Ancient Texts
Can I ask a question?
Why are most of the texts listed here modern? I mean, we had a Shakespeare somewhere - but even he's modern. The oldest book I've heard someone express a desire to read in this Reading Room was Boccacio's Decameron (thank you a million times).
So, to ensure the longevity of the 'Ancients' & some more overlooked modern writers....
The Republic
The Illiad and the Odyssey
The Canterbury Tales
Utopia - very similar to the Republic apparently
tons more - Aristophanes, Plato, Aristotle, etc...
For those who wonder why I care, I'll explain:
philosophy influences literature. As the Sophie's World readers know, we have a strongly defining Greek element predominant in philosophical thought until we come to Rene Descartes. Descartes philosophical reform advocates reason, logic etc to the point where, in the 18th C, we have Jonathan Swift writing Gulliver's Travels in a passionate plea to get people to see that the prevailing view of man as a rational creature who will inexorably improve is just plain stupid. To be honest, I think today we largely ignore whether or not society is changing for the better, and might do well to borrow some elements of antiquity.
Btw, does anyone who read Sophie's World get the nagging feeling that we got a very cut-down version of each philosopher's project? I'm not sure I can trust Jostein Gaarder to do a summary of thousands of year of human thought just like that...not without knowing the assumptions he brings to each philosopher's writings....whether he is ancient or modern...
Can I ask a question?
Why are most of the texts listed here modern? I mean, we had a Shakespeare somewhere - but even he's modern. The oldest book I've heard someone express a desire to read in this Reading Room was Boccacio's Decameron (thank you a million times).
So, to ensure the longevity of the 'Ancients' & some more overlooked modern writers....
The Republic
The Illiad and the Odyssey
The Canterbury Tales
Utopia - very similar to the Republic apparently
tons more - Aristophanes, Plato, Aristotle, etc...
For those who wonder why I care, I'll explain:
philosophy influences literature. As the Sophie's World readers know, we have a strongly defining Greek element predominant in philosophical thought until we come to Rene Descartes. Descartes philosophical reform advocates reason, logic etc to the point where, in the 18th C, we have Jonathan Swift writing Gulliver's Travels in a passionate plea to get people to see that the prevailing view of man as a rational creature who will inexorably improve is just plain stupid. To be honest, I think today we largely ignore whether or not society is changing for the better, and might do well to borrow some elements of antiquity.
Btw, does anyone who read Sophie's World get the nagging feeling that we got a very cut-down version of each philosopher's project? I'm not sure I can trust Jostein Gaarder to do a summary of thousands of year of human thought just like that...not without knowing the assumptions he brings to each philosopher's writings....whether he is ancient or modern...