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Ancient Greek Literature - Literary Criticism, Ancient Greek Poetry - Literary Criticism, Greco-Roman Folklore & Mythology, Philosophy & Literature, Mythology in Literature, Plato - Ancient Greek Philosophy
The Bow and the Lyre by Seth Benardete β€” book cover

The Bow and the Lyre

by Benardete, Seth
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Overview

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.

About the Author, Seth Benardete

Seth Benardete was professor of classics at New York University. He was the author of The Being of the Beautiful, The Rhetoric of Morality and Philosophy, Socrates' Second Sailing, and The Tragedy and Comedy of Life.

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Editorials

Albert E. Gunn and Staff

Bernardete's procedure frees him to take seriously the problems of the surface on their own terms.
β€” Martin Sitte, New York, NY

Book Details

Published
December 26, 1996
Publisher
Lanham, Md. : Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, c1997.
Pages
216
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780847683673

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