Classics and the Western Canon discussion
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Planning for our fourth 2015 read
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My next choice would be Crime and Punishment, but I know Everyman would like us to take a break from the "modern" and read some Greek classics.


Not a rule, no. It often, perhaps usually, happens, but it's not required.


I am trying to remember which recent book I read (unusually for me) focused initially on Lucretius. Aging memory is temporarily failing me, but maybe somebody else read the same book and remembers it.


I am trying to remember which recent book I read (unusually for me..."
Another reason I am grateful for Goodreads. Cataloguing books here has helped me when memory fails more times than I can count. :-)

I remember using many adjectives in my enthusiastic review of Lucretius, such as epic, fun, creative, systematic, logical, but "challenging" is definitely not one of them. Lucretius is very much like Herodotus in that anyone who chooses can enjoy their works without any difficulty.

Because I'm feeling contrary at the moment, I tried to not be interested in any of the books listed - but I failed. :)
I'm kind of leaning towards something that isn't a novel/fiction as it seems like we've had quite a bit of that lately.
But that being said, I'm completely opened to being persuaded as they all look interesting.

Bingo. That was the book. Thanks!
The Swerve is, indeed, a fine book. When I read it, I felt it was as much about the culture of the monks who preserved Lucretius and that of those who discovered it, as it was about his writings. Prescient as they may have been, the vagaries of the ways they could have been lost forever, and yet were found, are the themes of the book as far as I was concerned.

I do agree. Lucretius was the hinge on which the book opened, but not the primary focus.
But it brings to mind something I have been thinking about as I read a book of the history of the English country house which is based in considerable part on the letters and diaries which have survived over the centuries. And I sometimes marvel that we have as much literature as we do from ancient times, given that it all had to be handwritten.
And I wonder what historians five hundred years in the future will have to work with. There are almost no personal letters any more, certainly very few which compare with the letters of past centuries. Everything is email or Twitter, and will any of this survive the centuries? Just from twenty years ago I have piles of 8 inch and 5 inch and 3-1/4 inch floppy disks most of which are useless and their contents lost. I read with pleasure the letters of Jane Austen, of Johnson, of Jefferson, and many others. Who will want in two hundred years to publish "the emails of _____"?

Spinoza is best known for his Ethics, but apparently he broke off writing the Ethics to write the Treatise, in part because he had friends who were jailed for publishing work that questioned accepted Christian ideology. He had already been excommunicated from the Jewish community due to his unconventional views on the Divine, so he was familiar with intellectual intolerance. (Despite his views and his excommunication, he is today considered a major figure in modern Jewish thought, at least historically speaking.)
I've looked at the Ethics but didn't get too far because it seems like a book to study rather than read, and I wasn't up for that at the time. Very rigorous stuff. (Interestingly, George Eliot produced the first English translation of the Ethics. Apparently she liked his attacks on superstition.)
But the Theological-Poitical Treatise looks much more approachable than the Ethics, and I'm sure it would provide for a lively discussion if chosen.




No. Indeed, others might also want to read it because of the Lawrence Block book "The Burglar who Studied Spinoza."



A bit of a surprise to me, too, but if the group decides it's what they want to read, we'll have a great discussion of as we have with other selections I was initially dubious about.

I think Roger makes a very good point. Darwin's work is historically significant; perhaps one of a short shelf-full of the most significant works in history. And it is stylishly written (from the excerpts I have read). But, alone, it will not shed as much light on his own theory as other, later, books could do. We might as profitably read a good biography--and that is not the purpose of this group.

Also, why interest in The Origin of Species versus The Descent of Man, if one is going to explore the writings of Darwin?

Of course, just as we study Freud or Marx as scientific dead ends (interesting because of the cultural turmoil they caused), we may also read Darwin from an historical point of view. An approach in which his errors are at least as important as his insights. However, I believe that a general reader interested in the classics for other than aesthetic reasons, is usually better served with a recent interpretation.
Lucretius is also an interesting case. The humanists, I understand, were excited by the quality of his Latin verses, but I doubt whether many of us can enjoy this long poem in translation. And if, on the other hand, it is Epicurean thinking we are interested in we would probably profit more from a modern exposition (Greenblatt’s "Swerve" may be useful for the philosophy, though as history it has been severely criticized, I believe with good reason).

Susan: I may well be wrong, but I thought Wallace actually arrived at the theory first, or at least simultaneously. My understanding was that this is what forced Darwin to overcome his reluctance to go public and rushed him to his presentation.
Wendell: Could you elaborate on why you think Greenblatt's history is lacking? I enjoyed the book, though I was not bowled over by it. I actually found the parts about the monks more interesting than the parts about Lucretius.
Wendell: Could you elaborate on why you think Greenblatt's history is lacking? I enjoyed the book, though I was not bowled over by it. I actually found the parts about the monks more interesting than the parts about Lucretius.


@30 from Susan. Yes. This clarifies. It is how I recall it too. I believe part of Darwin's reticence was that he sensed how his theory would upend traditional Christian doctrine and feared the pain to his pious wife.

If the book is voted in, that's the spirit in which I would approach it. Not as a textbook of natural selection, which as several point out there are much better texts on (and what atrocious grammar that was!), but first as showing the process of intellectual development and scientific endeavor which brought a whole new theory of human development into Western intellectual thought, and also to help understand the enormous intellectual upheaval which it brought into Western thinking.
Actually, the argument of "modern books are better" could be made of almost any classic scientific or historical work, but I argue that it is as important to understand the development of scientific and historic thought and how we got where we are as it is to understand its current status. There is a lot in Plato which we now reject, but just to see his process of thought, even when he's wrong, is of value.

I found the historical problems concerning Greenblatt’s book best formulated by prof. John Monfasani. But in fact there seem to be two different strands of criticism that we may differentiate between.
The first problem is that Greenblatt sketches a very simplified and one-sided image of the 'medieval mind', which has shocked some connoisseurs. Of course, the idea that a single poem destroyed 'medieval superstition' and led us into our brave new world is a bit silly. Historians prefer to dwell on continuity, in this case to contemplate the slow change in the balance of power in the western mind from the 8th century renaissance to the 12th century renaissance, going on to the early 14th century renaissance and the High Renaissance, not forgetting the apotheose in the Enlightenment.
But hey, a caricature is not necessarily wrong, and a guy writing popular history deserves some space. I find it very disappointing that schooled historians seem so often wishy-washy when it comes to popularization, leaving the field to journalists, or, worse [:-)], professors of literature. So it is only the second line of criticism that is really damaging Greenblatt’s case. Because now it is argued that he is not just exaggerating, neglecting the importance of long-term developments, but presenting a view that has no relation to reality at all, that is plainly wrong.
Monfasani follows this line when he concentrates his criticism on the fact that Greenblatt has no prove what’s however that Lucretius poem influenced Western development, let alone ushered us into the era of modernity. That Montaigne and Jefferson were impressed is not enough. This view accords with my less informed reaction, which must have been just the opposite of what Greenblatt intended. While I initially enjoyed the book (Greenblatt knows how to tell a tall story) I gradually started to wonder how it could be that a line of thought as interesting as the Epicurean apparently had so little influence. Not even Poggio seemed to have appreciated what Lucretius tried to say, only the way he said it.
So in the end Greenblatt's book felt like a mighty ride along the runway, but lacking lift-off. Which once again indicates that popular history is not a simple thing to do (and I'm not sure that prof. Monfasani understands the common reader when he suggests that in stead of Greenblatt he should try The History of Scepticism: From Savonarola to Bayle).
PS: perhaps I should add a link to a review by Michael Dirda - another reserved critic.

On that basis, the weighted voting was:
Goldsmith, The Vicar of Wakefield: 12 votes
Lucretius, On the Nature of Things: 10 votes
Darwin, The Origin of Species: 9 votes
On that basis, the top two finishes will go into a run-off, which I will post right now.

The raw vote was even -- 6 for each.
So we go to the weighted vote.
And the weighted vote is, TA DA
Goldsmith, The Vicar of Wakefield -- 10 votes
Lucretius, On the Nature of Things -- 10 votes
So -- we read both. And let's go in that order -- Goldsmith then (after an Interim read) Lucretius.
The random number generator has, as usual, come up with an interesting selection for our consideration, to which are added two moderator nominations. It's a selection which includes novels, philosophy, biography, history, poetry, and science. Something that should appeal to everyone!
As usual, the list will be open for discussion and lobbying for a period until I get around to posting the poll.
Here are our choices in alphabetical order by author, and if you can't find something in this group that interests you, well, what can I say?
Augustine, Confessions
Chaucer, Troilus and Criseyde
Darwin, The Origin of Species
Dostoevsky, Crime and Punishment
Goldsmith, The Vicar of Wakefield
Herodotus, Histories
Lucretius, On the Nature of Things
Spinoza, Theological-Political Treatise