Why Study Greek Philosophy?
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there's going to be some positive
outcome from from an act of intellectual
courage to actually go and challenge the
sort of lies of the time.
Welcome to another episode of the
students. Today, should you be reading
the old philosophers? So, Stephen,
you're you're uh
one of our one of our big fans at
Palladium. I remember you wrote some
great stuff for us. You were always
there supporting us. Uh I really enjoyed
that. That's kind of where we met. Uh
you did one of the earliest interesting
sort of substantive reviews of um
Costamaru's
selective breeding and the birth of
philosophy and you've definitely been
kind of a a fixture in terms of bringing
the classical philosophy angle on a lot
of topics. So, I thought it would be fun
to kind of get together and talk about
this topic that, you know, vexes me
sometimes, which is should a modern
student of the 21st century be reading
the ancient philosophers, especially
obviously we mean Aristotle, we mean
Plato, we mean Socrates, but uh I I
wanted to get to the bottom of that
matter with you. So, Stephen, welcome to
the show. Thank you for coming on.
>> Absolutely. Glad to be here. So my
initial answer would be maybe not. Um
and we should take that possibility
seriously. If uh if you are comfortable
in the warm embrace of the cathedral, if
you think our regime is basically
roughly reasonable and heading in a good
direction and just needs some writing
here and there, um no. The answer is you
probably don't need to be digging into
what Aristotle or or Plato uh thought
about that stuff. But if your
perspective is quite different, if
you're one of these people like myself
who thinks that there is a very great
deal wrong and it's not simply a
question of, you know, minor tweaking
here or there, that there's something
very fundamentally wrong at the basis of
um the kind of liberal democratic regime
that has now slid into this managerial
you know, some people would say soft
totalitarianism
and that we should really be rethinking
things more fundamentally, then my
answer is yeah, you want to be digging
into the best resources for that.
>> Mhm. So I guess part of it is at that
time in history that these guys are
writing this is 300 BC
>> uh after the Palpeneian war they're kind
of facing the decline of Greek society
right this is this is the overall
context as I understand and so you know
on that purely kind of historical
comparison basis they are trying to
understand
what makes a society be bad or good and
through through the lens of dealing with
their own time of historical decline at
least at the beginnings of it. And uh
you know for that reason maybe there's
some relevance and so I'd love to hear
though from you kind of what is it about
that context that makes them in
particular interesting? Like why why do
we care about the Greeks? Isn't that
just something, you know, a bunch of
medieval fuddy duddies kind of thought
was important because that's all they
had? Like what what is what is it about
the Greeks that makes them relevant to
our situation? So I think you're right
to say that they're writing in a period
of decline as they themselves perceived
it
>> and there's all kinds of um if you just
read you know through cities on the
pelpeneisian war you know you can see
the like total wreck of things that had
gone on and they're writing in the
aftermath of that but even prior to that
there's a lot of features of their
society where they had very clearly
declined from sort of the more
aristocratic
ideals um that an earlier generation
would have said were sources of strength
in a in a society
>> and they really are grappling with that.
So So why them? Why are they important?
Because really the they are the first
thinkers in the west to grapple with the
questions of what makes a regime good or
bad? What are the foundations of a
regime? How does politics fundamentally
work? And it really is kind of a open
exploration. So one thing that I would
really emphasize is you don't go to
Plato or Aristotle for doctrines. You're
not looking for a blueprint. You're not
looking for, you know, they said this is
how to do it in sort of concrete object
level terms.
>> That's not the point. Um the point is
that they opened up a way of exploring
of asking fundamental questions not just
about politics at its surface level but
ultimately about human life like how
should a man live? What is a good
honorable flourishing life? and and they
had a like very uh you know being a good
warrior being able to contribute to the
defense of your city was definitely a
part of that. So by no means was this
like some you know ivory tower you know
kind of thing. We we we we think of of
Socrates as this guy who just hung
around and and talked with people and he
sure did a lot of that, but we forget
that he also served as a hoplight um you
know for Athens in the Pelpeneisian War
that that he um had this very impressive
reputation. you know, Alsabides and
others uh comment on how well he served
and you know, how how powerfully he
acted in that capacity. So, you know,
there's a lot of very practical
experience that goes into this. It's not
just theoretical.
>> I mean, and people always uh
find it funny to find out that Plato was
his kind of like his wrestling name, you
know? It's like he's he's a wrestler. It
means like he's the big guy. He's like a
big, you know, plate of stone. Uh,
>> and was reputed to be an extremely good
wrestler. Not just that he did it
sometimes,
>> right? And so these guys, you know, it's
very different from today where, you
know, your average professor or
something of philosophy is is this this
kind of very pathetic creature that
that,
you know, you might read some
interesting books, but but uh doesn't
have this Marshall engagement with
reality uh the way these guys did. And
>> yeah, athletics was absolutely
presupposed as foundational to
education. um not just wrestling but a
whole array of competitive I guess you
could call them sports or athletics all
of which were intended to reflect and
prepare for skills you would actually
need on the battlefield. So like javelin
is an obvious example but running um
strength sports that that reflected what
you would have to do with armor on
chariot races. Um, some of them are a
bit archaic by the time you get to uh
their period, but nonetheless very
clearly derived from war and that was
just like that's the foundation that's
taken for granted. If you if you don't
have that, you're not in a position to
proceed further to the study of
philosophy or whatever.
>> Right. Well, that's an interesting kind
of point to make these days, right? is
is that to think coherently you have to
have some kind of strength of the body.
like the uh thought is a very it's
grounded in physicality at some level
and um
you know we don't have to pursue that
thought very far here but
>> it's interesting that it's a little bit
different than than uh I think your sort
of typical kind of
>> uh the nerd pretense or the
>> a lot a lot of nerds think like okay you
know actually the body is just this meat
bag I don't need it I don't care about
it uh I you know I'm just going to kind
of abstract myself into the realm of
thought entirely. Um and that does feel
wrong. It it does seem that they they