In this fascinating course of lectures, Professor Fred Baumann leads us on an engaging exploration of this penetrating work. Taking in each of the eight books, we examine the complex juxtaposition of events Thucydides demonstrates without much comment of his own. We see how democrats and oligarchs, Athenians and Spartans, understand the world and misunderstand each other. We explore how Thucydides contrasts Sparta - so deliberately narrow, provincial, overtly moral, and covertly cynical - with Athens - cosmopolitan, sophisticated, overtly cynical and covertly moral. In doing so, we discover his admonishment to respect both and to get past our own instinctive, and sometimes destructive, human tendencies. In the end, we come to understand how Thucydide's work shows human nature in the most extreme circumstances and thus provides deep insight into both political practice and philosophy. That may indeed be the reason for its lasting relevance: its unique ability to still shed light upon our own predicament some two-thousand years later.
Classical Mythology
Peter Meineck
audiobookGreek Drama
Peter Meineck
audiobookThe Mysteries of Eleusis and Bacchus
Thomas Taylor
bookWomen Holding Things & Still Life with Remorse
Maira Kalman
audiobookThe Chinese Must Go
Beth Lew-Williams
audiobookThe Seven Against Thebes
Aeschylus
bookThe Ancient Near East
Amanda H. Podany
audiobookPollution is Colonialism
Max Liboiron
audiobookThe Classical World
Robin Lane Fox
audiobookThe Book of the Ancient Greeks : An Introduction to the History and Civilization of Greece from the Coming of the Greeks to the Conquest of Corinth by Rome in 146 B.C.
Dorothy Mills, Cole Bolchoz
audiobookHow to Fit All of Ancient Greece in an Elevator
Theodore Papakostas
audiobookThe Road to Eleusis: Unveiling the Secret of the Mysteries
Albert Hofmann
audiobook