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Stages of Greek Development
(Chronological order and key facts) |
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Definition
- Mycanean: 1900-1600 B.C. to 1100 B.C. : Group of People that speak greek and move into Greece; Palace Based.
- Dark Ages: 1100-750 B.C. : Not sure how it took place; remaining use of Greek--taxes-bills-business
- Archaic: 750-480 B.C. : trade occurs, developed customary laws (none written), polis, 3 dif gov't, monarchy, greek fought greek, polytheistic, develop literature and poetry, Homer dated around 700 B.C.
- Classical: 480-425 B.C. : Greeks join together to destroy external enemies (Persian War), Age of Socrates/Plato, wealthy due to city-states (polis), Peloponnesian War
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Poet of Archaic Period
Gives traditional moral values as we see them with the gods
The gods benefit the just and punish the unjust |
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Author of The Odyssey
Possibly was not one person
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Polis/Greek Concept of Citizenship |
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Definition
- city-state, church and state intertwined
- Men are citizens
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- Greeks join together to defeat the Persians
- Classical Period begins
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Historian of the Persian Wars
"Father of History"
First person who writes history |
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The idea that all societies have different moral values |
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Belief that moral values are human created and relative to who created them |
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- Sparta vs Athens (fight between City-States)
- long lasting, 27 year war
- Sparta wins
- Bankrupt city-states
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- Leader of Athens for a signifigant part of Peloponnesian War
- Considered one of the greatest leaders in Greek History
- made numerous reforms to make Greece more Democratic
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Historian of Peloponnesian War
First realist historian |
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- Wandering teachers: instruct redderick--persuasive speaking/ public speaking-- and how to manipulate
- taught how to get power and what you want; instructed it's okay to decieve and manipulate--it's not wrong because everyone tries to do it
- Say that by nature we are selfish
- Human beings created laws to punish people, and created laws so people won't do things in secret: God is watching
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- Sophist
- First to acknowledge that he's a Sophist (moderate)
- "man is the measure of all things"
- Agnostic: unsure if the gods exist or not
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- Radical Sophist
- "Might makes Right" --most powerful will determine the way it works
- Different societies make different moral values
- mentioned in The Republic
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- Believes morality is an arrangement
- The contract: Human laws, I won't hurt you if you don't hurt me
- People are only just with reluctance; the ulitmate nature of human beings is to be very jealous
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- Believes in universal values and truths
- "knowledge is virtue"-- if you truly know the good, you will be good
- model of ideal behavior in the face of Justice against bad people
- better to be just than not just
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Definition
- The subject has some belief about a given moral question
- Through the elenchos (making them think for themselves) Socrates shakes this belief
- The subject realizes that he does not know waht he thought he knew
- The subject begins to search for moral knowledge
- The subject arrives at new moral opinions
Breakdown by Klosko
This is overall intended to stimulate independent thought |
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4 parts of Socrates psyche or 'soul' |
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Definition
- It is the most important part of a person, taking presedence over the body
- It is that with which one thinks, and so the seat of the intellectual faculties
- It is the seat of the moral faculties--the source of right and wrong behavior
- It is the self, what I recognize as "I"
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- Gold: Ruling Class
- Silver: Soldiers
- Bronze: Producers (normal people)
- Maristocracy: You must accept your place in life as the gods assigned you
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The Four Virtues in the State |
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Definition
- Wisdom: these rulers are there because they reason the best--The Ruling Class
- Courage: The Military
- Temperance: If the leaders are in charge and doing their job the whole society will have temperance-- The Rest of the People
- Justice: how it can be defined to as "Minding your own business"
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- Reason: The Rulers
- Courage to make the right decision: Soldiers
- Instincts: Citizens
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dominated by the people with personalities of being good to one another
JUST |
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- Once ideal state declines the first state to take over is the military
- dominant characteristic: courage--> instead dominated by ambition. Want Power and Honor.
- Soldiers take over and can't resist temptation
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- Plutocracy-- Wealthy Families
- Dominated by Greed
- Human Society is plummeting downward, as would be seen by Plato
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- Ruled by the common folk
- Lower than Oligarchy according to Plato
- Dominated by instinct and appetite
- unstable society that will evolve to a tyrant
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- Dominated by all the appetites
- One Person with Total Power
- Only the psychologically insane would desire the life of a tyrant rather than being just
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- people do not tolerate too much chaos and thus create a tyrant
- number of desires not good for us
- based on what group they're placed in and the chance of people being untalented
- Direct form: people making the decisions
- not enough discipline for positive freedom (the absence of internal restraints)
- based on Negative freedom
- The power depends on the people who are not fully educated to make their own decisions
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- Another work by Plato
- Argues each gov't could be good for the gov't
- Public Good: 1) Monarchy 2) Aristocracy (ruled by best families) 3) Democracy (governed by mediocre)
- OWN Good: 6) Tyrant (one person ruling on behalf of themselves--the worst) 5) Oligarchy 4) Anarchy (least dangerous; Democracy with failure of talent)
- 7) Mixed Constitution-- combination of the one, the few, and the many--eventually evolves into Checks & Balances
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