“Follow the argument wherever it leads” — drawn from Plato’s Republic — stands as the cornerstone of the Socratic method. It reflects a profound commitment to pursuing truth through rational dialogue, even when conclusions challenge our deepest assumptions. Socrates held that intellectual honesty demands we set aside bias and comfort in favor of objective reasoning. Through dialectic — the art of reasoned questioning — he pushed interlocutors to confront contradictions in their own beliefs. This relentless pursuit of truth over reputation ultimately led to his trial in Athens, yet he never wavered. Philosophy, at its best, asks us to do the same.
Tag: Truth
The Light That Always Shines
How shall I explain to the people I loveAnd I love a great many peopleFamily, friends, relatives and strangersThat this … More
Truth & the Journey Towards It
“Only two ways to realize the Truth: Either understand that this whole world is nothing but His forms, including our … More
Adhurapan
However much I write Something always remains to be said It never seems to end Always some incompleteness That demands … More
On Love & Truth
“We need love when we do not love the truth.” “Every movement of the mind and heart takes you away … More
Claude on the Different Forms of Love
Claude, So, how does desire and need for sex tie in with love? Where desire and need are admixed with … More
“You can’t handle the truth”
“Most people can’t handle the truth because understanding and admitting the truth upsets their well-laid out plans for satisfying their … More
My Latest Book Published Yesterday on Amazon’s KDP
What if everything you have been taught about happiness, love, and success is built on a misunderstanding?
An Idle Man’s Reflections is a provocative and deeply introspective book that explores the timeless questions that most of us sense—but rarely dare to confront.
Why do we keep chasing happiness yet feel restless even after achieving what we wanted?
Why does love often carry traces of expectation, fear, and ego?
And why do many spiritual traditions insist that the truth we seek is already within us?
In this collection of reflections, letters, and philosophical musings, D. Samarender Reddy invites readers into a lifelong inquiry into the nature of human experience. Drawing from Advaita Vedanta, Buddhism, Sufi thought, and Western philosophy, the book examines the hidden assumptions that shape our lives and our search for fulfillment.
Rather than offering formulas or self-help promises, the author shares honest reflections born from decades of questioning, contemplation, and spiritual exploration.
Inside the book you will explore:
• Why the belief that happiness lies outside us creates endless striving
• The surprising connection between desire and suffering
• The illusion of love as we commonly understand it
• How the mind creates both our problems and our search for solutions
• Why some spiritual traditions say we are already what we are seeking
These reflections are sometimes unsettling, often paradoxical, and always sincere. They challenge conventional narratives about achievement, relationships, and the purpose of life.
Part philosophical meditation, part spiritual inquiry, and part personal reflection, An Idle Man’s Reflections speaks to readers who feel that beneath the noise of modern life there is a deeper question waiting to be explored.
This book is for:
• spiritual seekers
• lovers of philosophy
• readers of Eastern wisdom traditions
• anyone questioning the meaning of success and happiness
If you have ever felt that life’s deepest questions remain unanswered despite outward success, this book may resonate with you.
Sometimes the most important discoveries begin not with action—but with reflection.
Goodbye Ye All — Summa Iru
Renunciation & Summa Iru While I will continue to do the work for Vidya and GSR, for all practical purposes, … More
The Longing of the Flesh
Every call of the fleshIs a call of the spiritIn every consummation of longingThere’s a transcendenceTranscendence of egoTranscendence of the … More