The Classical Wisdom Tradition – Telegram
The Classical Wisdom Tradition
2.39K subscribers
133 photos
4 videos
14 files
48 links
Exploring the spirituality inherited by Europe from Greece and Rome.
Download Telegram
The Classical Wisdom Tradition
I am curious to know where my fellow Classicists come from.
This poll has confirmed my impression that the American South punches above its weight in this community! Much love to all and thanks for satisfying my curiosity. Back to our regularly scheduled programming...

- CWT Admin
14👍4😁4
A subtle but basic shift in perspective is necessary for European peoples to most effectively advance our spirituality: we must see that our classical inheritance is spiritual in nature and is the Western analog of the Vedic tradition.

The average person no longer perceives e.g. Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, the Stoics, and the great Poets as figures of spiritual wisdom, but they do so perceive Jesus, Buddha, Confucius, Lao Tze, and others. The first group is thought to inhabit a tedious academic realm of no real importance. Westerners -- tragically -- do not even understand that their deepest well of spiritual wisdom is spiritual.

How many people know, for example, that Platonism is a polytheistic spiritual path involving the purification of the soul over a series of reincarnations, ending in apotheosis? Nobody leaves a college philosophy course with that understanding, but it is the vision which animates the whole Platonic project. How many people know that there's an ancient tradition of reading Homer, not as a mere story teller, but as a divinely inspired sage?

But this situation we find ourselves in is not only a spiritual matter. We're losing more than a wisdom tradition. To know ourselves, says the Platonic tradition, is to know our causes; to look deep inside ourselves is to, eventually, find something higher than ourselves, that which we descend from, and this inner vision refreshes and energizes us - it gives us form. I believe the same idea applies at the level of civilization. A civilization that no longer remembers its causes, its traditions, is a civilization in disintegration. We are losing our identity because we are disconnected from the past.

Our people will likely continue to turn to Buddha or Jesus or (worst of all) atheism until this change of perspective occurs.

- CWT admin
21👍6🔥5💯1
😁16🤓12👍4🔥4👎2
"At the twilight of antiquity there were still wholly unchristian figures, which were more beautiful, harmonious, and pure than those of any Christians: e.g., Proclus. ... In comparison with them Christianity looks like some crude brutalisation, organised for the benefit of the mob and the criminal classes."

Friedrich Nietzsche, We Philologists 249
👍21🔥9💯2🤓21
"Nevertheless I long - I pine, all my days -
to travel home and see the dawn of my return.
And if a god will wreck me yet again on the wine-dark sea,
I can bear that too, with a spirit tempered to endure.
Much have I suffered, labored long and hard by now
In the waves and wars. Add this to the total -
Bring the trial on!"

Odyssey, 5.221-27
🔥35
"For Fate alone with vision unconfin'd
Surveys the conduct of the mortal kind.
Fate is Jove's perfect and eternal eye,
For Jove and Fate our ev'ry deed descry."

The Orphic Hymns 59 "To the Fates"
🔥198
"Unrighteousness in men causes surprise, because people expect man to be the really valuable part in the All, because there is nothing wiser. But the fact is that man has the middle place between gods and beasts, and inclines now one way, now the other, and some men become like gods and others like beasts, and some, the majority, are in between. Those, then, who are corrupted, so that they come near to irrational animals and wild beasts, pull down those in the middle and do them violence; these are certainly better than those who assault them, but all the same they are mastered by the worse men, in so far as they are worse themselves too, and are not really good, and have not prepared themselves not to suffer wrongs. If some boys, who have kept their bodies in good training, but are inferior in soul to their bodily condition because of lack of education, win a wrestle with others who are trained neither in body or soul and grab their food and their dainty clothes, would the affair be anything but a joke? Or would it not be right for even the lawgiver to allow them to suffer this as a penalty for their laziness and luxury, these boys, who, though they were assigned training-grounds, because of laziness and soft and slack living allowed themselves to become fattened lambs, the prey of wolves? ... The law says that those who fight bravely, not those who pray, are to come safe out of wars; for, in just the same way, it is not those who pray but those who look after their land who are to get a good harvest, and those who do not look after their health are not to be healthy; and we are not to be vexed if the bad get larger harvests, or if their farming generally goes better. ... But the wicked rule by the cowardice of the ruled; for this is just, and the opposite is not."

Plotinus, Enneads 3.2.8
15🔥7👍1
"There was a boy tending the sheep who would continually go up to the embankment and shout, 'Help, there's a wolf!' The farmers would all come running only to find out that what the boy said was not true. Then one day there really was a wolf, but when the boy shouted they didn't believe him and no one came to his aid. The whole flock was eaten by the wolf."

Aesop, The Boy Who Cried Wolf
🔥11
Wise men in the pagan movement point out that Socrates (and Plato, by extension) was discredited by his conviction in the Athenian court. Truly, a brilliant insight -- nothing in the news right this moment, for example, would ever lead me to question the legitimacy of state courts.

- CWT Admin
😁22💯7👎42👍1🤓1
According to Aristotle, a quarter of the state's land should be dedicated to religious use:

"The expense of religious worship should likewise be a public charge. The land must therefore be divided into two parts, one public and the other private, and each part should be subdivided, part of the public land being appropriated to the service of the Gods ..."

Aristotle, Politics 1330a
35
"Someone would be better advised to say: 'let us flee to our beloved fatherland' (Iliad 2.140). But what is this flight, and how is it accomplished? Let us set sail in the way Homer, in an allegorical way, I think, tells us that Odysseus fled from the sorceress Circe or from Calypso. Odysseus was not satisfied to remain there, even though he had visual pleasures and passed his time with sensual beauty. Our fatherland, from where we have actually come, and our father are both in the intelligible world."

Plotinus, Enneads 1.6.8
20🔥7
"Pythagoras said that man was a microcosm, which means a compendium of the universe; not because, like other animals, even the least, he is constituted by the four elements, but because he contains all the powers of the cosmos. For the universe contains Gods, the four elements, animals and plants. All of these powers are contained in man. He has reason, which is a divine power; he has the nature of the elements, and the powers of moving, growing, and reproduction."

Anonymous Life of Pythagoras
15
21🔥6👍4
"One after another the roots prevail as the cycle goes around,
Fading into one another and increasing as their appointed turn arrives.
For they are just themselves, and by running through one another
They become men and all the other kinds of creatures,
Now being brought together by love into a single orderly arrangement,
Now being borne asunder by the hostility of strife,
Until they grow together as one and the totality is overcome.
Thus, in that they have learnt to become one from many
And turn into many again when the one is divided,
In this sense they come to be and have an impermanent life;
But in that they never cease from alternation,
They are for ever unchanging in a cycle."

Empedocles, fragment DK 31B26
7🔥3👍1
“To live, indeed, is not in our power, but to live rightly is.” Quintus Sextius

Seneca writes of Sextius:

“All our senses ought to be trained to endurance. They are naturally long-suffering, if only the mind desists from weakening them. This should be summoned to give an account of itself every day. Sextius had this habit, and when the day was over and he had retired to his nightly rest, he would put these questions to his soul: ‘What bad habits have you cured today? What fault have you resisted? In what respect are you better?’ ... When the light has been removed from sight, and my wife, long aware of my habit, has become silent, I scan the whole of my day and retrace all my deeds and words. I conceal nothing from myself, I omit nothing.” Seneca, De Ira, III.XXXVI

Here we have another example of the practice of nightly self-examination.
12🔥7😁3👍1
The Classical Wisdom Tradition
“To live, indeed, is not in our power, but to live rightly is.” Quintus Sextius Seneca writes of Sextius: “All our senses ought to be trained to endurance. They are naturally long-suffering, if only the mind desists from weakening them. This should be summoned…
Daily self-examination is a core practice of our wisdom tradition, and I highly recommend incorporating it into your practice. It can be (but doesn't have to be) combined with journaling.

- CWT Admin
13😁3💯3🔥2
"The Pythagoreans also insisted upon a very great exercise of the memory, setting up the following way of giving it practice. They would not arise from their beds until they had frankly disclosed to one another everything they had done the day before, beginning with early dawn and closing with the evening. ... This practice they followed to gain knowledge and judgement in all matters and experience in the ability to call many things to mind."

Diodorus Siculus, Historical Library 10.5.1
13🆒4🔥2👍1
"Shrill muse, sing of Hephaestus, great inventor.
He and gray-eyed Athena taught all bright works
To mortals on the earth, who made their poor homes,
Like animals, in caverns in the mountains.
But now Hephaestus, glorious in his knowledge,
Has made them skilled. They spend the seasons' circle
In peace and comfort now, in their own houses.
Hephaestus, lend your grace: teach and reward me."

Homeric Hymns 20 "To Hephaestus"
17🔥10👍1
"Every pleasure or pain provides, as it were, another nail to rivet the soul to the body and to weld them together. It makes the soul corporeal, so that it believes that truth is what the body says it is. As it shares the beliefs and delights of the body, I think it inevitably comes to share its ways and manner of life and is unable ever to reach Hades in a pure state; it is always full of body when it departs, so that it soon falls back into another body and grows with it as if it had been sewn into it."

Plato, Phaedo 83d
👍21🔥2
"Truly, above all I disclosed the stern inevitability of ancient Chaos, and Time, who in his boundless coils, produced Aether, and the twofold, beautiful, and noble Eros, whom the younger men call Phanes, celebrated parent of eternal Night, because he himself first manifested."

From the theogony of the Orphic Argonautica
12🔥5