Thales said the world floats like a log on endless water.
All things are full of gods.
Anaximander said we evolved from fish
and the universe from the boundless.
Anaximenes thought all was air,
and the heavens moved around Earth
like a hat on a head.
Pythagoras thought reality ten-sided, and that beans
were reincarnated souls;
he was killed by a hostile mob beside a beanfield
he refused to trample.
Heraclitus thought all was fire.
Everything flows and nothing abides.
Parmenides said something
could not come out of nothing.
Empedocles named four elements and two forces, love and strife, and leapt into Mt. Etna.
Socrates said, The only thing I know is that I know
nothing,
and paid his last debt with a chicken.
Plato thought we live in a world of
fleeting shadows, mistaking it for the real.
Aristotle identified five hundred species of sea life, but mistook women for unfinished men.
Epicurus taught in a garden,
Pleasure is the highest good.
Zeno taught acceptance from a porch
(stoa) to the Stoics
Diogenes the Cynic told Alexander the Great to get out
of his light.
Augustine said now is all there is.
Hypatia was flayed alive
by mad Christians with oystershells.
Anselm proved that God exists because we can
imagine God.
Aquinas saw plants and animals have souls, yet grew
so fat he had to have a niche cut into his table.
Descartes' pet peeves
were cold and early rising; he died of
pneumonia
giving early morning lessons
to the Queen of Sweden.
Spinoza said the universe is God.
There cannot be too much joy.
For this he was thrown out of the synagogue
and stabbed on its steps.
Locke's father was an inspector of sewers,
and Locke was in charge of England's slave trade.
Bishop Berkeley said,
To be is to be perceived, and proved irrefutably
the nonexistence of matter.
Dr. Johnson said, I refute it thus,
and kicked a stone.
Hume questioned everything, even
cause and effect, inspiring Einstein.
Kant never married, traveled, or
got sick.
He called space and time irremovable goggles.
His tomb reads:
Two things fill my mind
with ever-increasing wonder and awe,
the starry heavens above
and the moral law within me.
Hegel's lectures were plodding and he got evicted
for dallying with his landlord's wife.
Mary Wollstonecraft said,
The mind has no sex.
Nietzsche's autobiography had
chapters called
Why I Am So Clever and Why I Write
Such Good Books.
Husserl found time an eternal now, just as space is always
here, wherever you are.
Heidegger asked, What is it to dwell?
and became a Nazi.
John Dewey found school boring.
Wittgenstein loved second-rate cowboy movies and once attacked Karl Popper with a poker.
Sartre liked to drink
and smoke and hang out in cafés.
Simone de Beauvoir saw women
oppressed by mundane chores and invisible in
philosophy.
(Simone Weil, for example, is not
mentioned in this book.)
Foucault pointed out that the deranged
were once called prophets.
Derrida maintained everything
differs from everything else, and made
deconstruction the rage.
Adorno found our time no closer to the truth
than any other.
Luce Irigaray said women will write
with breast milk, a white ink.
Crippled but jolly, Feyerabend
concluded philosophy
should not be taken too seriously.
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About Barbara Ungar
Barbara Ungar’s new book of poetry, Immortal Medusa, is just out from The Word Works. Prior books include Charlotte Brontë, You Ruined My Life; Thrift; and The Origin of the Milky Way, which won the Gival Press Poetry Award, a silver Independent Publishers award, a Hoffer award, and the Adirondack Center for Writing poetry award. She has published in Salmagundi, Rattle, The Nervous Breakdown, and many other journals. A professor of English at the College of Saint Rose in Albany, she coordinates their new MFA program. For more information, please visit Barbaraungar.net.
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[…] I Am, A Round-Up” won second place in their 2014 poetry contest. You can read the poem here, or find it in my latest collection, Immortal […]