Posted on 11/17/2021 7:31:15 AM PST by Brookhaven
“I am Spartan. I call a ‘spade’ a ‘spade.’”
“Princeton University announcing this summer that it would no longer require classics students to study ancient Greek and Latin”
In other news, the math department will no longer require competence in algebra, geometry, trig or calculus.
Because solid learning from ancient times, the Trivium of Grammar (good literature), Logic (how, not what, to think) and Rhetoric (persuading others of the truth, and learning it yourself in greater depth in the process), protected students from exploitation by elite controllers of society, students had to be subjected to the fun-house world familiar in the school institution today.
This required laying the foundation for schooling, not on the basis of the classics of Western Civilization, the first among equals of nine great world civilizations–the free legacy of each citizen of the world–but upon planned disruption of them and opposition to them–the chimera of cultural appropriation as asserted by people with no appreciable education themselves–by vilification of the great and the good books (Dead White Males), and by an insidious control curriculum to thwart the acquisition of a solid academic foundation, to deliberately “crush the imagination” and stymie development of habits of independent thought immune to elite control.
Mirabile dictu!
What's "racist" about The Odyssey?
The Greek portion of the sign above Jesus at the cross saying "Jesus of Nazareth king of the Jews"
In my limited study of classical and Koine Greek I have yet to see the forest for the trees. That said, I have gained a desire to be precise with language and to think critically. Does not always work, however.
I had 8yrs of Latin and 1yr of Classical Greek, back in the 60s in HS and college, and it did wonders for my vocabulary and public speaking. I aced all courses, and enjoyed it immensely.
From what I have read, the Greek philosophers were a heavy influence on our Founding Fathers in crafting our government/ Constitution. This step is simply another step in the direction of erasing our history. Greek philosophers were NOT on the side of the Commies.
Ping.
You are behind the times. My sister is a middle- and high-school math teacher. She says we passed that point years ago.
Vive la France ! Vive la Republique !
Give credit where credit is due !
—”What’s “racist” about The Odyssey?”
NOTHING!
Long ago I read (skimmed?) The Odyssey for a class.
My son recommended the Emily Wilson translation, OH MY!
Some of the best fiction, ever.
I knew the ending but about a third of the way in, I could not stop reading! I read all night!
And Tennyson’s Ulysses is a nice denouement, Odysseus was not born to sit around... So he puts the band back together for a world tour.
“Some work of noble note, may yet be done,
Not unbecoming men that strove with Gods.”
“We are not now that strength which in old days
Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are;
One equal temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.”
Things like this and a high birth rate are why France is a real country.
The Great Pyramid was built around 2,600 BC.
Alexander the Great (the high point of Greece) lived around 330 BC.
Egyptian civilization and culture predates Greece by at least 2,000 years, so he may have a point about the cultural appropriation.
As to black Egyptians, there is some evidence there were black rulers in Egypt from time to time (especially in the southern kingdom), but once the kingdoms were unified, the evidence points to the leaders being semitic—white Egyptians.
There is plenty of evidence that the Egyptians would routinely raid south of Egypt to capture people as slaves. Almost all of those people would have almost certainly have been black.
Speaking on Monday, Education Minister Jean-Michel Blanquer, a leading figure in France’s war on woke, said that ancient Greek and Latin would become available to sixth formers pursuing vocational courses next year, as well as middle school students.
“There’s nothing nobler than a man and wife, of one heart and mind in a house:
A bane to their enemies; and to their friends, great joy.
But their own hearts know it best.”
Aha! Kinda sexist and un-inclusive? /s
Loved The Odyssey. Shared it with my daughters whom I home-schooled, and I did get a bit misty when we read the above. We all got a great education. The quote above hung in our home thereafter.
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