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I'm absolutely sure Socrates had moments of bliss. I imagine we all do at some point.
But bliss is not something sustainable. Bliss is a momentary emotion. So I do not think there is much sense in wondering if he was blissful.
We might wonder if he was happy. And I think that is closer to what Arjen is asking. Even the old phrase "Ignorance is bliss" tends to be taken as meaning "Ignorance is happiness". As for the answer: there's no way to tell. You'd have to ask Socrates, and even then, he might not know. If Plato's and Xenophon's accounts are any evidence, then Socrates seems to have been a reasonably happy man.
I do not think wisdom causes harm to happiness, quite the opposite. If you are ignorant, how will you know what happiness is, much less how to find it? Sure, the wise and foolish can have moments of bliss, but the wise are best able to discover happiness as the ignorant do not even know where to begin looking.
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