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The Greeks of the Ancient World The Minoan Culture 2nd millennium BCE The mythical king Minos The larger land of Crete The citadel—Mycenae The palace—Pylos With centers of wealth and power Its language the early form of Greek The Dark Age of Greece Palaces destroyed by fire in the last century of the millennium BCE Written language lost and the Greeks were illiterate for the next few hundred of years Only a body of oral epic poetry left that was the raw material of Homer Homer and His Epics 8 century BCE—Greeks learned how to write again Shaping the oral epic poetry into written form The Iliad and The Odyssey The basis of an education and a whole culture A Completely Different World View Pantheism The arbitrary tendencies of gods The disorder of the world A ruler of heaven that can be feared, laughed at, cheated, blamed and admired at the same time Gods’ sublime disregard of humans The limited power of Zeus A Completely Different World View the blind forces of universe which are not necessarily connected with morality Death is a human fear, just as the courage to face it is a human quality Our real admiration are not toward gods but toward mortals [vs. The Old Testament] City-States of Greece Geographical features: mountain barriers and scattered islands Differing from each other in custom, political constitution, and even dialect Rivals and fierce competitors 8th-7th centuries BCE: age of great expansion—all over the Mediterranean coast Adapting the Phoenician system of writing Athens & Sparta: 5th BCE Leading the combined Greek resistance to the Persian invasion (490-479 BCE) Athens vs. Sparta Athens ---Direct democracy ---Leader of a naval alliance: fleet (Aegean Sea & coast of Asia Minor) Sparta ---rigidly conservative in government ---individuals reared & trained for the state’s business ---superior in land army The Peloponnesian War 431-404 BCE With Athens’s surrendering to Sparta The exhaustion of Greek city states Subjugated by Macedon: ---King Philip Alexander: (Ptolemy) ---Hellenistic age (323-31 BCE) ---the expansion of the Greek culture under Alexander: language, buildings, gymnasium, theater (the writing of the Gospels) The rise & decline of Athenian values The delicate balance between the individual freedom and the demands of the state ---the individual versatility and grace ---the spirit of reverence A patriarchal class society 3 groups excluded from participation in democracy: ---women (could not own property, hold office or vote) ---resident aliens ---slaves Intellectual revolution caused by the war Critical reevaluation of traditional values Innovations in education The appearance of the Sophists, teachers for the art of public speaking and related subjects ---the appearance of liberal education The deterioration of the Sophists The Sophists’ Influence: both positive & negative The appeal to human intelligence (the canon of probability) ---attack on myth and concepts of gods ---undermining traditional moral convictions: appeal to the self-interest of the audience ---men as the measure of all things: new forms of creativity in art (poetry, painting sculpture) and thoughts ---the Athenian rhetoric: contribution to Rome The Socratic philosophy Taking no fees, unlike the Sophists Issues such as justice, truth of peity The dialectic method: a search for truth through questions & answers To expose the illogicality of his opponent’s position but did not often provide a substitute for the belief he had destroyed Distrust of public life The influence of Socrates the Athenians’ exasperation Socrates sentenced to death for the insistence of his doctrine Plato and Aristotle revolutionized philosophy and laid the foundations for later ancient and European philosophical thought.