I provided the link to the Princeton Press series for those interested. I am interested in authors such as Cicero, Plutarch and Seneca, never having studied such texts at school or University. It seems a gap in my education which modern editions like these might help to fill. — Wayfarer
To be honest the ancient texts I like most are the early Buddhist texts but I’m trying to broaden my base. — Wayfarer
The early suttas also almost always open by introducing the geographical location of the event they depict, including ancient place names, always preceded by the phrase "thus have I heard" (evaṃ me sutaṃ). — Wikipedia
So, are we to infer that the Buddhism predates the written word and it was transmitted orally until India invented a script? — TheMadFool
Please name your top five "ancient wisdom" reads for modern (beginner) philosophers. — 180 Proof
I’ve been under the impression that gangsta cultcha was pop rather than progressive or regarded as dispensing wisdom, though in some part authentically counter-cultural and validly so. — praxis
Please lay off the idiotic youtube artifacts, they sometimes have their use and I sometimes post them but in your hands they might as well be grafitti. — Wayfarer
It's not inference, it's a matter of fact. They were aural traditions for centuries, until being codified in various Indic scripts, of which one early extant version is Pali — Wayfarer
Yes, counter-cultural or anti-cultural sounds about right. And anything that serves as a substitute for traditional culture qualifies as "progressive" in certain quarters where deconstruction and replacement count as progress. — Apollodorus
Objectivity may be "honored more in the breach than in the observance". A succinct statement of ancient philosophical wisdom is Socrates' epigram : "know thyself". Which requires enough self-directed insight to "see" your own personal biases and ignorances. Perhaps we could rephrase as : "the fear of self-deception is the beginning of wisdom". :smile:Postmodernism announces (loudly and often) that a supposedly neutral, objective rationality is always a construct informed by interests it neither acknowledges nor knows nor can know. — Does Reason Know what it is Missing?
The Nag Hammadi Library. — Noble Dust
I would strongly advise against reading Maimonides. He probably had no access to Platonic texts and learned about Plato through Arabs like al-Farabi and Ibn Sina. He complained that there are so many parables in Plato's writing one can dispense with it and stick to Aristotle. The fact that he is held in high esteem by the likes of Leo Strauss speaks volumes. — Apollodorus
Proclus's system, like that of the other Neoplatonists, is a combination of Platonic, Aristotelian, and Stoic elements. In its broad outlines, Proclus's system agrees with that of Plotinus with a notable difference: unlike Plotinus, Proclus did not hold that matter was evil, an idea that caused contradictions in the system of Plotinus. However, following Iamblichus, Plutarch of Athens, and his master Syrianus, Proclus presents a much more elaborate universe than Plotinus, subdividing the elements of Plotinus's system into their logically distinct parts, and positing these parts as individual things. This multiplication of entities is balanced by the monism which is common to all Neoplatonists. What this means is that, on the one hand the universe is composed of hierarchically distinct things, but on the other all things are part of a single continuous emanation of power from the One. From this latter perspective, the many distinctions to be found in the universe are a result of the divided perspective of the human soul, which needs to make distinctions in its own thought in order to understand unified realities. The idealist tendency is taken further in John Scotus Eriugena.
I am open to arguments for or against this or that point of view. But to propose not reading an author is an odd proposition. How will we know how right you are if we don't try it out for ourselves? — Valentinus
There's something about modernity that is inimical to the traditional idea of wisdom. — Wayfarer
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