Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

The Great Sophists in Periclean Athens

View through CrossRef
Abstract The arrival of the Sophists in Athens in the middle of the fifth century BC was an intellectual event of great importance. They brought a new method of teaching founded on rhetoric, and offered bold new doctrines which broke away from tradition. They have often been misunderstood - only fragments of their own work survive, and we have to rely on the testimony of Plato, who was an opponent. Athenians used their teaching to defend an amoralism which they did not themselves advocate. Through an original interpretation of the works of their disciples such as Thucydides, Euripides, and Isocrates, Professor de Romilly investigates the reasons for the initial success of the Sophists and the reaction against them, in the context of the culture and civilization of classical Athens.
Oxford University PressOxford
Title: The Great Sophists in Periclean Athens
Description:
Abstract The arrival of the Sophists in Athens in the middle of the fifth century BC was an intellectual event of great importance.
They brought a new method of teaching founded on rhetoric, and offered bold new doctrines which broke away from tradition.
They have often been misunderstood - only fragments of their own work survive, and we have to rely on the testimony of Plato, who was an opponent.
Athenians used their teaching to defend an amoralism which they did not themselves advocate.
Through an original interpretation of the works of their disciples such as Thucydides, Euripides, and Isocrates, Professor de Romilly investigates the reasons for the initial success of the Sophists and the reaction against them, in the context of the culture and civilization of classical Athens.

Related Results

Cult
Cult
This chapter focuses upon the literary representations of the importance of rituals, religious offices, and cult traditions in the time of the Second Sophistic. The “real-life” sop...
Characterization of Individuals in Thucydides’ History
Characterization of Individuals in Thucydides’ History
Thucydides presents the words and deeds of individuals chiefly in terms of their importance for understanding the war. He characterizes leading actors through their speeches, indic...
Pericles’ Utopia
Pericles’ Utopia
In this chapter, Greenwood looks afresh at the genealogy of utopias and utopianism in Classical Greek political thought (traditionally seen as originating with Plato’s Republic). S...
The Palaikastro Kouros
The Palaikastro Kouros
J. A. Macgillivray, Origin, December 2000, Archaeological Receipts Fund...
Apuleius
Apuleius
This chapter considers the biography, literary career, and literary output of the second-century Platonizing Latin writer Apuleius, born in Roman North Africa in the 120s ce and re...
Alexander the Great and Democracy in the Hellenistic World
Alexander the Great and Democracy in the Hellenistic World
This chapter looks at how Alexander the Great was remembered by democratic regimes in both Athens and Asia Minor in the early Hellenistic period. It argues that while Alexander’s r...
The Drum Recording Handbook
The Drum Recording Handbook
"Drums are the foundation of just about any kind of music, and a great drum sound is essential to a great recording, but that sound can be elusive. The Drum Recording Handbook, Sec...
Patmos
Patmos
Ēlias Kollias, Art, Byzantine, 1985, "Melissa" Pub. House...

Back to Top