He was born on April 8‚ 1798 in Zakynthos‚ a Greek island in the west part of Greece‚ the Ionian Sea‚ which is the part of Adriatic Sea‚ the band of water that separates (but also connects) Greece and Italy. He is the son of count Nikolaos Solomos and his housekeeper Angeliki Nikli. His father was a rich aristocrat and a count‚ who was married
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Robert Sangen 1. Archaeology- the scientific study of historic or prehistoric peoples and their cultures by analysis of their artifacts‚ inscriptions‚ monuments‚ and other such remains‚ especially those that have been excavated. 2. Neolithic Revolution- The Neolithic Revolution was a fundamental change in the way people lived. The shift from hunting & gathering to agriculture led to permanent settlements‚ the establishment of social classes‚ and the eventual rise of civilizations. The Neolithic
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‘After having considered the right arrangement of the human body‚ the ancients proportioned all their work‚ particularly the temples‚ in accordance with it’. To what extent does the human body influence architectural forms and writing from antiquity to 1600? The study of the human body has spanned centuries‚ from the mathematicians of antiquity to the humanist scholars of the High Renaissance‚ and parallels between the bodily proportions and architecture have played their part in some of the
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Sofilda Totoni March 3rd‚ 2011 Lit 216 “The Fire Sermon” Analysis. This section‚ and the longest of Elliot’s “The Waste Land”‚ depicts poor‚ gloomy‚ lethargic scenery in which the themes of lust‚ sexual ambiguity‚ moral degradation‚ spiritual melancholy‚ abound throughout the poem. The poet himself often embodies the role of ancient and mythological figures to which he alludes in order to strike the reader ’s infatuation. He continually reminds
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an octagonal shaped base. The Virgin is seated on a stool. It has five columns and bases with very short pedestals. There are shafts with eight corners‚ which have four congruent longer sides and shorter sides. The bases of the columns are like the Ionian‚ but the capital is very similar to Corinthian style column because it has decorative leaves that look like they are pealing of its bell. There are four longer pedestals that separate the columns and knobs with slightly visible pegs. On the left hand
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Socrates though that philosophers would make the most ideal ruler in the ideal city. However‚ Adeimantus thought the opposite of Socrates saying that philosophers would make the worst rulers of the ideal city. Adeimantus thought that philosophers who were ignorant in the ways of philosophy‚ such as individuals pretending to be philosophers‚ would lead the ideal city into destruction. Also‚ he thought that the best philosophers‚ like Socrates‚ would only be caught up in philosophy and not the politics
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AlanWatts Alan Watts or Alan Wilson Watts was a British philosopher‚ writer‚ and speaker who popularized and interpreted Eastern Philosophy for the ... Read More Albert Camus A Nobel Prize laureate‚ Albert Camus was the French Algerian philosopher‚ author and journalist‚ much renowned worldwide for his contribution in ... Read More Albert Schweitzer Albert Schweitzer was a German born French theologian‚ organist‚ philosopher‚ physician‚ and medical missionary. His notable work is in founding
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After proving that the real problem is caused by democracy‚ Socrates suggests that people should come to philosophers for rule rather than philosophers volunteer to rule. In Book VI of Republic‚ Socrates provides another analogy to illustrate his point: “The natural thing is for the sick person‚ rich or poor‚ to knock at the doctor’s door‚ and for anyone who needs to be ruled to knock at the door of the one who can rule him” (489 c). Here‚ in my interpretation‚ Socrates sardonically emphasizes that
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Within the allegory education moves the philosopher through stages of struggle but ultimately allows him to attain the Form of the Good. The allegory goes as follows; A group of people have lived in a cave since birth‚ they have never seen the light of day and are hindered in their mobility as they
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1) (From the Republic Book VII) WHY SHOULD THE PHILOSOPHER RULE? EXPLAIN WHY HE IS BEST SUITED TO RULE AND EXPLAIN 2) WHY IT IS A DILEMMA FOR HE TO CHOOSE TO RULE. WHY DOES HE HAVE TO BE COMPELLED AND WHAT IS THE NATURE OF THE COMPULSION? 3) BE SURE TO COMMENT ON HOW THIS QUESTION IS RELATED TO THE ANSWER PLATO ATTEMPTS TO CONSTRUCT TO GLAUCON’S CHALLENGE? Part 1 In Plato’s Republic‚ Plato sets out to prove that it is always better to be just than unjust. Doing so requires him to look
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