I enjoyed watching the videos, and the ones that stood out to me were the After Religion, Astrophysics and Religion, What is Art for?, What is Literature for?, What is Philosophy for?, What is History for?, and The Value of Forgotten Ideas. I found it very interesting that in the After Religion video, the message was to show that the real challenge with religion is to learn from it so that we can live fulfilled lives by replacing the things that religion was made up to provide. The thing that stood out to me about the Astrophysics and Religion video was the connect between astrophysics and religion. This connection was explained by the awe both concepts show and the concept kindness …show more content…
Throughout Homer’s The Odyssey, Odysseus faces many challenges and obstacles throughout his extensive journey home. All these challenges, barriers, trails, and obstacles can be categorized into two general categories; internal and external. These are things that he must face in the physical sense (external) and things he must deal with inside of himself (internal). According to Johnston, many things stand between him [Odysseus] and home—external obstacles which threaten to destroy him and inner obstacles which threaten to so sap his endurance and his faith in the voyage home that he will give up (2004).
In your opinion, what were the most important “life lessons” that Odysseus …show more content…
Homer’s The Odyssey is often used to base if other works of literature are epic poems. According to Johnston, The Odyssey is an epic poem because of its length and relations to series of books, the way is starts off in the middle and then takes the reader on a journey to discover the while story, and Johnston goes on to say, “One of the most curious historical facts about epic poems is that they tend to get written when the civilization they are celebrating is clearly passing away or has disappeared completely; Homer's poems are about a culture which no longer exists in quite the same manner in his day