the greek way of mind - university of albertaegarvin/assets/2.-the-greek-mind.pdf · the greek way...
TRANSCRIPT
The Greek way of Mind
Fatalism
• Humans exist outside of the natural and divine matrix• Events are predetermined by Fate• Resignation• Submission• There is no free will because fate cannot be changed• It is God’s will.
Fatalism
• Acteon saw Artemis• There was nothing he could have done…
• Oedipus killed his father• There was nothing he could have done…
• Somebody else won the lottery• There is nothing you can do.
Fatalism
The Gods
NaturalWorld
Humans
Determinism
• The universe operates by a set of natural and unalterable laws of cause and effect.
• Events are the result of other events and circumstances
• Human choices and actions are conditioned by these circumstances
• Free will is an illusion, even for gods.
Determinism
Gods
NaturalWorld
Humans
Responsibility
• Are Fatalism and Determinism not abrogation of responsibility?
• “Its not my fault… it is the will of the gods.”
• If we can praise the divine for good…must we not blame the divine for the bad?
Personalism
• Humans are individuals possessed of free will• Free will means self-determination• But if humans are the agents of their own fates, are they
also responsible for anything that happens to them?
Existential Personalism
Gods
NaturalWorld
Humans
Humanism
• Man is the measure of all things.• Our perception of the natural and the divine are merely
conveniences of our own creation.• We create reality to suit our needs.
Greek Zeitgeist
• Divine law can be known.• If divine law is absolute, the best course is to live within divine
law• Yes, the gods are fickle, but they usually act in accordance with
divine law
Three Maxims
ΓΝΩΘΙ ΣΕΑΥΤΟΝΜΗ∆ΕΝ ΑΓΑΝ
ΕΓΓΥΑ ΠΑΡΑ ∆ ΑΤΑ
• Know yourself• Nothing in Excess
• An oath sworn will be your ruin
Kouros
The Tragic Trilogy
• Hubris• Pride, entitlement, a sense of superiority.
• Ate• Foolishness, recklessness
• Nemesis• Divine retribution
Hubris
Sequences
• “As the old proverb goes, the beginning is half of the whole”
( Plato, Politics 1303b.29)
• “The beginning is more than half of the whole” (Aristotle. Nic. Eth. 1098b)
Inevitable Outcome Sequencing
• If nature functions in patterns and sequences, is the sequence inevitable?
• The snowball effect• Does the avalanche prove the snowball?• Solon: “we must look to the end of all things…”
Passions and Accidents
• Is beauty a metaphor for hybris?• The Greeks celebrated the human body in stories of passions
and accidents.• Passion is not just about lust and pleasure, but also about pain.
Passions and
Accidents
Passions and
Accidents
Prescriptions?
• Does it not seem more likely that the myth cycle and the Dramas that illustrate it, are prescriptions against behaviour that leads to tragedy?
Or… Power Relations
Gods
NaturalWorld
Rulers
Ruled
Questions to Consider
• Do these myths explain power to the powerless?• Do the myths justify that the powerful may act towards the
powerless as the gods act towards them?• Does religion use the divine to establish relations of power
between humans?• Do they tell us anything about the human condition?• Or are they just fun stories?