In the World of Ready-Made Answers
Many years ago, in an ancient city, there lived a man whom people considered strange. First, he walked the streets with a lantern. Second, he did it in broad daylight.
When asked why he needed a lantern during the day, he would calmly reply: “I am looking for a human being.”
People looked around. Some laughed. Some took offense. Some began to explain that they were perfectly decent people.
The philosopher looked at them closely, thought for a moment, and moved on.
His name was Diogenes.
Over time, he noticed something peculiar.
People quickly found answers to simple questions: who is richer, who is more important, who has more power, who owns more things.
But when the conversation turned to meaning, freedom, or what truly makes a human being — the answers suddenly ran out.
Then Diogenes made another “strange” move.
He settled in a large clay jar right in the city square.
It looked like poverty, but in reality it was a philosophical argument.
Diogenes’ jar carried one simple message: a person needs far fewer things than they think, and far more meaning than they are used to seeking.
Once, Alexander the Great — a man who had conquered half the world — came to this jar. He looked at the philosopher and said: “Ask me for anything you want.”
Diogenes thought for a moment and replied: “Stand aside. You’re blocking my sun.”
Two and a half thousand years have passed.
The world has changed.
Now people live not only in cities — they live on the Internet.
Here, you can ask any question and receive an answer in a second. Answers have become infinite.
Yet a new strangeness has emerged.
People less and less often ask the questions that truly matter. Because a good question is already half the answer, and formulating it is far harder than simply typing into a search bar.
Gradually, thinking has become short and fragmented.
Information flickers like a social media feed. Answers are scrolled past faster than a thought can even form.
A person increasingly receives an answer, but less and less understands what they truly wanted to ask.
This is where the Philosopher appears.
He does not give ready-made answers — there are already enough of those on the Internet.
Instead, the Philosopher does something else: he helps people formulate the right question. He offers a fresh philosophical perspective on any problem — even the most ordinary one.
Sometimes it seems that he, too, walks through the Internet with a lantern, searching for a human being.
A human being who is still capable of asking a real question.
The Internet knows how to answer.
Philosophy knows how to ask.
My name is Barch. Welcome to my world. Let’s start asking.