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Golden Age of Athens

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Athens began to use its powerful navy to control the other city-states ... Great talent for oratory. Did not try to dazzle the audience but worked to reason with them ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Golden Age of Athens


1
Golden Age of Athens
  • The Birth of the Thinking World
  • 480 430 BC

2
Delian League
  • Alliance of 140 Greek city-states
  • Purpose
  • To ward off future Persian attacks
  • Athens began to use its powerful navy to control
    the other city-states
  • In effect, the Delian League became an Athenian
    Empire

3
Pericles
  • Leader of Athens through a great part of the
    Golden Age
  • Great talent for oratory
  • Did not try to dazzle the audience but worked to
    reason with them
  • Dominated Athenian life for 32 years
  • 461 429 BC
  • This period is often called the Age of Pericles

4
Three Goals of Pericles
  • Strengthen Athenian democracy
  • Most public officials were now paid salaries
  • To build a commercial empire
  • Increased the power of the navy which safeguarded
    commerce
  • Glorify Athens
  • Used money gained from the Delian League to
    beautify Athens

5
Acropolis
6
Acropolis Map
7
Parthenon - Then
8
Parthenon-Now
9
Drama
  • Two great dramatists
  • Aeschylus
  • Sophocles
  • Oedipus
  • Tragedy
  • Had to portray people of character, whose
    strengths led to their downfalls
  • Comedy

10
Greek Philosophy
  • The Big Three

11
Socrates
  • The Father of Philosophy

12
Socrates
  • Socrates set the standard for all subsequent
    Western philosophy
  • Use of critical reasoning
  • Unwavering commitment to truth
  • The vivid example of his own life
  • He left no writings
  • We are dependent upon contemporary writers for
    our information about his life and work
  • Aristophanes
  • Xenophon
  • Dedicated his life to an investigation of the
    development of moral character
  • Retired from active life to work as a stonemason
    and to raise his children with his wife

13
Socrates
  • After inheriting a modest fortune from his
    father, Socrates used his financial independence
    to give full-time attention to inventing the
    practice of philosophical dialogue
  • For the rest of his life, Socrates devoted
    himself to free-wheeling discussion with the
    aristocratic young citizens of Athens
  • Insistently questioning their unwarranted
    confidence in the truth of popular opinions, even
    though he often offered them no clear alternative
    teaching

14
Socrates
  • Socrates pointedly declined to accept payment for
    his work with students
  • But many of them were fanatically loyal to him
  • Their parents were often displeased with his
    influence on their offspring
  • An Athenian jury found him guilty of corrupting
    the youth and interfering with the religion of
    the city
  • They sentenced him to death in 399 BCE
  • Socrates drank hemlock and died in the company of
    his friends and disciples

15
Philosophy of Socrates
  • Best source of information about Socrates's
    philosophical views
  • the early dialogues of his student Plato
  • Socratic dialogues
  • extended conversations with students, statesmen,
    and friends
  • aim at understanding and achieving virtue, aretĂȘ
  • Vital steps toward our acquisition of genuine
    knowledge
  • Destroying the illusion that we already
    comprehend the world perfectly
  • Honestly accepting the fact of our own ignorance
  • Discovering universal definitions of the key
    concepts governing human life

16
Philosophy of Socrates
  • Socrates refuted the superficial notion of piety
    as doing whatever is pleasing to the gods
  • Efforts to define morality by reference to any
    external authority, he argued, inevitably founder
    in a significant logical dilemma about the origin
    of the good
  • During his imprisonment
  • Responded to friendly efforts to secure his
    escape by seriously debating whether or not it
    would be right for him to do so
  • Concluded that an individual citizen can never be
    justified in refusing to obey the laws of the
    state

17
Philosophy of Socrates
  • Tries to determine whether or not virtue can be
    taught
  • Led to a careful investigation of the nature of
    virtue itself
  • His direct answer is that virtue is unteachable
  • Socrates argues here that knowledge and virtue
    are so closely related that no human agent ever
    knowingly does evil
  • We all invariably do what we believe to be best
  • Improper conduct can only be a product of our
    ignorance rather than a symptom of weakness of
    the will

18
Plato
  • Source of Understanding

19
Plato
  • Son of wealthy and influential Athenian parents
  • Began his philosophical career as a student of
    Socrates
  • When Socrates died
  • Plato traveled to Egypt and Italy
  • Spent several years advising the ruling family of
    Syracuse
  • Returned to Athens
  • Established his own school of philosophy at the
    Academy
  • Attempted to pass on the heritage of a Socratic
    style of thinking and to guide their progress
    through mathematical learning to the achievement
    of abstract philosophical truth

20
Platonic Philosophy
  • Plato tried to convey the spirit of Socrates'
    teaching by presenting accurate reports of
    Socrates' conversations
  • Early dialogues are typically devoted to
    investigation of a single issue, about which a
    conclusive result is rarely achieved

21
Platonic Philosophy
  • Later dialogues of Plato develop, express, and
    defend his own, more firmly established,
    conclusions
  • Claims to demonstrate the immortality of the
    human soul
  • Discusses the virtues of justice, wisdom,
    courage, and moderation
  • Reviews various forms of government
  • Says that only philosophers are fit to rule
  • Shows that justice is better than injustice

22
Aristotle
  • The Founder of Science

23
Aristotle
  • Aristotle was the most notable product of the
    educational program devised by Plato
  • Spent twenty years of his life studying at the
    Academy
  • When Plato died, Aristotle returned to his native
    Macedonia
  • Participated in the education of Alexander the
    Great
  • He came back to Athens in 335 and established his
    own school at the Lyceum
  • Spent most of the rest of his life engaged there
    in research, teaching, and writing
  • His students acquired the name "peripatetics"
    from the master's habit of strolling about as he
    taught

24
Aristotle
  • Surviving works of Aristotle probably represent
    only a fragment of the whole
  • Include his investigations of an amazing range of
    subjects
  • Logic
  • Philosophy
  • Ethics
  • Physics
  • Biology
  • Psychology
  • Politics
  • Rhetoric

25
Aristotles Philosophy
  • Aim of Aristotle's logical treatises
  • To develop a universal method of reasoning by
    means of which it would be possible to learn
    everything there is to know about reality
  • Developed a scheme for the description of
    particular things in terms of their properties,
    states, and activities
  • Developed syllogisms

26
Aristotles Philosophy
  • Aristotle rejected the Platonic theory of forms
  • Defended his own vision of ultimate reality,
    including the eternal existence of substance
  • Explains the use of sensation and reason to
    achieve genuine knowledge
  • Aristotle made several efforts to explain how
    moral conduct contributes to the good life for
    humans
  • He considered the natural desire to achieve
    happiness
  • Described the operation of human volition and
    moral deliberation
  • Developed a theory of each virtue as the mean
    between vicious extremes
  • Aristotle's view is that the lives of individual
    human beings are invariably linked together in a
    social context
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