62:09
Who Would Plutarch Write About Today?
David Brooks, Yale Jackson Institute for Global Affairs Senior Fellow lecture "Who Would P...
published: 13 May 2013
author: YaleUniversity
Who Would Plutarch Write About Today?
Who Would Plutarch Write About Today?
David Brooks, Yale Jackson Institute for Global Affairs Senior Fellow lecture "Who Would Plutarch Write About Today?"- published: 13 May 2013
- views: 889
- author: YaleUniversity
9:32
Plutarch and Morals
Professor Christopher Pelling of Oxford University talks about his work on the ancient Gre...
published: 29 Mar 2010
author: ClassicsConfidentia1
Plutarch and Morals
Plutarch and Morals
Professor Christopher Pelling of Oxford University talks about his work on the ancient Greek author Plutarch and much more in this interview from www.classic...- published: 29 Mar 2010
- views: 2311
- author: ClassicsConfidentia1
3:11
Plutarch Quotes
For More Famous Quotes By Plutarch : http://www.quoteswave.com/authors/plutarch About : Lu...
published: 17 Apr 2013
author: Quoteswave
Plutarch Quotes
Plutarch Quotes
For More Famous Quotes By Plutarch : http://www.quoteswave.com/authors/plutarch About : Lucius Mestrius Plutarchus was a Greek historian, biographer, and ess...- published: 17 Apr 2013
- views: 58
- author: Quoteswave
27:33
Isis and Osiris (Plutarch reading - Part 1)
Plutarch's account of his hearing varying versions of the story of Isis and Osiris (and Ho...
published: 01 Mar 2012
author: Culain ruled by Venus
Isis and Osiris (Plutarch reading - Part 1)
Isis and Osiris (Plutarch reading - Part 1)
Plutarch's account of his hearing varying versions of the story of Isis and Osiris (and Horus). I appreciate that he gives equal respect and attention to bot...- published: 01 Mar 2012
- views: 11269
- author: Culain ruled by Venus
8:15
Mark Bauerlein - Young Americans Are the Dumbest Generation
In his provocative new book The Dumbest Generation, Mark Bauerlein argues that "the digita...
published: 23 Jul 2008
author: ReasonTV
Mark Bauerlein - Young Americans Are the Dumbest Generation
Mark Bauerlein - Young Americans Are the Dumbest Generation
In his provocative new book The Dumbest Generation, Mark Bauerlein argues that "the digital age stupefies young Americans and jeopardizes our future" by turn...- published: 23 Jul 2008
- views: 40386
- author: ReasonTV
12:31
Plutarch über das Fleischessen (I)
Egregantius liest einen "Essay" von Plutarch über das Fleischessen. Ein weiterer wird noch...
published: 26 Feb 2013
author: Bruder Egregantius
Plutarch über das Fleischessen (I)
Plutarch über das Fleischessen (I)
Egregantius liest einen "Essay" von Plutarch über das Fleischessen. Ein weiterer wird noch folgen!- published: 26 Feb 2013
- views: 135
- author: Bruder Egregantius
4:23
Plutarch
50 Notable Names is a collection of fifty people down through history that are worth learn...
published: 10 Sep 2011
author: LittleBillysWorld
Plutarch
Plutarch
50 Notable Names is a collection of fifty people down through history that are worth learning about and learning from. Notable Name # 25 - Plutarch.- published: 10 Sep 2011
- views: 404
- author: LittleBillysWorld
8:59
Plutarch's Lives - Lyrcurgus - Summary - Sparta
http://www.litforbrains.com Here, we go through a summary of the Life of Lycurgus, as told...
published: 31 Dec 2012
author: litforbrains
Plutarch's Lives - Lyrcurgus - Summary - Sparta
Plutarch's Lives - Lyrcurgus - Summary - Sparta
http://www.litforbrains.com Here, we go through a summary of the Life of Lycurgus, as told by Plutarch. Here, you will learn more about Sparta, and how truly...- published: 31 Dec 2012
- views: 391
- author: litforbrains
45:38
Plutarch's revival in late Byzantium: the case of Theodore Metochites
23-05-2013 Warburg Institute & Institute of Classical Studies http://www.sas.ac.uk/ http:/...
published: 07 Jun 2013
author: SchAdvStudy
Plutarch's revival in late Byzantium: the case of Theodore Metochites
Plutarch's revival in late Byzantium: the case of Theodore Metochites
23-05-2013 Warburg Institute & Institute of Classical Studies http://www.sas.ac.uk/ http://warburg.sas.ac.uk/events/collo... Plutarch's revival in late Byzan...- published: 07 Jun 2013
- views: 85
- author: SchAdvStudy
3:29
Life Of Plutarch
A video project I made for an Ancient Greek course at the University of Wisconsin-Green Ba...
published: 05 Nov 2007
author: Scott Bartell
Life Of Plutarch
Life Of Plutarch
A video project I made for an Ancient Greek course at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay. It's a video biography of the ancient Greek historian Plutarch.- published: 05 Nov 2007
- views: 2610
- author: Scott Bartell
2:38
The Hunger Games 2 - Philip Seymour Hoffman is Plutarch Heavensbee in Catching Fire
Philip Seymour Hoffman is Plutarch Heavensbee in The Hunger Games 2 Catching Fire! You mig...
published: 13 Sep 2012
author: BeyondTheTrailer
The Hunger Games 2 - Philip Seymour Hoffman is Plutarch Heavensbee in Catching Fire
The Hunger Games 2 - Philip Seymour Hoffman is Plutarch Heavensbee in Catching Fire
Philip Seymour Hoffman is Plutarch Heavensbee in The Hunger Games 2 Catching Fire! You might not officially meet Plutarch Heavensbee until 2013, but today Be...- published: 13 Sep 2012
- views: 18956
- author: BeyondTheTrailer
8:01
PLUTARCH: Lycurgus and Numa P1
...
published: 11 Jun 2013
author: The Rugged Pyrrhus
PLUTARCH: Lycurgus and Numa P1
Vimeo results:
30:47
Kenosis
FOLLOW US ON FACEBOOK https://www.facebook.com/Esoterietelevisie
Knowing Self is knowing ...
published: 12 Apr 2012
author: Entheogeen
Kenosis
FOLLOW US ON FACEBOOK https://www.facebook.com/Esoterietelevisie
Knowing Self is knowing emptiness,
knowing emptiness is knowing Wholeness.
To become more, be less...
To become full, be empty
In all this emptiness lies the source of all things,
the conscious Living Spirit, the mediator between Mind and Matter
Every-thing is in no-thing
Every-body is in no-body
The Hero always returns to Zero (Hunab Ku Productions)
All is in God - God is in All - All is God - There's no reality but God
Quotes
_______
'Do you not know that the temple of God and the Spirit of God dwells within you' (1Cor 3:16)
'Know thyself, and thou shalt know the Universe and God' (Temple of Apollo at Delphi inscription)
'He who knows others is wise, he who knows himself is enlighted' (Lao Tzu)
'This above all, to thine own self be true.' (William Shakespear)
'Turn the spotlight inwards' (Ghandi)
'The Kingdom of God is within you' (Jesus Christ)
'I shall fully explain Self-knowledge with Self-realization
after knowing that nothing more remains to be known in this World'. (Bhagavad Gita)
'Every one rushes elsewhere and into the future,
because no one wants to face one's own inner self.' (Michel de Montaigne)
'Each of us is something of a schizofrenic pesonality,
tragically divided against ourselves'. (Martin Luther King)
'Neurosis is the suffering of a soul which has not discovered it's meaning.' (Carl Jung)
END QUOTES
______________
The hardest victory is over self. (Aristotle)
The first and best victory is to conquer self. (Plato)
Look well into thyself;there is a source of strenght which will always spring up if thou wilt always look.
(Marcus Aurelius)
Inside us there is something that has no name, that something is what we are. (Jose Saramago)
There is no greater delight than to be conscious of sincerity on self-examination (Confucius)
Not till we are lost,in other words not untill we have lost the World, do we begin to find ourselves.
(Henry David Thoreau)
True wisdom consists in two things;knowledge of God and knowledge of Self. (John Calvin)
At the center of your being you have the answer; you know whio you are and you know what you want.
(Lao Tzu)
One can have no smaller or greater mastery than mastery of oneself. (Leonardo da Vinci)
What we achieve inwardly will change outer reality. (Plutarch)
The most common form of despair is not being who you are. (Kierkegaard)
You are constantly invited to be what you are, do not seek for things outside yourself. (Ralph Waldo Emerson)
To find yourself,think for yourself. let him who would move the World first move himself. (Socrates)
We ourselves posses beauty when we are true to our being; ugliness is in going over to another order; knowing ourselves we are beautiful, in self-ignorance, we are ugly. (Plotinus)
AND YOU?
WHEN WILL YOU BEGIN THAT LONG YOURNEY INTO YOURSELF ? (Rumi)
Music
The way-zack hempey
wake up-Jamin winans
keep on walking-burkhard dallwitz
mirage- alexander displat
my own heart-trevor morris
lindy-paul leonard
this is your calling-trevor morris
all by himself-marc streitenfeld
alone-jamin winans
vision-x ray dog
seeker- the who
Hunab Ku Productions
Follow us on FACEBOOK:
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Hunab Ku Productions LIBRARY:
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http://soundcloud.com/hunab-ku
2:11
SOUL IN THE SEA movie trailer
** Screening information - soulinthesea.com/#42d/custom_plain ** or a.pgtb.me/d13CPM
The ...
published: 09 May 2012
author: Amy Taylor
SOUL IN THE SEA movie trailer
** Screening information - soulinthesea.com/#42d/custom_plain ** or a.pgtb.me/d13CPM
The true story of one woman’s quest to befriend and protect an extroverted wild dolphin, Moko.
Filmed in the 6 months leading up to Moko’s death, Soul in the Sea follows a journey of discovery, devastating loss, and resolution. It’s a love story with a difference; breaking through the invisible wall between people and animals, celebrating the incredible experience of friendship with a lone wild dolphin, and questioning whether we are truly aware of these souls in the sea.
The greatest friendships can come out of the blue…
facebook.com/SoulintheSea
facebook.com/MokoDoco
www.soulinthesea.com
“To the dolphin alone beyond all other, nature has granted what the best philosophers seek: friendship for no advantage. – Plutarch
2:17
SOUL IN THE SEA TRAILER (2013)
** Screening information - http://soulinthesea.com/#42d/custom_plain ** or http://a.pgtb.m...
published: 22 Jul 2013
author: Amy Taylor
SOUL IN THE SEA TRAILER (2013)
** Screening information - http://soulinthesea.com/#42d/custom_plain ** or http://a.pgtb.me/d13CPM
The true story of one woman’s quest to befriend and protect an extroverted wild dolphin, Moko.
Filmed in the 6 months leading up to Moko’s death, Soul in the Sea follows a journey of discovery, devastating loss, and resolution. It’s a love story with a difference; breaking through the invisible wall between people and animals, celebrating the incredible experience of friendship with a lone wild dolphin, and questioning whether we are truly aware of these souls in the sea.
The greatest friendships can come out of the blue…
facebook.com/SoulintheSea
facebook.com/MokoDoco
www.soulinthesea.com
“To the dolphin alone beyond all other, nature has granted what the best philosophers seek: friendship for no advantage. – Plutarch
4:58
Heliogabale and war of principles (enhanced version)
(The English translation is below)
Video i made with a Phone
(The English translation is ...
published: 30 Apr 2010
author: Gérard Chauvin
Heliogabale and war of principles (enhanced version)
(The English translation is below)
Video i made with a Phone
(The English translation is below)
(…) C'est dans Héliogabale qu'Artaud affronte pour la première fois sur un mode systématique ce thème de la toute-puissance de la bisexualité créatrice. La «guerre des principes » y évoque déjà ce « rut quasi satanique » par lequel «le Paganisme, dans ses rites et dans ses fêtes, reproduit le Mythe de la création première» (VII,113). C'est à l'intérieur même du personnage d'Héliogabale que se rejoue cette lutte. Identifié à « Elagabalus, le dieu unitaire, qui rassemble l'homme et la femme, les pôles hostiles, le Un et le Deux », il personnifie cet écartèlement des principes dans la religion masculine du soleil : « La religion de la séparation initiale de l'UN. UN et Deux réunis dans le premier androgyne. / Qui est LUI, l'homme. / Et LUI, la femme./ En même temps. / Réunis en UN" (p. 82).
Ce premier androgyne qu'incarne Héliogabale, Artaud le conçoit non pas comme une structure stable où s'équilibreraient le masculin et le féminin, encore moins comme une fusion, mais comme une lutte à perpétuité, instable et violente, une oscillation permanente qui est une autre forme de la dépersonnalisation qu'il poursuit. L'image de l'androgyne, Artaud ne l'emploie d'ailleurs qu'ici et comme à regret puisqu'il se ravise plus bas : « Mais ce qui beaucoup plus que l'Androgyne apparaît dans cette image tournante, dans cette nature fascinante et double [...], et dans sa prodigieuse inconséquence sexuelle, image elle-même de la plus rigoureuse logique d'esprit, c'est l'idée de l'ANARCHIE » (p.83).
C'est à juste titre qu'Artaud corrige sa première référence pour rappeler à quel point l'anarchie de son héros a peu à voir avec ce qui sous le nom d'androgyne se réfère dans l'imaginaire à une complétude réalisée sous le signe de l'Un. On aurait tort en effet de voir dans ce qu'Artaud nomme la pédérastie rituelle d'Héliogabale le reflet des mythes qui se réfèrent à un ancêtre primordial cumulant la totalité des puissances magico-religieuses solidaires des deux sexes. Il ne s'agit pas ici de cette image totalisante du « genre neutre » niant le manque dont parle Green, pas plus que de ce fantasme finalement homosexuel dans le mythe d'Aristophane selon Platon qui nie la différence des sexes et absorbe le féminin en l'homme214. L'une et l'autre sont des images pacifiées (les êtres sphériques de Platon en sont l'emblème) qui réduisent les tensions en postulant une quiétude a-sexuelle ou une immobilité totalisante.
Les rites d'Héliogabale comme ceux des Tarahumaras mettent en scène un certain nombre de simulacres où la différence sexuelle est à la fois posée et désavouée. Double d'Héliogabale, le phallus sacré de la religion d'Émèse, ce fétiche215, désigne non pas l'organe mâle mais le va-et-vient entre humain et divin, masculin et féminin, dans la mise en scène perverse que le rite rejoue et démultiplie :
« [...] pour Héliogabale, Elagabalus c'est le membre érectile, à la fois humain et divin. Le membre érectile et le membre fort. Le membre-force qui se partage, qu'on n'utilise que partagé » (p. 81).
214 A. Green, « Le genre neutre » in, Narcissisme de vie, Narcissisme de mort, op. cit., p. 208-221
215 Rappelons que dans le sens défini par Freud, le fétiche est un phallus magique et tout-puissant, substitut du pénis de la mère auquel l'enfant ne veut pas renoncer. Des nombreux travaux consacrés au fétichisme, on retiendra que le fétiche, comme l'atteste l'étymologie, est un objet factice qui permet, grâce aux divers scénarios ritualisés dans lequel il entre, de rejouer activement un simulacre de castration répétitivement annulée (P. Aulagnier, « la perversion comme structure », op. cit., p. 31).
Extraits de « Entre corps et langue : l'espace du texte » par Evelyne Grossman Thèse pour le Doctorat d’Etat ès Lettres et Sciences humaines soutenue à l’Université Paris 7, le 20 décembre 1994.Une version abrégée a paru sous le titre Artaud/Joyce, le corps et le texte, Nathan, 1996 (épuisé).
« Héliogabale ou l'Anarchiste couronné » d’Antonin Artaud
Denoël et Steele, 1934. rééd. coll. L'imaginaire, Gallimard, 1997 (1979) (ISBN 2070284727)
___________________________________
L’ORIGINE PAÏENNES DES RITES CHRETIENS
« Chez les Tarahumaras, nombre de mythes antiques redeviennent d’actualité » Antonin Artaud
Signes et traces de rites et fêtes anciens reproduisant les Mythes de la création première sont encore visibles de nos jours à travers le monde. Ils sont la preuve que le paganisme a assuré un passage entre des cultes païens et le christianisme.
Les indiens Tarahumaras commémorent La semaine Pascale durant quatre jours en pratiquant la danse de judas et des pharisiens. Le samedi saint, Judas est brûlé. Raymonde Carasco cinéaste relate ceci :
(…)Il a
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1:30
Plutarch Lives - A Folio Society Review
A Short review of Plutarch Lives. This is a 4 Volume set from the Folio Society
Buy this ...
published: 13 Sep 2013
Plutarch Lives - A Folio Society Review
Plutarch Lives - A Folio Society Review
A Short review of Plutarch Lives. This is a 4 Volume set from the Folio Society Buy this set here: http://www.foliosociety.com/book/PTL/plutarch-lives Description from the Folio Society: PLUTARCH - LIVES ONE OF THE MOST INFLUENTIAL WORKS OF HISTORY EVER WRITTEN Thomas Jefferson said that there were three books that every gentleman should have to hand: Livy's History of Rome, the Aeneid and Plutarch's Lives. Plutarch's fascinating account of the lives of the greatest Greeks and Romans was one of the first major works of biography as we know it. It had an incalculable effect on Western culture, shaping the way we see the ancient world and influencing writers from Shakespeare to Emerson. This major new Folio Society publication, in four volumes, is introduced by acclaimed historian Tom Holland, and is vividly enhanced by a series of original illustrations by award-winning artist David Rooney. 'We have thought fit', wrote Plutarch in his Life of Pericles, 'to spend our times and pains in writing of the lives of famous persons.' It was an audacious plan, particularly for a Greek citizen of Rome writing in the first century AD. Not only was the art of biography in its infancy, but Plutarch paired celebrated Greeks with Romans, pointing out parallels between them. Greeks were esteemed by the Romans for their art and philosophy, but were not seen as heroes, warriors or law-makers. Plutarch's Greeks, however -- Theseus, Pericles, Alexander -- were no less heroic than the Romans. As introducer Tom Holland writes, this could have struck Roman readers as an exercise in conceited presumption, but the Romans loved the Lives, and their popularity proved instant and enduring. 'We dunces would have been lost if this book had not raised us' MICHEL DE MONTAIGNE Plutarch begins his Lives with Theseus and Romulus, the legendary founders respectively of the Athenian state and Rome, and ends with Antony, Brutus and the other successors of Caesar. Together, his Lives form an enthralling history of Greco-Roman antiquity from the earliest times to the fall of the Roman Republic and the birth of the Empire. By focusing on the roles of the great men in history, Plutarch creates a narrative that is lively, personal and compelling. His gift is to seize on the details that illuminate character, and to sum up people and nations through vivid anecdote. He tells how the young Julius Caesar, kidnapped by pirates who asked for twenty talents as ransom, 'laughed at them for not understanding the value of their prisoner, and voluntarily engaged to give them fifty'. We also learn how the Spartans bathed their children in wine to strengthen them, how the great orator Demosthenes overcame a stammer by speaking with pebbles in his mouth, and how the legislator Lycurgus defused the anger of a mob by inviting one of them to stay with him in his home. Plutarch's portraits are balanced, and he is always ready to acknowledge his subjects' less admirable qualities, whether the 'drunkenness, debauchery and insolence' of Alcibiades, or Mark Antony's 'insane desire to be the first and greatest man in the world'. This insight into human nature makes the Lives a timeless and fascinating history, as readable and relevant today as when it was first written. 'Sometimes a matter of less moment, an expression or a jest, informs us better of their character and inclinations, than the most famous sieges, the greatest armaments, or the bloodiest battles' Life of Alexander ''He was always excessively pleased with his own praise, and continued to the very last to be passionately fond of glory; which often interfered with the prosecution of his wisest resolutions' Life of Cicero It is impossible to exaggerate the influence of Plutarch's Lives on our view of the ancient world. For centuries he was the main source of information about such figures as Alexander and Cleopatra. Shakespeare based the stories of his Roman plays almost entirely on the accounts in the Lives. Many passages in Antony and Cleopatra, most famously the description of Cleopatra on her barge, are taken almost word for word from Plutarch. Voltaire and Montaigne were ardent admirers, while the Founding Fathers of America drew on many examples from the Lives in their writings and letters. This new Folio Society edition uses the classic translation overseen by John Dryden. Each life is placed in chronological order, with the Greeks before the Romans, creating an enthralling narrative history of the ancient world. 'A Bible for heroes' RALPH WALDO EMERSON Keep on Reading- published: 13 Sep 2013
- views: 15
8:01
PLUTARCH: Lycurgus P1
...
published: 11 Jun 2013
author: The Rugged Pyrrhus
PLUTARCH: Lycurgus P1
36:28
Plutarch in Scotland
23-05-2013 Warburg Institute & Institute of Classical Studies http://www.sas.ac.uk/ http:/...
published: 11 Jun 2013
author: SchAdvStudy
Plutarch in Scotland
Plutarch in Scotland
23-05-2013 Warburg Institute & Institute of Classical Studies http://www.sas.ac.uk/ http://warburg.sas.ac.uk/events/colloquia/afterlife-of-plutarch/ Plutarch...- published: 11 Jun 2013
- views: 46
- author: SchAdvStudy