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Books > Children's & Educational > Humanities > Philosophy & psychology > Philosophy / history of ideas
A definitive new history of the origins, evolution, and scope of the
ancient Greek city-state
The Greek polis, or city-state, was a resilient and adaptable political
institution founded on the principles of citizenship, freedom, and
equality. Emerging around 650 BCE and enduring to 350 CE, it offered a
means for collaboration among fellow city-states and social bargaining
between a community and its elites―but at what cost? Polis proposes a
panoramic account of the ancient Greek city-state, its diverse forms,
and enduring characteristics over the span of a millennium.
In this landmark book, John Ma provides a new history of the polis,
charting its spread and development into a common denominator for
hundreds of communities from the Black Sea to North Africa and from the
Near East to Italy. He explores its remarkable achievements as a
political form offering community, autonomy, prosperity, public goods,
and spaces of social justice for its members. He also reminds us that
behind the successes of civic ideology and institutions lie
entanglements with domination, empire, and enslavement. Ma’s sweeping
and multifaceted narrative draws widely on a rich store of historical
evidence while weighing in on lively scholarly debates and offering new
readings of Aristotle as the great theoretician of the polis.
A monumental work of scholarship, Polis transforms our understanding of
antiquity while challenging us to grapple with the moral legacy of an
idea whose very success centered on the inclusion of some and the
exclusion of others.
How the modern world has understood the ancient Greeks and why they
matter today
The study of ancient Greek history has been central to the western
conception of history since the Renaissance. The Muse of History traces
the shifting patterns of this preoccupation in the last three
centuries, in which each generation has reinterpreted the Greeks in the
light of their contemporary world, through times of revolution,
conflicting ideologies and warfare. It aims to offer a new history of
Greek historiography from the Enlightenment to the present, and to
acknowledge the continuing spiritual importance of the ancient Greeks
for European culture in the twentieth century under totalitarian
persecutions. Through the study of different historians, many of them
unjustly forgotten, it shows the problematic nature of the Anglo-Saxon
tradition and the importance of ideas from the continent of Europe, the
ambiguities of democracy, and the impossibility of understanding the
past or the present outside our common European heritage. It ends by
offering suggestions for the future of the study of the Greeks in the
context of world history.
Discusses reasoning and clear thinking, including such aspects as the nature of facts, language and reasoning, false analogies, and prejudice.
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