Moralia: Volume 2 - Plutarch, Richard Shilleto - translator
Language: EnglishKeywords: 
Ancient Greece
 Biography
 Greek
 Memoir
 Philosophy
 Politics & Social Sciences
Shared by:Haru55
Written by ,
Read by Matthew Lloyd Davies
Format: M4B
Bitrate: Variable
Lucius Mestrius Plutarchus (46 ce - after 119) was born in Chaeronea, Boeotia, to a wealthy Greek family and assumed his full Latin name on becoming a Roman citizen. He made the most of his varied background and experience as a philosopher, magistrate, ambassador and priest at the Delphic Temple of Apollo, to become one of the most important biographers and essayists of classical Greek and Roman times. His Parallel Lives, which recounts and describes the personalities and achievements of the great figures of the era, is his most well-known (and voluminous) text. But Moralia, his collection of essays on a rich variety of subjects, continues to fascinate and educate.
Volume 2 comprises 17 essays which are arguably even wider ranging than the Ethical Essays in Volume 1, opening with ‘On Listening to Lectures’, in which he warns against the habit of ‘the great majority of persons who practise speaking before they have acquired the habit of listening’. Plutarch is didactic, entertaining, informative and at times controversial. He considers atheism in ‘Superstition’, asks ‘Were the Athenians more famous in War or in Wisdom?’ and in ‘On Love of Wealth’ confirms that money can’t buy you love: nor ‘peace of mind, greatness of spirit, serenity, confidence, and self-sufficiency’.
Plutarch’s fascination with history and biography is also apparent here with some absorbing tales in ‘Sayings of Kings and Commanders’, ‘Sayings of Spartan Women’ and ‘Bravery of Women’. Taking another tack, he turns his attention to the political sphere in ‘A Philosopher ought to Converse especially with Men in Power’. And he gives advice ‘To an Uneducated Ruler’, pointing out that ‘most kings and rulers are so foolish as to act like unskillful sculptors, who think their colossal figures look large and imposing if they are modelled with their feet far apart, their muscles tense, and their mouths wide open’ - advice that is just as relevant to rulers in the 21st century. Throughout these essays there is humour, whimsy and wisdom, but above all Plutarch demonstrates an engaging humanity in his survey of man, in all his greatness and his foibles. Matthew Lloyd Davies is an ideal representative.
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| Creation Date: | Sat, 05 Sep 2020 22:31:05 +0100 |
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| Plutarch - Moralia, Volume 2 - 17 Various Essays.m4b 427.64 MBs | |
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This post has 13 comments with rating of 5/5
September 5th, 2020
Great to have these - thanks for bearing Greek gifts, Haru.
September 5th, 2020
Thanks a million!
September 5th, 2020
@caesar: Are you sure you want to take advice from a guy who spent the last thirty years of his life sniffing fumes as a priest in Delphi?
Ironically enough, “parnassah” פַּרנָסָה is the Hebrew word for livelihood.
September 5th, 2020
We’re all sniffing fumes of one brand or another. We should all aspire to respire as well as he.
I’m sure he was just getting to know himself.
September 6th, 2020
Thanks for another great upload, Haru! To commenter above: the fact that he was perhaps in an altered state as a priest at Delphi is ad hominem and irrelevant. It is his ideas that matter. Have stood the test of time for nearly two millenia.
September 6th, 2020
@fritzreg: My comments are seldom ad hominem and irrelevant.
More like irreverent and addled houyhnhnm.
September 6th, 2020
Why are the so-called well-read people the cringiest and antinatural? You just read their comments and see their suffering always having to come up with quirky lines to prove how special and intelligent they are.
Good seed.
September 6th, 2020
Gentlemen.Let us get along with each other.Everyone has a contribution to make.If you listen to this audio book a spark of intelligence burns within you.love.
September 6th, 2020
Tibi gratias ago pro dono!
September 6th, 2020
@ARNELIETOR - yes, my comments are cringy and quirky. Got it.
Thanks for the feedback.
Peace and Love
September 6th, 2020
Love, yes, love was the correct answer all along.
June 1st, 2023
Can someone please reseed?
December 1st, 2024
please seed, thanks
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