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Minoan fresco Knossos

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Plato believed that the world of appearances is only a shadowy emanation ... Use Plato's idea of the illusory to explain why you have no idea what's going on. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Minoan fresco Knossos


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Minoan fresco - Knossos
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Minoan Fresco
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Minoan fresco - Dolphins
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Minoan Bull-leaping fresco
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Snake goddess Knossos
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Clay tablet with Linear A
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Clay tablet Linear B
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Linear B Amphora
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Cycladean musician2500 1100 BC
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Cycladean votive figure2500 110 BC
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Heinrich Schleiman
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Mask of Agamemmnon
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Walls of Mycenae
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Periclesc. 490 429 BC
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Aspasia
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  • The task is not so much to see what no one has
    yet seen, but to think what no one has yet
    thought, about that which everybody sees.
  • Erwin Schrodinger
  • (1887 1961)

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What one substance is the essential element of
the universe?
  • Thales the world is made of water
  • Anaximander the world is made of a substance
    called apeiron, which producese the basic
    elements of earth, air, water, and fire
  • Anaximenes the world is made of air
  • Leucippus/Democritus the world is made of atoms
  • Pythagoras the world is an embodiment of
    numbers
  • Heraclitus the world is made of fire

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Thales620 555BC
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Leucippus and Democritus500 BC
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Heraclitus
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Pythagorasc. 530 BC
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Hippocrates460 377 BC
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  • The pre-Socratics were the first philosophers in
    ancient Greece. They proposed theories about the
    nature of the universe and about its origins
  • The pre-Socratics were not especially interested
    in people and how we should act. The sophists,
    on the other hand, were keenly interested in
    people
  • The sophists were philosophers interested in
    using knowledge to their own advantage. They
    tended to believe that truth and virtue are
    whatever people make of them
  • Socrates became famous for getting people to
    think more carefully about their ideas of virtue.
    He was seen as a threat to society and chose to
    die rather than renounce his beliefs.

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Socrates469 399 BC
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Plato427 347 BC
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Anamnesis
  • The notion that although we forget the ideal
    reality, we can sometimes remember it again.
  • Explanation for how we can know things even if we
    have never experienced them.

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  • Plato turned to philosophy when he was
    disillusioned with politics
  • Plato believed that the world of appearances is
    only a shadowy emanation of an ideal reality
  • We can come to know the ideal world of forms
    through inductive reasoning and by remembering
    what weve always known
  • In Platos ideal republic, philosophers rule with
    the help of soldiers, keeping the tradespeople in
    line

29
Putting Plato to work for you
  • Use Platos idea of the illusory to explain why
    you have no idea whats going on. When someone
    asks you what happened in the class you just
    slept through, say These passing shadows we call
    reality provide only the merest hints of an
    invisible truth.

30
Change
  • Heraclitus Change is the natural result of
    things colliding with their opposites
  • Parmenides Change is illusory. It only looks
    like things change. In reality, everything is
    always the same
  • Plato change shows how inferior things are to
    their unchanging, IDEAL form
  • Aristotle Change has a purpose and happens when
    things become what they should be
  • Darwin Change occurs randomly, but changes may
    be passed along through natural selection

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Aristotle
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Putting Aristotle to work for you
  • Use Aristotles idea that thinking has an
    essential human purpose as an excuse to slack off
    from work. Say, I am not goofing off, I am
    thinking about things and by thinking I am
    fulfilling my purpose as a rational creature.

33
Causality
  • Cause is not just what happens leading up to an
    event. It is a goal being realized, a sense of
    purpose. The outcome is already out there and
    pulling events along to it.

34
Four Kinds of Causes
  • Material Cause the matter or substance that
    things are made out of that allows change to take
    place
  • Efficient Cause the event that precedes and
    leads to an outcome
  • Formal Cause the internal, essential propulsion
    leading to change
  • Final Cause the external end or purpose served
    by a change

35
The Golden Mean
  • The notion of avoiding extremes
  • Lifes greatest purpose is to live well
  • Denial is unnecessary as long as a person avoids
    going overboard
  • Your purpose as a human being is to enjoy things
    in moderation (Augustine)

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Putting Aristotles ideas to work for you
  • Use Aristotles concept of the golden mean to
    explain why its actually good that you are
    mediocre at something. Say, Of course Im not
    an outstanding student. The whole purpose of
    academics is ruined when it is taken to excess.

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Deductive Reasoning
  • Aristotle invented this form of reasoning using
    the syllogism
  • The basis for geometry
  • Two premises (both of which must be true) and a
    conclusion
  • All men are mortal
  • Socrates is a man
  • Therefore Socrates is mortal

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Three Greek Principles
  • Humanism belief in the dignity and inherent
    worth of human beings
  • Realism fidelity to nature
  • Idealism commitment to an underlying standard
    of perfection

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Geometric PeriodAmphora1200 700 BC
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Geometric style
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Geometric style
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Geometric amphora
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Archaic Period700 480 BC
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Archaic PeriodAmphora
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Archaic period vaseAchilles and Ajax playing a
game
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Archaic PeriodBlack figure vase
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Classical Period 480 323 BC
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Classical Period urn
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Classical urn
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ClassicalPeriod
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The Calf Bearer
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KourosArchaic Period700 480 BC
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Rampkin Horseman
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Kritios
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Kritios boy
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Chiton
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Chios Kore
Peplos Kore
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Charioteer of Delphi
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Bronze Warrior
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Bronze Warrior
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Spear ThrowerRoman copy of a Greek bronze
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Kore
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Discobolus by Myron
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Aphrodite of Knidos
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Phidias
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Doric Order
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Ionic Order
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Erectheum Ionic capital
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Corinthian Order
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Greek temple at Corinth
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Contemporary aerial viewThe Acropolis
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Model of the Acropolis
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AthenaParthenon
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Statue of AthenaatThe Parthenon
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Parthenon Diagram
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Pediments
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East pedimentWest Pediment
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Parthenon Plan
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Labor of Heracles metope
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Centaur strikes a Lapith metope
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Lapith tackles a centaur south side metope
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South metopes reconstruction
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North frieze
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East frieze
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East Frieze
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Fragment of the Cavalcade
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West frieze Cavalcade
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Porch of the Maidens
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ErectheumPorch of the Maidens
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Porch of the maidens
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Athena Nike Temple Ionic Order
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ReliefofNike
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Athena
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Phidias
Horatio Greenough, 1840
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Roman bust of Homer
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Seven reasons why Homer was a great writer
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Drama in the Age of Pericles
  • Developed from the rites of Dionysus
  • 534 BC Thespis introduced an answerer
  • 30,000 people would assemble to see a performance
  • State provided funds for 3 actors
  • Competitions pitted three tragedies and five
    comedies

102
Three Great Tragedians
  • Aeschylus
  • Sophocles
  • Euripides

103
Structure of Tragedy
  • Tragic Discovery Oedipus
  • Tragic Decision - Bacchae

104
  • Early episodes - various characters try to deter
    main person and thereby avert tragedy
  • Middle episodes nothing works, hero goes
    headlong into disaster. His downfall follows
    immediately
  • Final episodes messenger arrives and report
    catastrophe. KOMMOS lyric exchange between
    chorus and important characters

105
Chorus
  • Breaks up the monotony
  • Provides emotional relief
  • Interprets action
  • Frequently serves as a foil for the main
    character
  • Introduces characters
  • May express political/philosophical ideas of the
    plot

Stasimon Chorus from Orestes by Euripides
106
Greek Terms
  • Hubris wanton insolence, arrogance from pride,
    violent anger presumption (originally toward the
    gods) self-confidence.
  • Hamartia to fail of ones purpose, to go wrong
    (to miss the mark or target), error, mistake in
    judgment. According to Aristotle an error
    derived from ignorance of some material fact or
    circumstance (ignorance combined with absence of
    wicked intent).
  • Catharsis -climax that constitutes overwhelming
    feelings of great pity, sorrow, laughter, fear,
    or any extreme change in emotion that results in
    the renewal, restoration and revitalization for
    living.

107
Catharsis
  • Found in connection with the complex reaction of
    pity and fear.
  • Pity - a state of mind that is occasioned by
    undeserved misfortune.
  • Fear understanding another person's distress
    and then projecting the possibility of this
    distress happening to us.

108
The Tragic Character
  • A character who is eminently good and just. Yet
    whose misfortune is brought about not by vice or
    depravity but by some error or frailty
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