Greek Philosophy I.Classical Age in Greece, 490-323 BCE II.Classical Greek Values III.Greek Philosophy IDs: polis, Pericles, hoplite phalanx, rationalism.

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Greek Philosophy I.Classical Age in Greece, BCE II.Classical Greek Values III.Greek Philosophy IDs: polis, Pericles, hoplite phalanx, rationalism

Argument The emphasis on humanism & rationalism in Classical Greek philosophy reflects the value classical Greeks gave to individual glory and competition. Even though it was balanced by identity as citizens in a polis, that value on glory and competition destroyed classical Greek society.

Axial (Spiritual Age) 6 th -4 th century BCE Influential Thinkers Buddha Mahavira Confucius Laozi ? Socrates Aristotle Plato & other Greeks New Religions/ Philosophical Systems Buddhism Confucianism Daoism Greek Philosophy

I. Classical Greece, BCE A.Origins 1. On periphery of Mesopotamian/ Egyptian civilizations

2. Cultural Development Ca BCE: Trojan War 800 BCE: Homer writes Iliad & Odyssey

3. Government: Polis (city-state) Athens Sparta Corinth Ephesus

4. Dependence on Sea, Trade & Colonies

Mediterranean Network, BCE Purple: Greeks Blue-Green: Phoenicians

B. War with Persia, BCE

Hoplite Phalanxes

C. Athens in the Classical Age Democracy Trade Philosophy Architecture

Democracy Limitations: Male Free Citizen Public Life Pericles demogogue

Slavery

D. Sparta in the Classical Age military identity helots

D. Peloponnesian War ( BCE): Athens vs. Sparta

II. Classical Greek Values: A. Competition & Individual glory

B. Identity: Citizenship in the polis Citizen- soldiers hoplites

C. Dissatisfaction with Religion Olympian gods Zeus anthropomorphic

D. Male Superiority & Separate Socializing Patriarchy Seclusion of elite women

Symposium

III. Classical Greek Philosophy A. Rationalism Reason Division of mind & emotions

B. Humanism Human wisdom, beauty, skill Science Poetry Music Sports Drama

C. Education competition reading writing athletics self-control

D. Debate & Public Life Agora (marketplace) Analysis Politics (from Polis = city-state)

E. Study of Nature & Human world Sciences Math Medicine Poetry Sculpture Theater: tragedy & comedy

Argument The emphasis on humanism & rationalism in Classical Greek philosophy reflects the value classical Greeks gave to individual glory and competition. Even though it was balanced by identity as citizens in a polis, that value on glory and competition destroyed classical Greek society.