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Introduction to Ancient Greece

Introduction to Ancient Greece. Ideas, Culture, Legacy. Greek Achievement. “They wanted to know what things are and what things mean.” —Edith Hamilton Created written language that was used as a permanent record. The City-State Democracy Jurisprudence Mystery Cults Reason

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Introduction to Ancient Greece

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  1. Introduction to Ancient Greece Ideas, Culture, Legacy

  2. Greek Achievement “They wanted to know what things are and what things mean.” —Edith Hamilton Created written language that was used as a permanent record.

  3. The City-State Democracy Jurisprudence Mystery Cults Reason Systematic Analysis and Scientific Method Epic Poetry Lyric Music Mathematics Physical Sciences Ethics Political Science History Psychology Greek Accomplishments

  4. City-State • Allowed for people to come together for market, school, prayer. • Allowed for exchange of ideas. • Ostracism considered worse than death.

  5. Democracy and Jurisprudence • Created participatory government (excluded slaves and women). • “innocent before proven guilty” concept established

  6. Mystery Cults:Dionysis • Dionysis was the Greek god of fertility, wine, and drama (party god). • Greeks held drama festivals in his honor (that’s where Oedipus was originally performed).

  7. Science and Reasoning • Aristotle in particular focused on science and reasoning • Observation, classification based on analysis • That’s what we do now (scientific method)

  8. Arts Epic Poetry Lyric Music

  9. Epic Poetry Homer’s “Rosy-fingereddawn”

  10. Sappho’s Lyrics Full Moon The glow and beauty of the stars Are nothing near the splendid moon When in her roundness she burns silver About the world Then In gold sandals Dawn like a thief Fell upon me

  11. Music • Instruments associated with gods (Pan, Apollo) • Pythagoreans: cosmos generated out of music • Plato speculated on impact of music on emotions • Used in plays and for straight entertainment

  12. Triangle Cosmos Criticism Nuclear Cosmopolitan Logical Physical Crisis Technology Dichotomy Energy Analysis Pentagon Circle Enthusiasm Ellipse Cosmetics Synthesis Atom Erotic Psychology Theory Statistics Geography Politics Ethics Words from Ancient Greece

  13. Greek Drama

  14. Types of Plays • Tragedy • Comedy • Satyr • Performed between acts of tragedies • Made fun of plights of tragic heroes

  15. TragedyEvery Moment is Eternity • Celebrated at the Great Dionysian Festival (Festival Dionysus) • Linear (beginning, middle, and end) • Purpose is catharsis • Watch the hero at the brink of abyss and observe his behavior • “Count no man happy until he is dead. The ending tells all” (Sophocles).

  16. ComedyEternity is in the Moment • Celebrated at Lenaia Festival • Cyclical • Initial problem followed by humorous complications • Pretends that death does not exist • Celebrates craziness of life • Purpose: reminder to keep perspective and communal laughter

  17. Art and ArchitectureBalance and Beauty • Serenity • Strength • Simplicity • Symmetry

  18. Sculpture

  19. Philosophy“Love of Wisdom” • Dedicated to Truth • Seeking truth is human duty • Not for practical reasons • Socrates • Plato • Aristotle

  20. What is real? What is the meaning of life? What is fate? How should a person best conduct his/her life? Is perfection possible? What is good? What is virtue? What is just? What is happiness? Philosophical Questions

  21. Moderation vs. Excess Toward the Golden Mean • Ideal behavior • Midpoint between extremes • Well lived life = nothing to excess • Balance, Proportion, Harmonia found in all aspects of Greek life: literature, art, architecture, ethics, politics, psychology until Alexandrian times when excess and decadence became the norm.

  22. Universal Knowledge vs Self-Knowledge • Microcosm and macrocosm • Part reflects the whole and whole shaped by parts • Personal reflects public and vice versa • Socrates: without self-knowledge, one cannot understand the world Oracle at Delphi: “know thyself”

  23. Two Strifes • Greeks recognized that strife was a part of life • Healthy strife: Olympics • Unhealthy strife: war • Competition essential: drama, sport, intellect

  24. Idealism vs. Realism • According to Plato: • Real vs. really real (chair vs. idea of chair) • We can’t trust real, only really real • We understood the really real before we became encumbered by our bodies and the earthly world • Goal of philosophy is find our way back to the ideal through questioning • Questioning leads us to the ultimate good (idealism)

  25. Idealism vs. Realism • According to Aristotle: • Real could be seen in the world • We can find it if we classify it • We can understand it if we can analyze it • Observation and study of the real leads to understanding • Realism

  26. Dialectical Reasoning vs. Intuition Greek Dialectical Process: Statement (thesis) --> Counter-statement (antithesis) --> Balance point (synthesis)

  27. Dialectical Reasoning vs. Intuition PLATO • Spent most of his life defending dialectical reasoning (banished poets) • At the end of his life, reconsidered poetry and intuition

  28. Dialectical Reasoning vs. Intuition ARTISTOTLE • Learned from Plato’s evolution • “Poetry is more truly scientific, or philosophical than history because history shows us only those things that were or are, while poetry shows us what should be or ought to be.” --The Poetics

  29. God centered vs. Man centered • Greeks began to believe the world to be human-centered • Odysseus – rejects immortality • Stories illustrate belief • Odysseus/Calypso • Prometheus steals fire • Socrates preferred the god within to gods of Olympus

  30. God centered vs. Man centered Socrates believed “the gods’ behavior was too unpredictable. They could not, in their imperviousness to the pain experienced by mortals, be understood, used as models, or trusted.” —Kenneth Atchity

  31. Examining Polar Differences • Set the opposites apart so that you can examine what is in between • Understanding comes when the right questions are asked

  32. Enduring Questions • Should a person pursue truth despite the ruin pursuit might unleash? • Should the individual’s rights be protected at whatever cost to the community? • Does the community have the right to destroy the offending individual?

  33. The Greek Way • Seek harmony • Seek the middle way • Draw on opposites as needed to deal with what life deals you • Seek balance • Seek moderation in all things

  34. Sources • Text comes from “Introduction” in The Classical Greek Reader by Kenneth Atchity. • Music comes from “Ancient Greek Music” at the Austrian Academy of Sciences. <<www.oeaw.ac.at/kal/agm/index.htm>>

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