"Explain how greek philosophy challenged traditional thinking and questioned the validity of the religion of the ancient greeks" Essays and Research Papers

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    In the capital of Ancient Greece‚ the city of Athens‚ women were treated unfairly. Woman were treated unfairly because men controlled their lives‚ women did not go to school‚ and women did not have the same opportunities as men. Men controlled women’s lives. When they were girls their father was the head of the house‚ and after their gamos‚ which was a celebration where their father passed the girl onto their older husband. This would mean the teenage girl would get married to a typical thirty

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    Greek Lit

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    GREEk Literature IntroGreek duction * Greece is a land of islands‚ mountains‚ and peninsulas. Rocky hill tops separate parts of the territory from each other‚ and make the soil difficult to farm. * Their literature focuses on human body and mind. ARCHAIC PERIOD TO THE END OF THE 6TH CENTURY BC The Greeks created poetry before they made use of writing for literary purposes‚ and from the beginning their poetry was intended to be sung or recited HOMER Iliad Odyssey Pure tragedy

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    notion‚ or dichotomy‚ depends on certain characteristics of the old Greek mythology. Many Western philosophical and literary personages have invoked this concept in their artistic and critical creative works. According to Greek mythology‚ Apollo and Dionysus are the two sons of Zeus‚ what Greeks believe it as a God. The god of reason and the rational was Apollo‚ while Dionysus was the god of the irrational and chaos. The Greeks did not think the two gods to be opposites or rivals‚ although often

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    What changes did the Greek emphasis on reasoning bring to their views of nature and society?






 Greeks broke with the mythopoeic outlook and started to view the physical world and human activities through reasoning and logical thinking. What changes did it make to nature and society? -Emphasis on reason marks a turning point for human civilization A) Philosophy -Marks the beginning of scientific thought‚ had an awareness of cause and effect‚ exploring the natural phenomena‚ principles

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    greek unifiers

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    Greek Unifiers The Ancient Greeks were a group of independent city-states that often rivaled each other. Although the Greeks were fiercely independent they were united and in all sorts of ways‚ such as athletics‚ religion and fear of Persia. The Greeks all had a common love for athletics to honor Zeus and to display human perfection. Religion and worship were the same in every city-state. The Persians were the most powerful and feared culture‚ which caused the Greeks to come together to protect

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    Triumph or Tragedy Pottery Ancient Greece An amphora is an ancient Greek form of a container‚ used as a storage jar and one of the principal shapes in greek pottery‚ a two-handled pot with a neck narrower than the body. There are two types of amphorae. One of the most common forms made in Ancient Greek Pottery‚ was always with two vertical neck-handles and used for storing and transporting oil‚ wine and foodstuffs

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    Ancient Greek Myths were developed many years ago‚ these myths provided entertainment‚ taught moral lessons‚ and explained the earth and its nature. Notably‚ the modern reader can learn valuable moral lessons from ancient Greek myths. Not to mention‚ the variety of myths that exist‚ many of these myths give children knowledge and understanding of the world. These following aspects are shown in the following myths‚ Phaethon and the Chariot of the Sun‚ Icarus and Daedalus‚ and Athena and Arachne. Additionally

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    The ancient Greeks and Roman civilizations both began their histories with the emergence of city states. Both of these civilizations made contributions to the Middle East. The Greeks had made a wild spread of discoveries on several fields. This included astronomy by Ptolemy‚ geometry by Euclid‚ and the philosophy of the Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius of his Stoic philosophy. Because the Greeks were widely known as a creative and prestigious race‚ the Romans were influenced by the Iliad (Homer’s legendary

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    Greek Sculptors

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    sorts of sub. art) The Greeks excelled in sculpture.  Their works are impressive for their handling of human anatomy‚ and details like hair and clothing.  They are also impressive for their handling of motion (cf. "Discobolus)‚ and for capturing a wide range of human emotions and moods.  Some sculptures are comic‚ others very serious. The Greeks sculptors could inspire patriotism and the love of liberty--and some of the subtleties of individual personality and character.  Greek sculpture inspired the

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    Aphrodite Goddess of love‚ beauty and fertility One in five women will go under plastic surgery to make herself beautiful but‚ who was the most beautiful of all? Aphrodite was the goddess of ancient greek mythology who celebrated love‚ desire‚ and eternal youth. Aside from her natural beauty she had a magic girdle that made everyone desire her. Her birth was as beautiful as she is she emerged from the ocean in a clam shell after Cronus threw Uranus’s genitals into the ocean. From this moment

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