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Full Description
In this exciting interpretation of the Odyssey, the late renowned scholar Seth Benardete suggests that Homer may have been the first to philosophize in a Platonic sense. He argues that the Odyssey concerns precisely the relation between philosophy and poetry and, more broadly, the rational and the irrational in human beings. In light of this possibility, Bernardete works back and forth from Homer to Plato to examine the relation between wisdom and justice and tries to recover an original understanding of philosophy that Plato, too, recovered by reflecting on the wisdom of the poet. At stake in his argument is no less than the history of philosophy and the ancient understanding of poetry. The Bow and the Lyre is a book that every classicist and historian of philosophy should have.
Contents
Chapter 1 Notice to the Reader
Chapter 2 Preface
Part 3 Part I: The Beginnings
Chapter 4 Theodicy
Chapter 5 Politics
Chapter 6 Telemachus
Part 7 Part II: Pattern and Will
Chapter 8 Nestor
Chapter 9 Helen and Menelaus
Part 10 Part III: Odysseus' Choice
Part 11 Part IV: Among the Phaeacians
Chapter 12 Shame
Chapter 13 Paradise
Chapter 14 Pride
Part 15 Part V: Odysseu' Own Story
Chapter 16 Memory and Mind
Chapter 17 Nature
Chapter 18 Hades
Chapter 19 Destiny
Part 20 Part VI: Odysseus' Lies
Part 21 Part VII: Nonfated Things
Chapter 22 Theoclymenus and Eumaeus
Chapter 23 The Slave Girls
Chapter 24 The Name and the Scar
Part 25 Part VIII: The Suitors and the City
Chapter 26 The Suitors
Chapter 27 The City
Part 28 Part IX: Recognition
Chapter 29 Penelope
Chapter 30 Hades
Chapter 31 Laertes
Chapter 32 Notes
Chapter 33 Index



