Diogenes The Dog May 2026

Some symptoms (public nudity, social transgression) resemble mania or schizotypal behavior. But his consistency, philosophical coherence, and selective control suggest performance, not pathology.

Several versions: holding his breath, eating raw octopus (causing cholera), or dying of old age in Corinth. A statue of a dog marks his alleged tomb. Conclusion: Why Diogenes Matters Now In an age of performative virtue, influencer asceticism, and curated authenticity, Diogenes remains the ultimate ungooglable philosopher. He cannot be brand-managed. He left no texts, no school, no followers—only a lamp, a jar, and a challenge. Diogenes The Dog

Lost works are attributed to him (e.g., Republic ), but only fragments and anecdotes survive via Diogenes Laërtius (3rd century CE). A statue of a dog marks his alleged tomb

Diogenes trampled Plato’s expensive rug and said: “Thus I trample on Plato’s vanity.” Plato retorted: “How much pride you show, Diogenes, in appearing not proud.” He left no texts, no school, no followers—only

From kynikos – “dog-like.” Not because of misanthropy, but because of canine shamelessness and living according to nature.