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Monthly Archives: April 2014

Free audio book of the Iliad

28 Monday Apr 2014

Posted by artaud23 in Uncategorized

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via LibriVox.

Cover Art

Click to go to download page

The Iliad

HOMER (c. 8th cen – c. 8th cen), translated by Samuel BUTLER (1835 – 1902)

The Iliad, together with the Odyssey, is one of two ancient Greek epic poems traditionally attributed to Homer. The poem is commonly dated to the 8th or 7th century BC, and many scholars believe it is the oldest extant work of literature in the Greek language, making it the first work of European literature. The existence of a single author for the poems is disputed as the poems themselves show evidence of a long oral tradition and hence, multiple authors. The poem concerns events during the tenth and final year in the siege of the city of Iliun, or Troy, by the Greeks. (Summary adapted from Wikipedia by Karen Merline.)

 

Genre(s): Plays, Poetry, War & Military Fiction

 

Language: English

via LibriVox.

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The Flawed Artist

24 Thursday Apr 2014

Posted by artaud23 in Uncategorized

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If you love art you have to realize that sometimes inspiration can come from dark places. Artists are not meant to be role models. The question is, do you still want art even if its creation leaves a wake of tragedy and suffering behind it?

Eh_quoi!_Tu_es_jaloux-_by_Paul_Gauguin

Paul Gauguin 1892 Tahitian: Aha Oe Feii? What! Are You Jealous?

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Choral Chant from The Bacchae of Euripides

24 Thursday Apr 2014

Posted by artaud23 in Uncategorized

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[556] Where on Nysa, which nourishes wild beasts, or on Corycian heights, do you lead with your thyrsos the bands of revelers? [560] Perhaps in the deep-wooded lairs of Olympus, where Orpheus once playing the lyre drew together trees by his songs, drew together the beasts of the fields. [565] Blessed Pieria, the Joyful one reveres you and will come to lead the dance in revelry; having crossed the swiftly flowing Axius he will bring the [570] whirling Maenads, leaving Lydias, giver of wealth to mortals, the father who they say fertilizes the land of beautiful horses with [575] fairest streams.

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Medea

24 Thursday Apr 2014

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A sketch for Medea by John Waterhouse, 1906-07

A sketch for Medea by John Waterhouse, 1906-07

Often her heart fluttered wildly in her breast. As when a sunbeam which is reflected out of water that has just been poured into a bowl or a bucket, dances inside a house and darts this way and that as it is shaken in a rapid swirl, so did the young girl’s heart quiver in her breast.

– Apollonius of Rhodes, trans. Richard Hunter, Argonautica

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Perikles of Athens

03 Thursday Apr 2014

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Perikles on Athenian Democracy
Perikles ( Περικλῆς “surrounded by glory”; c. 495 – 429 BCE)

Our constitution does not copy the laws of neighbouring states; we are rather a pattern to others than imitators ourselves. Its administration favours the many instead of the few; this is why it is called a democracy. If we look to the laws, they afford equal justice to all in their private differences; if no social standing, advancement in public life falls to reputation for capacity, class considerations not being allowed to interfere with merit; nor again does poverty bar the way, if a man is able to serve the state, he is not hindered by the obscurity of his condition. The freedom which we enjoy in our government extends also to our ordinary life. There, far from exercising a jealous surveillance over each other, we do not feel called upon to be angry with our neighbour for doing what he likes, or even to indulge in those injurious looks which cannot fail to be offensive, although they inflict no positive penalty. But all this ease in our private relations does not make us lawless as citizens. Against this fear is our chief safeguard, teaching us to obey the magistrates and the laws, particularly such as regard the protection of the injured, whether they are actually on the statute book, or belong to that code which, although unwritten, yet cannot be broken without acknowledged disgrace.

– Perikles’ Eulogy for the Athenian Dead of the 1st year of the Peloponnesian War as quoted by Thucydides (2.37)

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Define Ethical Algorithm: Some thoughts on Plato

03 Thursday Apr 2014

Posted by artaud23 in Philosophy

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Tags

Plato, Republic

10 REM: Define Ethical Algorithm;
20 SEARCH;
30 GOTO 10;
40 END;

Search.
If you don’t know the answer then search for it.
Once you think you know the answer. Look at it, critically; look hard; examine it; pour over it; tear it apart; ask for help looking at it.
And if it works – look again. And if it doesn’t work, search again.
In a word: search.

SocratesThis is not the answer to the question; it is the answer to finding the answer to the question if it exists. It may not, but we don’t know; this is why we search. This is what Socrates is doing. This is what Socrates tells us we should do. When Socrates stops asking questions for once and tells us something positive – admits to an actual belief – it is this:

“….I would contend at all costs both in word and deed as far as I could that we will be better men, braver and less idle, if we believe that one must search for the things that one does not know, rather than if we believe that it is not possible to find out what we do not know and that we must not look for it.” – Meno, 86c

And if it makes us better men, braver and less idle then isn’t that virtue; the belief that we can know and must search to know? Isn’t that the definition of ethical behavior?

So, what am I suggesting: that wanting to know what it is to be virtuous or ethical or questioning how to deal with a particular ethical dilemma, together with the willingness to expend the effort in searching for the answer to that question, results in an actual answer? Isn’t that just wishful thinking? What proof can I offer that thinking deeply about things isn’t just narcissistic behavior; that it really isn’t just a way of avoiding making an unpleasant decision? Does thinking about things really make us less idle, or is it just laziness? And more specifically, doesn’t Plato contradict himself, if this is the answer?

When Socrates speaks of virtuous men later in this dialog he states:

“As regards knowledge, they are no different from soothsayers and prophets. They too say many things when inspired, but they have no knowledge about what they are saying” – Meno, 99c

and further:

“Virtue… comes to those who possess it as a gift from the gods.” – Meno, 100a

These sorts of statements seem to devalue the need to search. Aren’t they saying that virtue can’t be taught or learned, but rather that you either got it or you don’t?

I actually don’t think so. I think that the search, for Socrates, has a purpose, and that purpose is not to define or create logical explanations or rules about ethics or virtue. It IS virtuous in itself. Or if not quite that, it is a meditation on virtue that can lead to a first hand knowledge of virtue, or at least to inspiration.

But the argument that virtue/morality comes from inspiration sounds weak. Why should we spend our time in so much logistical/verbal analysis if the result of all that heavy thinking is just to jettison it like so much extra ballast in a storm at sea. And inspiration itself sounds suspiciously like that old legal saw about pornography, “I know it when I see it.”

But notice that none of Socrates’ interlocutors ever come out and answer that “I’ll know it when I see it.” Only Socrates is brave enough to claim ignorance. They always fall back on reasons. They believe in reasons; they claim to have reasons for their actions or beliefs about things, and they suppose that these reasons are valid or self evident without ever bothering to examine them. And so Socrates is not finding reasons, he is debunking them. He examines the conventional reasons, and finds them wanting. What he is looking for defies reason and expectation. It is inspiration. In fact, I will go further; reasons interfere with inspiration.

In every case, verbal logic fails to capture the essence of virtue and ethics. The method is too inexact. It’s like trying to cut sushi with a carpenter’s saw. Plato holds that these ethical properties are real. There is a real virtue, a real piety, a real justice but they are not their words. Words can’t contain them. Words are just the tags we label them with. They point to something, but the definitions can’t explain the thing in itself because the thing is inspired in us on some level that words an logic can’t quite reach.

To know these things requires an Eureka! moment, like the child discovering the diagonal. There is a real principle, but it is blinding in its abstractness. This is the source from which our moral precepts derive, but it is not identical to the precepts. What the search achieves is to keep us in contact with that source. Analysis of these moral constructs, debate on the dilemmas they engender, keep us close to the inspiration and allow it to work through us. It can’t really answer any questions, but it can put us in the proper frame of mind to have that Eureka! And that is more than ethics, it’s metaphysics.

This is my take on ethics. At least it is for today. I will search again tomorrow.

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lightofluxor.wordpress.com/

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Collaborative, informational site of the Indiana Memory DPLA Service Hub

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Anime, manga and manhwa.

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never knows best

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where words grow like leaves

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A journey into language, books, and print.

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Welcome Aboard, Train Wreck

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The Life of A Mentally Ill Writer

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