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Books that Made History

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The books were chosen because of their intrinsic greatness and because they still speak to us today. IV. ... India, Greece, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Books that Made History


1
Books that Made History
  • Lecturer Wu Shiyu

2
Outline
  • I. The subject of this course is great books.
    These are books that over the course of time have
    proven their ability to speak to us and have
    given us lessons for living our lives.

3
  • III. In hopes that we can gain some wisdom, this
    course, Books That Have Made History Books That
    Can Change Your Life, explores the ideas that
    have made history and shaped lives by discussing
    some of the most influential writings in history.
    These books range in time from the 3rd millennium
    B.C. to the 20th century and range from the
    classical civilizations of China, India, Greece,
    and Rome to the Europe of the Renaissance to
    contemporary Europe. The books were chosen
    because of their intrinsic greatness and because
    they still speak to us today.

4
  • IV. The course is organized thematically around
    the eternal questions that endure through history
    and that every thoughtful person must consider.

5
  • A. The first theme is God, and the question is
    Does God exist? This theme includes books of
    polytheism, such as the Iliad, and books of
    monotheism, including the biblical book of
    Exodus, the Gospel of Mark, and the Koran.

6
  • B. The second theme is fate, and the question is
    Do things happen by chance, or is there a plan?
    Marcus Aurelius explores this theme.

7
  • C. The third theme is good and evil, which
    explores several questions.
  • 1. Are good and evil absolutes that are
    true in all times and all places and for all
    people? Although Bonhoeffer believed in absolute
    good, he also believed that telling lies was
    necessary at times.
  • 2. Is it always right to tell a lieor
    always wrong? Homer, for example, praises
    Odysseus as a man who knew how to tell many lies
    and tell them well.

8
  • D. The fourth theme explores how we should live.
    Do these great books give us a way to learn the
    meaning of our lives?

9
  • V. This course seeks answers to these questions
    under eternal conditions, emotions, and
    challenges that are interconnected.

10
  • A. The meaning of life Do we ask the question of
    whether life has meaning, or do we just go
    through life without asking?
  • B. Truth Do we live our lives with questions of
    good or build our lives on a fabric of lies?

11
  • C. Duty and responsibility What is our duty?
    Here we explore different conclusions of duty. Do
    we believe in Bonhoeffers conception of his
    responsibility to follow the higher calling of
    good or Judge Thorbecks adherence to the
    importance of duty?
  • D. Justice, government, and society What types
    of justice, government, and society are desired?

12
  • E. Love, jealousy, and hate Romantic love is
    extremely important in our lives.
  • F. Courage, honor, and ambition These emotions
    run through such works as the Iliad, the Gospel
    of Mark, and the story of Faust.

13
  • G. Beauty and nature These concepts speak to
    what is inside of us. Henry David Thoreau, for
    example, writes that our souls must commune with
    the beauty of nature.
  • H. History and the past Books are our link to
    the great ideas of the past. This course is built
    on the belief that great books, great ideas, and
    great individuals make history. This concept runs
    counter to the Marxist idea that social and
    economic forces make great ideas. Such great men
    as Socrates, Napoleon, and Lincoln all built on
    ideas of the past. In truth, great ideas propel
    people to become great in themselves.

14
  • I. Education The lessons of the past come
    together to educate us. Wisdom is the ultimate
    goal of any great books course. We must take the
    information and knowledge from this course and
    transform it into wisdom, applying what we have
    learned from these great books to our lives.

15
  • VI. How do we define a great book?
  • A. A great book has a great theme. It discusses
    ideas of enduring importance.
  • B. A great book is written in language that
    elevates the soul and ennobles the mind.
  • C. A great book must speak across the ages,
    reaching the hearts and minds of people far
    removed in time and space from the era and
    circumstances in which it was composed. Thus, a
    great book summarizes the enduring values and
    ideas of a great age and gives them as a legacy
    to future generations.
  • D. Great books are an education for freedom.

16
Lecture One Bonhoeffer, Letters and Papers From
Prison
  • Lecturer Wu Shiyu

17
  • II. On April 9, 1945, when Germanys defeat in
    World War II was imminent, the German Gestapo
    hanged the Lutheran pastor Dietrich Bonhoeffer as
    a traitor to his nation and its leader.
    Bonhoeffer, who lived from 1906 to 1945, was
    shaped by his knowledge of great books.

18
  • A. Bonhoeffer was born into a comfortably
    well-off family in Berlin. He received a German
    classical education.
  • B. He chose theology as a career and became a
    pastor.

19
  • C. He became interested in the ecumenical church
    movement and went to New York in 1939. Although
    his friends urged him to remain in the United
    States, he decided to return to Germany. He later
    stated that as soon as he boarded the boat, his
    spirit became quiet, because he knew that he was
    doing what he was destined to do.

20
  • D. By 1942, Bonhoeffer was involved in the
    resistance movement. He joined those who had
    realized that Hitler represented evil and must be
    destroyed he understood that the only way to
    stop this evil was for individuals to take
    actions that others might consider treason and
    place a belief in good above what others would
    consider to be their duty to the country.

21
  • E. Bonhoeffer was arrested on April 5, 1943.
  • 1. He wrote while he was prison. His
    friends who had also been arrested brought these
    writings out of prison, and they were
    posthumously published as Letters and Papers From
    Prison. This work joined the Apology of Socrates
    and the Crito of Plato as powerful statements of
    the soul in prison and how the soul could
    continue to speak despite cruel punishments.

22
  • 2. In prison, Bonhoeffer read Plutarch, the
    Bible, and the Prison Dialogues of Plato. He
    realized that such works could speak in a
    different voice at different times of life, in
    times of triumph or times of trial.

23
  • 3. While in prison, Bonhoeffer also evaluated his
    concept of God. He developed the theology of the
    cross, the theology of a world without God. He
    believed that God had been driven from the world
    and had abandoned it. This belief allowed him to
    come to grips with the concept of evil. He
    explored the question of why evil flourishes and
    whether evil exists. He believed that the
    individual must take action and in that action
    find his own God. His Christianity, therefore,
    became a Christianity without formulas of
    religion.

24
  • 4. Bonhoeffers Christian faith, his use of great
    books, and his thought and contemplation enabled
    him to deal with this crisis in his own life.

25
  • 5. Bonhoeffer had read the same books as those
    who tormented him. His judge, Otto Thorbeck, had
    received the same type of classical education as
    Bonhoeffer. Judge Thorbeck believed that his duty
    was to carry out trials that he knew were wrong.
    Bonhoeffer, however, read books with the moral
    compass of absolute right and wrong. Great books
    themselves are no cure. They offer a means to
    live life in a way that can do either good or
    harm.

26
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