If you can draw a square circle or even envision it in your mind then it would exist. Just being able to put the words square and circle next to each other isn’t the same. Like many before, you have missed the point.
@mrscanlan.5016Ай бұрын
Diomedes was a BOSS and a top top warrior, with Achilles i see his point about Agamemnon taking his war prize turned Lover Bresis, Saying Agamemnon was a Hypocrite because they were at Troy to get back Menalaus's wife, this was in the last year after Achilles took 11 cities and 12 island's then had HIS Prize and Lover taken off him by Agamemnon, come on men be honest now, ill would of stopped too, But Ok Achilles was having a BIG BIG SULK
@mrboston80702 ай бұрын
Greetings to you all the snake 🐍 is a symbol chosen by us jews
@louiswatrin14472 ай бұрын
By far the best video on this topic, covering the whole story in a clear and in depth way. Thank you!
@mynameisjeff99412 ай бұрын
Go Bacchae Go Bacchae it's your birthday, we gonna party like it's your birthday
@benquinneyiii79412 ай бұрын
Diogenes?
@maludiven74183 ай бұрын
What Book did you use for the pictures? The German Text Sound really interesting, and also, „Pentheus, Christmascracker.“ That had me dying 💀💀
@michaelhensel31873 ай бұрын
Uh Teacher! Sorry for the interruption You forgot to mention that there are 2 instances of a Greek Dragon’s teeth being planted in the ground like seeds causing “Spartoi” (which are skeleton warriors) sprouting from the ground One instance coming from the dragon in Jason’s story And another being the story of how Minos found his city We can either assume that the 2nd instance (i dont know which was written first) was merely a reference to the first, or we could say that the ancient greek people saw dragons as just having this ability much like how modern people all see dragons as having some kind of breath weapon such as fire, poison, lightning, acid, etc.
@H.J.U.494 ай бұрын
Wonderful lecture - now I finally understand the drama of Medea. Thanks!
@Darkseidsolosfiction4 ай бұрын
Medea didn't murder her children, Greeks lied.
@ParticularlyRudeOne4 ай бұрын
Sir, why did you delete the Hamlet video? Saw that years ago, still think about it?
@ains29045 ай бұрын
4:10 at this point he just summons the anchient forces of darkness
@kssw33b627 ай бұрын
This video was great, I'm kind of sad he no longer posts.
@andreascampus55157 ай бұрын
Loved this!
@g.v.64507 ай бұрын
Medea: “But where shall I go, what shall I do?” Jason: “Frankly Medea, I don’t give a damn!” 🤣🤣🤣
@threestars21647 ай бұрын
He was an ancient deist
@BernasLL7 ай бұрын
What a great channel!
@jacobringenwald7 ай бұрын
Aristotle never saw a theory he wouldn't dispute, haha
@markwarrensprawson8 ай бұрын
I was recently watching an experienced PhD philologist specializing in Greek and Latin give a presentation during which he mentioned a monument that stands to this day over the site of a well in which a mob of of (and in this I might easily be mistaken - I need to find the presentation and re-watch it) Corinthians who had murdered Medea's sons and disposed of them there in the well. The story went on to detail a threat delivered by supporters of Medea to the murderers that they'd be made victims of a terrible curse woven by her if they didn't build said monument on that site as a form of reparation. It's funny, - this topic, kinda like that of Hypatia of Alexandria - has been popping up a lot in my feed lately and I mentioned the same lecture I listened to in the comments section of another video attributing this terrible crime to Medea just a day of two ago. I need to get onto that and provide a link to the lecture, or at least make a clip of that part and share it here and there ASAP. I will soon, I promise. But it's a school night and I've a Monday looming dark and menacing before me right now. I'd better save my little search for tomorrow.
@illusus_aten8 ай бұрын
Parmenides was the Master of the Day at understanding and fully comprehending and encompassing the Universal Law of Duality ☯
@jacobringenwald8 ай бұрын
I think your voice is endearing
@Juicy4HocoKing9 ай бұрын
This man NEEDS more follower
@jbricklin19 ай бұрын
Nice graphics. Peter Kingsley's book Reality gives us a deeper interpretation of what Parmenides was about.
@Saaraayee9 ай бұрын
Thank you so much 💓
@isaiahyasharahlah86249 ай бұрын
This comment board should be riddled with statements! This was an excellent video and the teaching style is universal . I'm tuned in!
@shabbarali397310 ай бұрын
The point, floating in the cosmos of circular motion ,surrounded by ever distant ocean??kindly explain this sentence??
@xenophanessonic82110 ай бұрын
Mm this is very interesting
@Grimm-Grimm9 ай бұрын
its about you lmao
@charmingmagican98216 ай бұрын
No way is Drowning drowning sinking sinking
@BushyHairedStranger10 ай бұрын
Jason abandoned Medea & their children when he met a younger bigger breasted princess,…seriously! she had huge tits! Which was mentioned in the fable of their marriage. So he dumped Medea for a younger chesty bride…
@earlthepearl406210 ай бұрын
This was an case of logical fallacy projection of Parmenides philosophy by sophistry why dont you do the same with Wittgenstein and Kierkegaard next as to inept this was, btw this nerdy unfunny persona didn´t help either mostly sounds pathetic and weak!
@bewitchedstars120110 ай бұрын
Was Nestor a gravely serious man? I'm studying The Merchant of Venice and he is referenced in act 1, scene 1 of it. I can't find if he was very serious anywhere online.
@FoxwedeHistory10 ай бұрын
Certainly he was widely respected as an elder and was never portrayed as a comic fool in the original epics. In one his essays Plutarch calls him σεμνός, "honourable".
@nonhodiesatanas10 ай бұрын
The bit about Heraclitus being the only woke enough individual to see the truth was quite hilarious! I love your humor! Subscribing
@QalOrt10 ай бұрын
ah the Koryos
@Christopher-ej2bs10 ай бұрын
Unbeknownst to the world , she was a real person and was a real chemist(sorceress) and scholar. Her works have survived to today ,as did some from the nomadic philosopher Nessus, who contrary to popular belief was not half horse half man, it a man who spent so much time on his horse he was depicted as being one with it. The tunic of Nessus is one of the first things I learned to make when I began my studies and it's not as mystical as you would believe, but is a very brutal way to assassinate anyone. The tunic of Nessus was made by soaking a tunic or robe in the juice of Co'nium ( water hemlock) and heracleum mantegazzianum ( aka.giant hogweed, hogsbane, cow parsnip) When the tunic was put on, the sweat of the victim would mix with the toxic hogweed juice causing the skin to blister and split in the direct sunlight. The water hemlock would also enter the blood stream through the wounds made by the giant hogs weed.. This water hemlock would then set to work shutting down the internal organs starting with the lungs, kidneys and eventually heart. The reason this stuff was treated as a myth was so no copycats would try the same shit today! Magic is an illusion to cover up the treachery of the mind of men and women scorned.
@Kid_Ikaris11 ай бұрын
Damn, do not marry a witch unless you are fully committed.
@user-ym4lj8ms3n18 күн бұрын
do not marry anyone if you are not fully committed, honestly.
@Kid_Ikaris11 ай бұрын
1:18 There might be a clear chronology in the lexicography, but when I hear scholars say things like oh her name must come from this word, isn't it also possible the word came from her name?
@FoxwedeHistory11 ай бұрын
Likely not here when it comes to proper names in Greek mythology - when the person's name has a transparent meaning, it is usually a case of the storyteller giving a name from a pre-existing word. Another example of this principle is "Thersites", meaning an arrogant fellow. If we're dealing with a very very ancient god (different scenario), perhaps there could be an argument for a reverse relationship.
@gabetabor977611 ай бұрын
I love Nestor. Maybe my favorite character. When he made his appearance in the Odyssey I was so happy to see him again
@budojitsu111 ай бұрын
Warcrimes?? 😂
@RichardTaylor1800 Жыл бұрын
The apeiron is fish. See, we people used to burst out of fish, so we are fish. And water? That's fish. Dryness? Fish. It's fish all the way down and all the way up.
@anirbellahcen5551 Жыл бұрын
The name of the book please
@FoxwedeHistory Жыл бұрын
Of the play? Bacchae, by Euripides.
@jess.lu27 Жыл бұрын
my second name is Medéa☺️
@militantpacifist4087 Жыл бұрын
Hecate’s personality sounds a lot like Pazuzu’s personality.
@9340Steve Жыл бұрын
wow. What a great job! What a great myth, too. Stand with your people in time of need, says Old Nestor. The Greek leaders/heroes are so deeply flawed; maybe none worse than Achilles. Everything relies on the secondary leaders, such as Nestor, who display such valor and courage. Loyalty to ones people in time of great need -- that's the singular moral in Nestor's story. I wonder, though, whether cattle raids and such (the entire war against Troy is a kind of giant cattle raid) could also be seen as a warning to us all in the age where giant imperial powers such as the US, China, Russia, in their insatiable thirst for world conquest, threaten all humanity with catastrophe.
@Fnelrbnef Жыл бұрын
Anaximander got it. The ONE.
@JohnEricksonYYZ Жыл бұрын
Next time, would you please speak in a normal voice? These ancient Greek tragedies deserve to be taken seriously.
@seratonyn Жыл бұрын
Much respect and love, but.... Uuuuughhghghg I love chaos, don't get me wrong, this is fun etc etc but I currently live in hell and I'm trying to get my daughters back after DOING rites for the like and I can't abide by this AT ALL. Sorry. This is not the story of how Demeter lost Kore to Hades and I am perplexed, upset, annoyed, and getting angry at this charade that plays out around me. Kneel before your God and do as I say AND AS I DO. Stop burning houses down in the Pier for Christ's sake. YES, CHRIST'S. Because I don't discriminate between my gods, what the fuck ever, and fill libraries with REAL BOOKS OF REAL INFORMATION, feed the poor and actually do something about abusive situations. Stop being a DICKtator and fuck off with the disinformation before I get wrathful and smite the shit out of you. K thx bai.
@seratonyn Жыл бұрын
Awesome necronomicon, bro.
@chuckbeattyo Жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/g6XOiaOPosaKjsk
@thequestion9902 Жыл бұрын
Sounds like he was talking about entropy.
@sebby8283 Жыл бұрын
how did she die? i searched in many places but i found nothing about her death