Showing posts with label Alma Mater. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alma Mater. Show all posts
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
Spirited: More on Μήδεια
I have gotten really behind on pretty much everything I am trying to do right now. Trying to catch up, I have been reading a lot of Μήδεια
so there will be a lot of focus on this play in my posts right now. I recently wrote a long post in comments on yesterday's blog about translating Jason's speech and I have an addendum that I will finish and post when I am more awake and coherent. There is a lot of fascinating word choice in the Μήδεια and I love people weighing in on the discussion. I am also planning on doing a post on the rhetoric of enemies in the Μήδεια. It makes me wish I had been able to fit an additional class into my schedule second semester so I could have taken the Μήδεια with my alma mater's wonderful ancient rhetoric and oratory professor. Days just need more hours in them...
Thursday, March 10, 2011
Appetitive: Cerinthus and Homer on the iPad
I am going up to visit Cerinthus this week. Posting may be a bit spotty, but since he has midterms I may have some more time to work on my blogs.
In other news, the coolest iPad app I've ever heard of has just been released: you can now own your own copy of Venetus A, one of the preserved Homeric manuscripts. The Homer Multitext reports that the text has been fully digitized and can be downloaded from the iTunes store. Now that's a cool reason to get an iPad.
In other news, the coolest iPad app I've ever heard of has just been released: you can now own your own copy of Venetus A, one of the preserved Homeric manuscripts. The Homer Multitext reports that the text has been fully digitized and can be downloaded from the iTunes store. Now that's a cool reason to get an iPad.
Monday, January 24, 2011
Reasoning: The Fragility of Goodness
I must take a break for this week from my continuing review of Gregory Vlastos' Socratic Studies
, because I on my way up to visit my Alma Mater. When I was interviewing for my current job, an alumnus from my Alma Mater asked me how I could have possibly written my thesis on Plato and tragedy without reading Martha Nussbaum's The Fragility of Goodness
. Remembering this, I switched the copy of Socrates: Ironist and Moral Philosopher
for Nussbaum's book. I read the introduction on the first leg of the plane flight. I would have read a lot more, but I was frustrated by the formatting (dratted endnotes!) and am rather tired.
In her introduction, Nussbaum
explains that she is departing from the traditionally Kantian-influence approach to understanding the Greek conception of ἀρετή [1]. She claims to use an Aristotilian approach and will spend the book concerned with the conception of ἀρετή in tragedy, Plato, and Aristotle. She starts her discussion with a quotation from Pindar, about a person being a vine. She posits that the quotation implies that the vine must come from noble lineage to be considered good, but also external conditions determine the goodness of the vine. She sees this as an important distinction, but also a set of principles in tension with one another.
I like Nussbaum's book
so far, and I will report more as I continue to move through it.
In her introduction, Nussbaum
I like Nussbaum's book
Endnotes
- ἀρετή means excellence. It is often questionably translated as virtue. Although virtue is a fine word, and may be better in some ways than excellence, virtue has been framed as something distinct from the Greek conception by the Judeo-Christian tradition and many philosophers who claim to be Platonic or Aristotilian, but who use the term under a Judeo-Christian blanket. ἀρετή encompasses all of those attributes of a person required to lead a good life.
Sunday, December 5, 2010
Appetitive/Reasoning: Reminder about E-Books Collection
I just returned from my Alma Mater and I seem to have gotten a cold. At the moment, I am not particularly able to wade through scholarship. However, AWOL posted about the UC Press E-Book Collection, which is an incredible resource. I have a link on the left-hand column of my blog under "Interesting Links," but I thought I would be a copycat and remind everyone of this incredible collection. Anything marked "public" in the collection is open access and anyone at a University of California school has access to the entire archive. Happy reading!
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