Episode 5 - Antisthenes
Sayings of Antisthenes
Antisthenes Antisthenes Quotes
Antisthenes Quotes
Antisthenes "some wicked thing"
Esc.Mul. Antisthenes de Oliveira
Lecture on Cynicism and Skepticism
10 Great Quotes From Socrates
Philosophers
3 Items HAUL!!!
Mercan Dede - Sufi Dreams "Hidrelez - Dream of Perhan"
Rate My Philosopher
First break of snow -nov.13 2010 Twin citys, minnesota.
Ross Daly with Huun Huur Tu & The Trio Chemirani - White Dragon "To Moiroloi tou Orfanou"
Episode 5 - Antisthenes
Sayings of Antisthenes
Antisthenes Antisthenes Quotes
Antisthenes Quotes
Antisthenes "some wicked thing"
Esc.Mul. Antisthenes de Oliveira
Lecture on Cynicism and Skepticism
10 Great Quotes From Socrates
Philosophers
3 Items HAUL!!!
Mercan Dede - Sufi Dreams "Hidrelez - Dream of Perhan"
Rate My Philosopher
First break of snow -nov.13 2010 Twin citys, minnesota.
Ross Daly with Huun Huur Tu & The Trio Chemirani - White Dragon "To Moiroloi tou Orfanou"
127 people, past and present, that have helped shape the world we live in today
Cynics - Religion Project
DIRE STRAITS - Private Investigation
Diogenes - Musikverein Ludwigshafen - Komponist: Jacob de Haan
CLAIR de LUNE - 222 - Poema de Lucia Azevedo Lima - Claude Debussy 1862-1918 - LAL 2013
Sayings of Diogenes of Sinope
Передача №75. Россия угрожает доллару. Сталинские трибуналы повстанцев "ДНР".
My Thoughts on Nyanners' Hyaters
BEST HISTORY PROJECT EVER!
Woven Hand - Kingdom of Ice Live HQ
Episode 9 - Descartes
Ribbon Falls in Yosemite - 3/15/2014
Dee Hock Quotes
Episode 1 - Socrates
Marge Piercy Quotes
Sextus Empiricus' Pyrhonian Scepticism
Lauper Family Story
Episode 10 - Thomas Hobbes
Wes Studi Quotes
The 12/8 Path Band
Iris Murdoch Quotes
Antisthenes (Greek: Ἀντισθένης; c. 445 BCE – c. 365 BCE) was a Greek philosopher and a pupil of Socrates. Antisthenes first learned rhetoric under Gorgias before becoming an ardent disciple of Socrates. He adopted and developed the ethical side of Socrates' teachings, advocating an ascetic life lived in accordance with virtue. Later writers regarded him as the founder of Cynic philosophy.
Mercan Dede (born Arkın Ilıcalı, 1966, Bursa, Turkey), also known as DJ Arkin Allen, is a Turkish composer, ney and bendir player, DJ and producer. He divides his time between Turkey, Europe and North America. He is a world music artist, playing a fusion of traditional acoustic Turkish and other oriental musics with electronic sounds.
His best known albums include Seyahatname, Su, and Nar. He has worked in collaboration with Turkish and international musicians such as Susheela Raman, Dhafer Youssef, Sheema Mukherjee (Transglobal Underground) and Hugh Marsh.
Dede graduated in media studies from Istanbul University and moved to Canada as an art teacher, specialising in ebru (a traditional Turkish marbled printing). He is still a resident of Canada.
Dede speaks Turkish, Arabic, French, Persian, and English.[citation needed]
The Mercan Dede ensemble was founded in 1997, by which time Arkın had been working as a musician for some years. Their first album was Sufi Dreams, released in 1998. This album got a boost when the music was used in a German television documentary on Sufi music.
Ross Daly (born 29 September 1952 in King's Lynn, Norfolk) is a world musician who specializes in music of the Cretan lyra. Although of Irish descent, he has been living on the island of Crete for over 35 years.
Ross Daly has traveled the world, mainly in the Middle East, Central Asia and the Indian subcontinent, studying various forms of local music traditions. In 1982 he established an educational institution called Labyrinth Musical Workshop, in the village of Houdetsi in Crete, twenty kilometres south of the capital city of Herakleion. More than 250 instruments that Daly collected during his travels are on show and hundreds of students from all over the world come to study with renowned international teachers of modal music each year.
In 1990 Daly designed a new type of Cretan lyra which incorporates elements of lyraki, the byzantine lyra and the Indian sarangi. The result was a lyra with three playing strings of 29 cm in length (the same as the standard Cretan lyra), and 18 sympathetic strings which resonate on Indian-styled jawari bridges (the number of sympathetic strings was later increased to 22).
Claude-Achille Debussy (French pronunciation: [klod aʃil dəbysi]) (22 August 1862 – 25 March 1918) was a French composer. Along with Maurice Ravel, he was one of the most prominent figures working within the field of impressionist music, though he himself intensely disliked the term when applied to his compositions. In France, he was made Chevalier of the Legion of Honour in 1903. A crucial figure in the transition to the modern era in Western music, he remains one of the most famous and influential of all composers.
His music is noted for its sensory component and for not often forming around one key or pitch. Often Debussy's work reflected the activities or turbulence in his own life. In French literary circles, the style of this period was known as symbolism, a movement that directly inspired Debussy both as a composer and as an active cultural participant.
Diogenes the Cynic (Ancient Greek: Διογένης ὁ Κυνικός, Diogenēs ho Kunikos) was a Greek philosopher and one of the founders of Cynic philosophy. Also known as Diogenes of Sinope (Greek: Διογένης ὁ Σινωπεύς, Diogenēs ho Sinōpeus), he was born in Sinope (modern-day Sinop, Turkey), an Ionian colony on the Black Sea, in 412 or 404 BCE and died at Corinth in 323 BCE.
Diogenes of Sinope was a controversial figure. His father minted coins for a living and when Diogenes took to "defacement of the currency", he was banished from the city. After being exiled, he moved to Athens to debunk cultural conventions. Diogenes modelled himself on the example of Hercules. He believed that virtue was better revealed in action than in theory. He used his lifestyle and behaviour to criticise the social values and institutions of what he saw as a corrupt society. He declared himself a cosmopolitan. There are many tales about him dogging Antisthenes' footsteps and becoming his faithful hound, but it is by no means certain that the two men ever met. Diogenes made a virtue of poverty. He begged for a living and slept in a tub in the marketplace. He became notorious for his philosophical stunts such as carrying a lamp in the daytime, claiming to be looking for an honest man. He publicly mocked Alexander and lived. He embarrassed Plato, disputed his interpretation of Socrates and sabotaged his lectures.