1 / 44

Economics in the hellenistic world

Western Civilization University High School 2011-2012. Economics in the hellenistic world. Commerce. Wealth created new cities, harbors, roads More geographical knowledge of East Greeks spread Hellenic law and business practices - standardization

khuyen
Download Presentation

Economics in the hellenistic world

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Western Civilization University High School 2011-2012 Economics in the hellenistic world

  2. Commerce • Wealth created new cities, harbors, roads • More geographical knowledge of East • Greeks spread Hellenic law and business practices - standardization • Development of long overland trade routes • Caravans with camels • Luxury goods from East, manufactured goods from West • Ideas and knowledge • Slave trade • The Silk Road

  3. Industry & Agriculture • Little development  manpower over machinery • More elaborate pottery  made locally • Agriculture still mainstay of economy & production

  4. Western Civilization University High School 2011-2012 Religion in the Hellenistic World

  5. Spread of Greek Religion • Familiar Greek religious cults spread throughout Near East & Egypt • Means of spreading Greek culture • Focus on rituals, festivals • Did not satisfy spiritual yearnings • Tyche Fate, doom, chance • Some turned to philosophy, superstition, magic

  6. Mystery Religions • Ritual & practice secret to initiates • Incorporated aspects of Greek & Eastern religions • Appealed to those looking for immortality • Main concept: initiates become united with male god • Raised from the dead • Sacrifice and resurrection of god saved devotee from eternal death

  7. Cult of Serapis • Serapis  combination of Osiris and Zeus • Created by King Ptolemy • Judge of souls  rewarded people with immortality

  8. Cult of Isis • Wider appeal than Serapis • Most important goddess of Hellenistic world • Marriage, conception, childbirth

  9. Western Civilization University High School 2011-12 Greek Philosophy

  10. Ancient Greek Philosophers • “seekers of wisdom” who tried to study the world in a systematic way • believed people could understand the world through reason & logic • vs. religious myths, authority of others

  11. Ancient Greek Philosophers • earliest philosophical questions: What is the world made of? What holds the world up?

  12. The Pythagoreans • school of thinkers founded by Pythagoras (570 – 497 BCE) • tried to unite philosophy & mathematics • believed that universe has order to it, which can be expressed through math

  13. Ancient Greek Philosophers • one of the earliest groups = sophists(“men of wisdom”) • Sophists’ main concerns = political & social success • many were teachers for children of the wealthy

  14. Socrates • 470 – 399 BCE • born & lived in Athens • believed what we need to know is how to conduct ourselves • Important Questions: • What is good? • What is right? • What is just?

  15. Socrates • apply terms like “just” to people, laws, situations, etc.  “justice” emerges as common trend • can discover justice through rigorous discussion, careful questioning & examination of beliefs

  16. Socrates • developed the Socratic Method: a question & answer technique of studying issues • designed to make people examine their beliefs • BOTTOM LINE: No one knowingly does wrong. If we know the answer to “What is Justice?”,we will be obliged to act in just ways. • tried to involve & teach others

  17. Plato • 424 – 348 BCE • a student of Socrates • first written philosophy: The Dialogues • early dialogues: records of Socrates’ teachings • later dialogues included Plato’s own ideas

  18. Plato • one of his most famous dialogues: The Republic • outlined his ideal society • believed no one would have wealth/luxury, everyone do what they are best suited to do • included the Theory of Forms

  19. Plato’s Theory of Forms • all things in the world are versions of their original Forms (archetypes) • the Forms are ideal; highest & most fundamental version of reality • studying the Forms is the only path to “true” knowledge • e.g. human body = glimpse of true human Form (soul) • basis of the Allegory of the Cave

  20. Plato’s Allegory of the Cave • prisoners chained to chairs; shadows projected on wall • reality for prisoners = shadows • Plato: philosophers’ job = “free” the prisoners to see the Forms • “rehearsing to be dead”

  21. Aristotle • 384 – 322 BCE • a student of Plato’s Academy in Athens • later established his own school (the Lyceum: the world’s first scientific institute)

  22. Aristotle • considered one of the great thinkers of modern world • wrote about: physics, metaphysics, poetry, theater, music, logic, rhetoric, linguistics, politics, government, ethics, biology, zoology, economics, optics, and more… • Dante: “the teacher of those who know”

  23. Aristotle: The Nature of Being • all things have 2 aspects: • 1. Matter: constituent materials; the stuff out of which things are made • 2. Form: the way that matter is organized • things are different from each other because they have different Forms • no “turtle stuff”  instead, matter (stuff) arranged into turtle Form • Human beings = body (matter) + soul (form)

  24. Aristotle: The Nature of Being • believed that reason was the highest good • praised the virtues of self-reliance and self-control • allowed insight into “true” human nature (form! soul!)

  25. Hellenistic Philosophy • Philosophy attractive to more people • Less elitist • Absence of politics/religion  believe in philosophy • New schools of philosophical thought • Agreed on necessity of making people self-sufficient

  26. Epicureanism • Practical philosophy of serenity • Epicurus (340-270 BCE) • Based on scientific theories • Naturalistic view of universe  gods had no real effect on human life • Principle good is pleasure  absence of pain • Ignore politics • People could attain peace & serenity by ignoring outside world  focus on their own feelings & reactions

  27. Stoicism • Zeno from Cyprus (335-262 BCE) • Nature an expression of divine will • People happy when they live in accordance with nature • Unity of man & the universe • Most popular Hellenistic philosophy • People should participate in politics • Key Question: Achievements don’t matter, did you live a virtuous life?

  28. Stoicism • Evolved the concept of world order • People should do their duty to the state in which they find themselves • Natural Law  a natural order of life, right and wrong, governed everyone • Valuable concept for the Romans!

  29. Western Civilization University High School 2011-12 Hellenistic science & medicine

  30. Hellenistic Science: Astronomy • Aristarchus • 310 – 230 BCE • educated in the Lyceum (Aristotle’s school)

  31. Aristarchus • promoted heliocentric theory: Earth and planets revolve around the sun • went against Aristotle’s geocentric theory (everything revolves around Earth) • no telescopes! • heliocentric theory pushed aside until Copernicus (16th century CE)

  32. Hellenistic Science: Astronomy • Eratosthenes • used math to calculate circumference of the Earth • his guess = 24,675 miles • actually = 24,860 miles • also studied geography using math • argued that you could reach India from Spain by sailing south (around Africa) or west

  33. Hellenistic Science: Geometry • Euclid • mathematician from Alexandria • wrote “The Elements of Geometry”

  34. Archimedes • 287 – 212 BCE • from Syracuse • interested in math and mechanics • very accurate approximation of pi • principle of a lever • water displacement

  35. Archimedes’ Screw

  36. Archimedes’ Weapons of War (real??) • The Claw of Archimedes • weapon that supposedly protected Syracuse • metal grappling hook on long arm over water • lift ship out of water, drop it back down

  37. Archimedes’ Death Ray • series of mirrors set up to reflect sunlight to a single point • set ships on fire?

  38. The Results of All This Science… • major effect on military, warfare • theories of mechanics  “siege machines” in war • catapults (rocks, burning bundles) • siege towers • Philip II of Macedonia, Alexander the Great

  39. The Results of All This Science… • War was no longer between soldiers on battlefield • Now, between populations… • civilian casualties (murder, rape, slavery) • Sense of unease among Greek people  cities falling to new machines/weapons

More Related