The Greeks. Beliefs and Philosophy

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Transcription:

Greek literature

The Greeks Beliefs and Philosophy

What did the greeks believe? - Sought to know basic truths about human nature. - Believed in the pursuit of excellence in all aspects of life. - Wanted to understand themselves and the people around them. - Intense love of intellectualism and rational thought.

The Heroic age 1500-1200 B.C.E.

greek civilization Began in Crete Minoan (2000 B.C.): Developed sixty miles south of mainland Greece A peaceful people Named for King Minos of Crete- sacrificed twelve young men and women each year to feed a half-man, half-bull monster called the Minotaur (Theseus myth)

Minoan civilization directly influenced the rise of the Mycenaean (1500 and 1200 B. C.) on the Greek mainland: Enterprising and aggressive King Agamémnon led an expedition against the city of Troy in Asia Minor. Homer immortalizes heroes of this Trojan War four centuries later in The Iliad. The Greeks of this time called the Mycenaean era The Heroic Age.

The Dark Age Mysterious Decline

Mysterious decline of Mycenaean culture less than fifty years after the Trojan War 1100 B.C.- Dorians invade the Greek peninsula: Burned Mycenaean palace centers Dark Age lasts several centuries Writing falls out of use No record of cultural development

The Epic Age The Iliad and The Odyssey

Earliest surviving works of Greek poetry are epics: The Iliad and The Odyssey (c. 750 B.C.) Greeks develop a script for their language based on a system borrowed from the Phaiákians: We know this as the alphabet. Named for its two initial letters, alpha and beta Theories: its purpose was to aid commercial dealings and/or to record Homer s epics for posterity.

The Rise of the City States 700-500 B.C.E.

Between 700 and 500 B.C.E.: Greek life was more organized and institutional. Fragmented settlements banded together to form communities. Polis (politics)- city-state; ruled by a king Despite city-states, Greeks did not think of themselves as a single nation. Hellenes- belief that all Greeks were direct descendents of Helen, the son of Deukaliôn, who according to Greek myth, was the sole survivor of a great flood and thus the ancestor of all Greeks; this belief created common cultural bonds.

Cultural identity: Set Greeks apart from barbarian neighbors Unity resulted in social and religious institutions : Olympics: brought city-states together; fostered Greek identity; held every four years at Mt. Olympus in honor of Zeus Religious shrines: universal centers of worship; Oracle at Delphi (god Apollo)

Greek Gods and goddesses Ageless and Immortal

First glimpse of Greek religion is in Homer s epics. Ancient Greeks saw gods as being human, i.e. being able to interact with humans. Gods possessed the worst traits of humans: jealously, irrational anger, and pettiness.

Greeks believed that everyone had his or her own destiny or fate (moira); gods do not control human beings. A god can help or hinder a human being, depending on the human s relationship with the god, their character and talents, and the trouble and effort the person took with offerings. Two differences that distinguish gods from humans: Gods and goddesses are ageless and immortal. Gods and goddesses are immensely more powerful than humans.

The Lyric age 7th-5th century B.C.E.

C. 7 th -5 th centuries B.C.E.: Lyric poetry: derived from the word lyre a stringed instrument used to accompany poets : Listen to a Greek Lyre Speaker is not always the poet but a persona a character whose voice and concerns do not necessarily reflect those of the poet. The poet used relatively few lines to express the personal emotions of a single speaker. intimate themes Only small fraction of this poetry has survived.

. Pindar- wrote odes that celebrated victors in major athletic contests. Sappho- composed some of the finest and honest love poems ever written. The power of lyric poetry lies in its immediacy and its ability to quickly and fully describe a strong emotion. This is done through the first-person speaker, the I telling the poem, and through the use of sensory imagery images that appeal to the senses and trigger memories and emotional responses.

sparta and athens 5th century B.C.E.

Start of 5 th century B.C.: Bitter rivalry that formed out of conflicts Most powerful city-states in Greece Sparta- militaristic and conservative; boys and girls underwent years of rigorous physical training and frail infants were exposed, or left on mountaintops to die (legend). Athens- played a leading role in the Persian Wars.

the golden age of athens Pericles and Democracy

Athens: Main beneficiary of the Persian Wars Victories: Marathon, Salamis Athens as wartime leader of all city-states and chief naval power of Greece Established a democratic government (free adult males; women and slaves could not vote); influenced both the Roman Republic and democracy in the United States.

Late 460s B.C. Athenian Golden Age Pericles: Great general and statesman Guided the fortunes of Athens for over three decades Skillful politician who walked the line between extremists views in the democratic assembly Patron of literature, philosophy, and the arts Organized campaign to build the Parthenon (dedicated to Athena)

the rise of greek drama Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides

5 th century B.C.: Authors of tragedy: Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides Plays posed profound questions about the limits of knowledge, individual free will, moral responsibility, and human suffering. Sophocles was the most admired playwright; general and friend to Pericles. Aristophanes: author of comedies; used farce and satire to deal with serious issues as education and war.

The Historians Herodotus and Thucydides

Herodotus (c. 485-c. 425 B.C.): considered, in the West, to be the first historian wrote a chronicle of the Persian War reported on many foreign lands and customs of people he met during his travels filled his narrative with colorful character sketches and interesting digressions thought of his role as that of a moral teacher

Thucydides (c. 460-401 B.C.): He analyzed the Athenian rise to power and the conflict with Sparta in his History of the Peloponnesian War. His work stressed rigorous research and objective reporting. He thought of his role as that of a moral teacher.

Greek philosophers Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle

Philosopher: a Greek word meaning lover of wisdom. Socrates (469-399 B.C.): Wisdom begins in wonder. Method of questioning through dialogue Left no writings of his own Eccentric pretending to be ignorant, he wandered the streets of Athens, a shabby and unkempt figure who questioned people about concepts such as virtue, truth, and wisdom.

Socrates cont.... Never preached or offered his own solutions Demonstrated that no argument was infallible His technique of questioning is know as the Socratic Method. Pointed criticism at official authorities earned him a reputation as a public nuisance. Persecuted for his teaching methods and his belief that an unexamined life is not worth living 399 B.C.: tried and executed on false charges of corrupting the minds of his young students

Plato (c. 429-c. 347 B.C.): Socrates pupil Preserved Socrates method of questioning in a series of dialogues in which the character Socrates poses and answers philosophical questions for/with two or more other characters. Used dialogues as a vehicle to present a comprehensive philosophical system known as Platonism. Platonic system: ideas are the only reality, and people should rely on reason, not on their senses, to comprehend the world.

Plato cont.... His writings examined concepts such as freedom of conscience, the nature of reality, the existence of the soul, ideal government, and how to lead a virtuous and happy life. 387 B.C.: founded a school called the Academy a center of philosophical learning. The Republic: sets forth in brilliant detail his theory of an ideal state ruled by philosopher-kings. At the age of sixty, during a sea voyage, his ships was raided by pirates, and he was sold as a slave to a former student, who helped him return to Athens. He never left Athens again.

Aristotle (384-322 B.C.): Plato s greatest pupil Studied in Athens and later became tutor to a young Alexander the Great Wrote numerous treatises on logic, ethics, political theory, rhetoric, and biology Poetics- one of Aristotle s most influential works sets forth the principles of Greek tragic drama.

Aristotle cont.... His systematic inquiry into numerous branches of knowledge impacted the development of Western philosophy. Modern students of philosophy and literature must acquaint themselves with the work of Plato and Aristotle (influenced literary theory).

Aristotle s theory of rhetoric: Rhetoric: the art of persuasion Ethos- credibility (ethics) Logos- logic of the argument (even if it isn t factual) Pathos- appeal to emotion

The decline of athens Athens vs. Sparta

Envy and resentment toward Athenian expansions led to clashes and then full-scale war between Athens and Sparta: The Peloponnesian War (431-404 B.C.): Involved other city-states on each side Sparta was victorious Athens spiraled into decline from which it never recovered.

Macedon (middle of 4 th century B.C.): Ruled first by Philip and then by his son, Alexander the Great Emerged as the most powerful state in the Greek-speaking world Alexander conquered lands from Egypt to India.

By the time of Alexander s death in 323 B.C.: Greek language and culture had spread through the Mediterranean, North Africa, and western Asia. Continuation of Greek culture by Alexander, and later by the Romans who would conquer the Macedonians in 197 B.C., is called the Hellenistic Age.

Hellenistic Age: Emulated the Hellenic Age, the age of the Greeks The Romans would be greatly responsible for the preservation and spread of Greek knowledge in the West.

Are you done reading the powerpoint? The Next Step: Click on the class document in Google Classroom called Greek Literature Powerpoint Questions and add YOUR three questions. Do not repeat questions that other students have asked.