That his words would be the reason for his death sentence.
12:01He likened himself to Achilles in the story of Troy
12:03Achilles, who was courageous
12:05He fought his enemy Hector
12:06Despite the confirmation of the prophecy
12:07That this will cause his death afterwards
12:09And at the time when prayer was considered, there was an atheist
12:11Scrat would consider his questions to people everywhere
12:13As a command from the gods who said that he is the wisest of people
12:16I have a friend from Arafat, by the way.
12:18It proves that I'm wise and I submitted a certificate for the idea
12:20Then, my dear Scrat, he mocks death itself.
12:23He says, "I'm not afraid of death."
12:24Because I don't know what will happen after I die.
12:25It is ignorant to fear something we do not know.
12:28And in the face of any temptation to compromise, he will say
12:30If in exchange for a death sentence
12:32I am abandoning philosophy, so welcome to the end.
12:34Scrat will continue his argument
12:35It will become a timeless sermon
12:37He will advise the people of Hatina to stop their pursuit of power and money.
12:40They focus on purifying their souls and improving their morals.
12:43Socrates told them, "If you decide to execute me, you will be the losers."
12:45I am not you, I am a gift from the gods to you.
12:46Even if it's an annoying gift
12:48Or, as he put it, I am that vile fly that God sent to the nation.
12:52I have no concern when I was and when I was
12:54However, I will stir your souls with persuasion and codification.
12:57That's how it is in the country, my dear, he used to say
12:58I am Moses, annoying Jay Razi, people
13:00To make them wake up and come to their senses
13:02Scrat will emphasize the coherence of the alleged riddles
13:05And he won't cry so they can make him cry.
13:06This is the essence of advocacy; it should rely on logic and reason, not emotions.
13:11After the accusations and Scrat's defense of himself
13:14Five hundred Athenians reach the verdict
13:16The majority of votes said that Scrat was guilty.
13:20Two hundred and eighty-one people voted and said and saw that Scrat was guilty
13:24Two hundred and twenty-one saw a sparkle
13:26Oh my dear, this group amazed the sorcerer
13:28Because he expected that the votes against him would be much greater than that.
13:31As expected, people told me that's why they'll call him brilliant.
13:33According to the laws of Qatina
13:34Miltos was supposed to choose Scrat's punishment.
13:37And Scrat also chooses his own punishment.
13:39And the people vote on which regime will be allowed to breathe.
13:41Of course, Miltos chose the death penalty for Socrates.
13:44He is poisoned
13:45And this was not revenge against Socrates
13:46This was a punishment chosen by the Athenians in conjunction with those condemned to death.
13:49Instead of the torture and beheading that was used to kill enemies
13:52Here, my dear Scrat, he had to choose a middle ground.
13:54A punishment that followed a little more than a sentence of enmity
13:56But it also has to be strong enough for them to accept it.
13:58Ajshul, my dear, that's exactly what was expected from Scratch.
14:01But let me tell you, Scrat will surprise everyone.
14:03And then he surprises you by saying he's not prepared to live in the dorms like a child.
14:07He's not willing to pay a large fine because he's a poor man.
14:09He doesn't like to choose exile for himself.
14:11Because this will cause him to lose credibility in the country where he is exiled.
14:14And of course, it's impossible for him to choose innocence in exchange for abandoning his philosophy.
14:17Because he confirmed that his mission was to assign the task to the Qaliha
14:19Tasked with hounding people with questions
14:21Here, Scrat will say a sentence that will become the motto of his philosophy.
14:26A life without questions or philosophy
14:28A life not worth living
14:30You might have heard this phrase, my dear, in a human development lecture.
14:33But this is a slang term.
14:34Scrat was someone who was scrutinizing us, examining our lives.
14:36We ask, think and meditate
14:38All this while he was on the verge of death.
14:40The important thing is that after we list the forms of punishment that he chooses for himself
14:43As usual, they were obsessed with art.
14:44He will tell them his piece.
14:45I'm a man who has never made money in my life.
14:47For I have devoted my time to teaching you wisdom.
14:49The just punishment I deserve
14:50You provide me with a free meal every day until the last day of my life.
14:54Mohamed, I feel like this isn't a punishment.
14:55This guy wants me to spend life in the football court in Athens
14:57My dear, the way was truly...
14:59But it is a Socratic irony that carries our meanings
15:02This is because of the meal issue.
15:04This was the way Olympic champions were rewarded.
15:06And the personalities who achieved success in our two categories at this time
15:09So here, my dear, there will be another vote.
15:10And we will find, my dear, that the number is increasing
15:12He will choose 361 Melotosan decrees as a punishment to breathe on Scrat
15:17It is death by poison
15:18On the other side, Neh 41 Athenian
15:20It's clear they loved sugar.
15:22And they were amused by the irony, which was his own suggestion.
15:24And here, my dear, death controls one of the most important and famous philosophers in the world.
15:28Throughout history
15:31The trial of Socrates, my dear, will become historically famous.
15:33Because it is one of the earliest incidents in history
15:35The one who rules over someone to execute them
15:37Because of his courage in expressing his views and standing against the prevailing trend.
15:40But the most important reason for the fame of the trial's participants
15:42It is Scrat's genius strategy for self-defense.
15:45What a genius, Abu Ahmed! He brought this on himself.
15:46There were 80 people who saw him as innocent.
15:48When they named the one who said, they said it's better to name him
15:50From 280 to 360
15:52This man, from the moment he spoke
15:54He is promoting his position in the membership more
16:03Because she is the one who will bring the trial, and he is the one who will judge Athens.
16:05Not the other way around.
16:06According to Hassan, there are many sources
16:07Scrat had known for some time that he would be tried
16:10And Miletus wants to execute him.
16:11This means that he is saying it in a certain way.
16:13Leave Athena and take her off
16:14But Scrat is on the run and Fidel is waiting for the trial.
16:17Scrat mocked them by choosing his punishment.
16:20He told them, "Eat me for the rest of my life."
16:22I deserve to work as a hero
16:24Someone with a sharp mind would know very well
16:25What he's saying will provoke most people.
16:27The one who is supposed to be trying to win their sympathy
16:29And you, when you give me a choice between execution and reward
16:32And you're already in control of your hands.
16:33So you left me no choice but to choose execution for you.
16:36Therefore, at first glance, it might seem that Socrates lost by being executed.
16:39But perhaps Scractar himself was the one who brought all this to light
16:42Why is Mohamed doing this?
16:43Because, my dear, this way he will achieve a more important and far-reaching goal for himself.
16:46He highlights his principles and beliefs in his trial.
16:48In a way that makes it last for more than 2400 years
16:51It was as if Scrat was aware that the death sentence that would be issued against him
16:54He will be the one who mixes up his history education
16:56It will be like a life-changing event that will make his education live forever.
16:59The ending will be a journey of Scrat, with stances, principles, and opinions all consistent with each other.
17:04And the final picture that was formed at the end after the trial
17:06The answer to the question "How do we live?" was drawn for us.
17:08The question we all ask, but Scrat lived and died for it
17:11Okay, Ahmed, what do you say to the answer?
17:13The easiest way to get rid of a cigarette? That's the door.
17:14The question is easy: how do we live? Okay.
17:16The answer, my dear, is what Scrat tried to reach.
17:18And whoever is looking now, look at it after the picture is complete in front of us
17:20The point is, we don't know a clear and straightforward answer.
17:22No one, my dear, will tell you how to live life.
17:24But at least we know that life is worth living.
17:27It's the life we live all the time
17:29We are trying to find the answers to these questions
17:30My dear, the treasure isn't in a specific answer.
17:32But rather, our journey through life is to reach the most accurate answers.
17:36Scrat treated his life as a painting.
17:38He is the one who draws it.
17:39He became so detached, my dear, that he drew his own death with his own hands.
17:41He insisted that his life or his painting would remain perfect
17:43And he continued in this manner even in the final days before the execution of the sentence.
17:46For example, in Crito's attempt
17:48We see how Creto, a disciple of Socrates, finds a way to Arabize his teacher before the sentence is carried out.
17:52If it happens, my dear, that Scrat refuses
17:54He says that the unjust sentence of execution
17:56It is not justifiable for him to break the laws of Athens and escape.
17:58If everyone forced the laws to their advantage
18:00The laws will have no meaning.
18:02No, my dear, may God have mercy on him, he was a chatterbox until the very last moment of his life.
18:05Remember, my dear, Scrat's attempt with Uthifa?
18:06The man who was a hero, who executed his father
18:08This conversation took place while Scrat was already on trial.
18:10It was as if Aziz Sakrat was a storyteller who was searching for the meaning of power.
18:13He's going to control his debauchery
18:15Another dialogue that will tell us about Scrat is the Phaedo dialogue.
18:18And in which we see the last moments in Scrat's life before he drank the poison
18:21In the last dialogue, my dear Socrates, he spoke about the meaning of death.
18:24Regarding his belief in the immortality of the soul
18:26Let me tell you, Scrat literally drank poison and then continued talking about these things.
18:29And so, my dear, ends the life of Scrat, who adhered to his philosophical duty until the very last moment.
18:34Well, thank God, Abu Hamhad, at least he insulted him by writing this defense dialogue and it reached us.
18:38Thank God, my dear, know that I'm always speaking on your behalf.
18:42If I make a mistake
18:43Why? Because when you cut the gas
18:45As you can see, I'm crazy, there's no one else here.
18:47Since I made you thank me for Scrat writing the dialogues
18:51So, what should I say in the next sentence?
18:53Ehud Socrates did not believe in writing.
18:56Scrat didn't write anything in his trial.
18:58And let me tell you, he's a big deal, he never wrote anything in his life at all.
19:01And from the lands of direct narrative, so if the refresher remains
19:03We are here with twisted narratives
19:04Tosty country, my dear, all that has reached us about the trial of Scrat
19:07Written by a young man from his students
19:09Live in awe of your teacher's life
19:11A young man was distressed that the common people had sentenced his teacher to death.
19:14This young man decided to leave us with a written record of her story.
19:17Whether by writing about his trial or recording his life experiences
19:20Like the dialogues between Uthfer and Krito that I told you about
19:22This young man, my dear, was among those present at the trial.
19:25He is the great philosopher Plato
19:27Okay, Ahmed, just a second
19:28You told us that Scrat is recording a historic moment.
19:30How does he record a historical stance?
19:31He is basically not good at writing
19:33If you want to express your opinions, write them down.
19:34My dear Skrati, my workers are telling you to sit down yourself.
19:36The method of refutation and discrediting tells you
19:39Don't take anything Muslim
19:40Take him and show me his dialogues and conversations
19:42So, for Scrat
19:43He gives you answers to read in a book.
19:45No matter how strong and eloquent the content is
19:47Death at the end, dead letters
19:49It won't transfer life experience
19:50It's impossible to make you think and search for wisdom on your own.
19:53This will give you a false sense that you understand.
19:55This is what Socrates fought against all his life.
19:56My question here, dear reader, is: do you think Scrat's fear was exaggerated?
19:59Is there a source capable of giving us answers all the time?
20:01Will this really destroy our ability to think?
20:03Let me answer you, my dear.
20:04This question was asked by someone named Chrissa Valls
20:06Professor of Philosophy at Oxford University
20:08In an article titled
20:10It depends, my dear, on her question.
20:12We know wisdom in the way of Socrates.
20:23In our current time
20:24AI era
20:24artificial intelligence
20:25The times you live in don't need you to read a book.
20:27Just like Scrat was afraid
20:28But you are with us as a virtual eye on the application
20:31He will answer any question you have
20:32He engages in any conversation with you without objecting.
20:34He'll never tell you he doesn't know or try to hide it.
20:36Like the people Scrat spoke to
20:37This talk
20:38According to the article, he can question everything I've told you.
20:40My dear Skrati wanted us to search for the truth.
20:42But the
20:43The
20:44The
20:44The entity provides guesses based on repeated signs.
20:50Stored inside
20:51My dear, AI doesn't provide you with true knowledge.
20:54But it offers you the most frequently used version.
20:56From the answer to your question
20:57That is, if there is a sentence that says a lot, even if it is wrong
20:59Artificial nutrition is often considered healthy
21:01For example, if the scientist decided that he would repeat and write
21:03In all locations, two like this make five
21:06There's a good chance the machine will agree with them and tell you five.
21:08This, my dear, is because Chat G Beti operates in a grocery store we call
21:13The
21:14The machine relies on feedback it receives from humans.
21:16And among the patterns that are repeated
21:17And that's how you'll get the answer that satisfies you as a human being.
21:20This is the most frequently answered answer
21:22Just like the people in Socrates' time, they believed in common answers.
21:25If Socrates had written a thousand trials, would he have satisfied the people?
21:27But let me tell you, if I had Chat G-Bitty at that time
21:29Perhaps Hensah was giving wrong answers to save his terrified wife.
21:32While Socrates was judged and sacrificed as a brilliant philosopher
21:36The article will describe Chat G. Beattie as a nightmare professor.
21:39At least until now, he's never going to tell you, "I don't know."
21:41Or it will alert you that you also don't know
21:43Instead, he will present you with guesses as facts.
21:46Because he's determined to please you
21:47And to spare you the long process of learning and testing beliefs
21:51The things that Socrates spent his whole life trying to attract people with
21:54But my dear, let me tell you that if Socrates saw our lives now, he wouldn't be happy with them.
21:57On the contrary, I have many doubts about it.
21:59This is what many historians did when they said
22:01Most of what we know about Socrates actually comes from Plato.
22:04Plato, who portrayed his teacher in an idealized, exaggerated way.
22:07In fact, let me tell you that some historians say that after these dialogues
22:11These are Socrates' dialogues, which he didn't actually write.
22:13But it pertains to Plato himself.
22:15But he chose its hero, Socrates, out of love for Socrates.
22:18The man was being polite to his teacher.
22:19The historians are now gone.
22:21If Socrates were with us, he would tell you what I'm telling you in every episode.
22:23Don't believe everything you hear.
22:25Go down and look at the sources
22:26Think about all the information and test it.
22:27Maybe she'll arrive at a correct or incorrect answer
22:29But one thing is for sure: the way of thinking in the current situation is something that Chat G Bety would never recommend.
22:33And it is certain that despite its difficulty and exhaustion
22:35However, it is the safest and richest way.
22:37In order to answer this question
22:38How to live
22:39No, my dear, the question has no definitive answer.
22:41But there are answers in the previous cases.
22:43There are answers in the following cases.
22:43There are answers in the sources.
22:45If we're on YouTube, please subscribe to the channel.
22:46Let me tell you, my dear, on the occasion of the end of the episode
22:48There are some sources that say Scrat might be a myth.
22:52Abu Ahmed's Medicine
22:53The problem is, he's not really a legendary philosopher.
22:54He is the master of legends too
22:55My dear, I mean legend
22:57Like a fictional character
22:59Who should I tell you?
23:00Like who, Abu Ahmed?
23:00Zik
23:01What's this? Just a second, Abu Ahmed?
23:03I mean, I'm drunk
23:04And you are Plato's disciple
23:05Come on, get the clothes ready, make the tea, and write down all my conversations.