Chapter 6 Greece*s Golden and Hellenistic Age
... 1. His work sums up Greek medical science because it bases medical treatment on reason, not magic or supernatural reasons. 2. Developed the code of conduct for doctors that is still used today. (Hippocratic oath) Philosophers ...
... 1. His work sums up Greek medical science because it bases medical treatment on reason, not magic or supernatural reasons. 2. Developed the code of conduct for doctors that is still used today. (Hippocratic oath) Philosophers ...
Historical Background to the Trial of Socrates
... Historical Background to the Trial of Socrates The Golden Age ...
... Historical Background to the Trial of Socrates The Golden Age ...
File
... Alexander the Great 1. He lived from about 356-323 B.C. He was the king of Macedonia from 336-326 B.C. and conquered Greece and Persia. 2. Macedonian leader who conquered largest empire the world had seen by 326 b.c. Aristotle (EHruhstotuhl) 1. One of the greatest of the ancient Athenian philosopher ...
... Alexander the Great 1. He lived from about 356-323 B.C. He was the king of Macedonia from 336-326 B.C. and conquered Greece and Persia. 2. Macedonian leader who conquered largest empire the world had seen by 326 b.c. Aristotle (EHruhstotuhl) 1. One of the greatest of the ancient Athenian philosopher ...
Greece Bingo (Review) - Mr. George Academics
... battle in the Persian wars where the Athenian navy defeated the ...
... battle in the Persian wars where the Athenian navy defeated the ...
Greek Civilization
... Philosophy Sophists: They traveled from city to city teaching speech, grammar, poetry, gymnastics, mathematics and music. Young ambitious men were persuaded that the sophists would teach them to make good laws, speak well and win debates. Laws should be based on justice and reason and not what favor ...
... Philosophy Sophists: They traveled from city to city teaching speech, grammar, poetry, gymnastics, mathematics and music. Young ambitious men were persuaded that the sophists would teach them to make good laws, speak well and win debates. Laws should be based on justice and reason and not what favor ...
The Legacy of Ancient Greece and Rome
... Philosophers, including Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle, use logic and reason to explore new ideas, creating an atmosphere conducive to democracy. Socrates encouraged his students to examine their most closely held beliefs and used a question and answer approach that became know as the Socratic metho ...
... Philosophers, including Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle, use logic and reason to explore new ideas, creating an atmosphere conducive to democracy. Socrates encouraged his students to examine their most closely held beliefs and used a question and answer approach that became know as the Socratic metho ...
The Glory That Was Greece
... The spread of Greek culture throughout Alexander’s former empire during the third to first centuries B.C.E. is known as the __________ period. ...
... The spread of Greek culture throughout Alexander’s former empire during the third to first centuries B.C.E. is known as the __________ period. ...
G.R.A.P.E.S Method Source: Glenco World History
... Problem: Ignores the city of Macedonia gaining power in the North. ...
... Problem: Ignores the city of Macedonia gaining power in the North. ...
chapter 4 - Novel Stars
... Socrates invented a system of teaching by asking questions and searching for answers. This question-and-answer technique, that is designed to make people examine their beliefs, is called the Socratic method. Plato was a student of Socrates. It was through Plato’s work, that Socrates made a huge impa ...
... Socrates invented a system of teaching by asking questions and searching for answers. This question-and-answer technique, that is designed to make people examine their beliefs, is called the Socratic method. Plato was a student of Socrates. It was through Plato’s work, that Socrates made a huge impa ...
Bi-Weekly Quiz # 4
... What was a “hoplite”? What was considered the greatest contribution to western civilization? What building material, which we rely on today, was not around to be used in Ancient Greece? Why was Socrates put to death? (What was he found guilty of?) What was the main building material in Ancient Greec ...
... What was a “hoplite”? What was considered the greatest contribution to western civilization? What building material, which we rely on today, was not around to be used in Ancient Greece? Why was Socrates put to death? (What was he found guilty of?) What was the main building material in Ancient Greec ...
Democracy and Greece`s Golden Age Notes
... i. The universe (land, sky, and sea) is put together in an orderly way, and subject to absolute and unchanging laws. ii. How people can understand these laws through logic and reason. b. Socrates i. Believed that absolute standards did exist for truth and justice. 1. However, he encouraged Greeks to ...
... i. The universe (land, sky, and sea) is put together in an orderly way, and subject to absolute and unchanging laws. ii. How people can understand these laws through logic and reason. b. Socrates i. Believed that absolute standards did exist for truth and justice. 1. However, he encouraged Greeks to ...
Greece Quick Notes
... • C. Sculpture • 1. Realistic & proportionate* • D. Greek Ideals • 1. Glorified the human being • 2. Pride in city-states • 3. Belief in harmony, balance, order & moderation • 4. Belief in combining beauty & usefulness VII. Philosophers & Writers* • Philosophy: the study of basic questions of realit ...
... • C. Sculpture • 1. Realistic & proportionate* • D. Greek Ideals • 1. Glorified the human being • 2. Pride in city-states • 3. Belief in harmony, balance, order & moderation • 4. Belief in combining beauty & usefulness VII. Philosophers & Writers* • Philosophy: the study of basic questions of realit ...
CA_NTSG_007 - Mira Costa High School
... most influential city-states were Sparta and Athens. While Sparta stressed stern discipline, Athens glorified the individual and extended political rights to more citizens. In many Greek city-states, the government started as a monarchy and evolved into an aristocracy. The Spartan government include ...
... most influential city-states were Sparta and Athens. While Sparta stressed stern discipline, Athens glorified the individual and extended political rights to more citizens. In many Greek city-states, the government started as a monarchy and evolved into an aristocracy. The Spartan government include ...
File - Mrs. VanValin`s World History
... • Macedonia a kingdom from the north swept in and took control of all of Greece ...
... • Macedonia a kingdom from the north swept in and took control of all of Greece ...
Ch1_Notes_-_Greece
... How Do I Take Notes in This Class? (This is the MAIN IDEA and would be written on LEFT side of your paper). • You write your notes in the class like this... • This would be written to the RIGHT side of your paper, under your main idea. ...
... How Do I Take Notes in This Class? (This is the MAIN IDEA and would be written on LEFT side of your paper). • You write your notes in the class like this... • This would be written to the RIGHT side of your paper, under your main idea. ...
ANCIENT GREECE
... Below the Acropolis was the walled part of the city where everyday life took place. There were marketplaces, theaters, public buildings, and homes. The market was called the agora. It was usually in the center of the city. Governing the City State At first, city states were ruled by one pers ...
... Below the Acropolis was the walled part of the city where everyday life took place. There were marketplaces, theaters, public buildings, and homes. The market was called the agora. It was usually in the center of the city. Governing the City State At first, city states were ruled by one pers ...
Classical Greece
... The Athenian Empire was destroyed in 405 B.C. The Great Peloponnesian war weakened the major Greek states. ...
... The Athenian Empire was destroyed in 405 B.C. The Great Peloponnesian war weakened the major Greek states. ...
The Legacies of Ancient Greece What is a legacy?
... Greeks defeated the Persians at Marathon Pheidippides ran to Athens (about 26 miles) to announce the victory He reached Athens, cried out Nike! (goddess of victory), and fell over dead. ...
... Greeks defeated the Persians at Marathon Pheidippides ran to Athens (about 26 miles) to announce the victory He reached Athens, cried out Nike! (goddess of victory), and fell over dead. ...
Ancient Greece P 182-189 The Greek World: (1
... beauty of the world, the pleasures and pains of love, the joys of family life, and the power of art to transcend death. The Greeks made great advances in science, medicine, and philosophy. Philosophy is the methodical use of reason to discover the truth. The Sophists were an influential group of anc ...
... beauty of the world, the pleasures and pains of love, the joys of family life, and the power of art to transcend death. The Greeks made great advances in science, medicine, and philosophy. Philosophy is the methodical use of reason to discover the truth. The Sophists were an influential group of anc ...
Ancient Greek philosophy
Ancient Greek philosophy arose in the 6th century BCE and continued throughout the Hellenistic period and the period in which Ancient Greece was part of the Roman Empire. It dealt with a wide variety of subjects, including political philosophy, ethics, metaphysics, ontology, logic, biology, rhetoric, and aesthetics.Many philosophers today concede that Greek philosophy has influenced much of Western culture since its inception. Alfred North Whitehead once noted: ""The safest general characterization of the European philosophical traditionis that it consists of a series of footnotes to Plato."" Clear, unbroken lines of influence lead from ancient Greek and Hellenistic philosophers to Early Islamic philosophy, the European Renaissance and the Age of Enlightenment.Some claim that Greek philosophy, in turn, was influenced by the older wisdom literature and mythological cosmogonies of the ancient Near East. Martin Litchfield West gives qualified assent to this view, stating, ""contact with oriental cosmology and theology helped to liberate the early Greek philosophers' imagination; it certainly gave them many suggestive ideas. But they taught themselves to reason. Philosophy as we understand it is a Greek creation.""Subsequent philosophic tradition was so influenced by Socrates (as presented by Plato) that it is conventional to refer to philosophy developed prior to Socrates as pre-Socratic philosophy. The periods following this until the wars of Alexander the Great are those of ""classical Greek"" and ""Hellenistic"" philosophy.