"He is a wise man, and beloved by divinity, who studies how to labor for the good of his soul as much as others labor for the sake of the body."
The Pythagorean Sentences of Demophilus 40
The Pythagorean Sentences of Demophilus 40
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"There is in fact one way to preserve [proportion], and that is not to exercise the soul without exercising the body, nor the body without the soul, so that each may be balanced by the other and so be sound."
Plato, Timaeus 87d-88b
Plato, Timaeus 87d-88b
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Classical spirituality as a practice has a sequential structure, meaning that you must complete the first part before moving on to the second, and so on. It is essential that we go in the proper order without skipping any steps.
The first part is moral education, which is the process of acquiring the cardinal virtues of wisdom, courage, temperance, and justice. It is critically important and should not be rushed.
Most of us will spend most of our lives practicing the first two steps (i.e., purification of the irrational soul), and that's OK.
The collection of texts in Protreptikos, including The Handbook and Works and Days among others, is ideal for moral education.
The first part is moral education, which is the process of acquiring the cardinal virtues of wisdom, courage, temperance, and justice. It is critically important and should not be rushed.
Most of us will spend most of our lives practicing the first two steps (i.e., purification of the irrational soul), and that's OK.
The collection of texts in Protreptikos, including The Handbook and Works and Days among others, is ideal for moral education.
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"It is requisite that those who are willing to hear concerning the gods should have been well informed from their childhood, and not nourished with foolish opinions. It is likewise necessary that they should be naturally prudent and good, that they may receive, and properly understand, the discourses which they hear. The knowledge likewise of common conceptions is necessary; but common conceptions are such things as all men, when interrogated, acknowledge to be indubitably certain; such as, that every god is good, without passivity, and free from all mutations ..."
Sallust, On the Gods and the World Chapter 1
Sallust, On the Gods and the World Chapter 1
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"Do not demand that events should happen as you wish; but wish them to happen as they do happen, and you will do well."
Epictetus, The Handbook 8
Epictetus, The Handbook 8
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"It is necessary that he who hastens to reach virtue as if it were his homeland should pass by pleasures, as he would the Sirens."
The Similitudes of Demophilus 23
The Similitudes of Demophilus 23
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"Do not neglect the health of your body;
but give it drink, food, and exercise in due measure."
The Golden Verses of the Pythagoreans 32-33
but give it drink, food, and exercise in due measure."
The Golden Verses of the Pythagoreans 32-33
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Forwarded from The Classical Wisdom Tradition
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
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
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"Do not let a woman with a fancy rear coax and cozen and deceive you: she is after your barn."
Hesiod, Works and Days 373-374
Hesiod, Works and Days 373-374
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"As we live through the soul, it must be said that by the virtue of this we live well; just as, since we see through the eyes, it is by the virtue of these that we see well."
Iamblichus, Exhortation to Philosophy Chapter 2 gnômê 1
Iamblichus, Exhortation to Philosophy Chapter 2 gnômê 1
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"O Lord, son of Leto, offspring of Zeus, neither in the beginning will I forget you nor at the end, but I will sing of you always, both first and last and in between; and you, give ear to me and grant me success."
Theognis, Elegies 1-4
Theognis, Elegies 1-4
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The Classical Wisdom Tradition
The Flower of the Mind, Volume One - Protreptikos.pdf
A few announcements:
1. I have corrected a handful of typos, formatting errors, etc. since the release a couple weeks ago. If you download the PDF again, you should get the updated version. At this point, I think it's pretty stable.
2. A hard copy will be available for purchase, but it is a work in progress and I don't have a release date yet. It will be a paperback. A hardcover edition may follow later. The book will be smallish, intended for practical use and convenient for carrying around.
3. The hard copy will be in essence the same as the PDF but with the following differences: a general index at the end of the book; a profile of the god Dionysus; possibly, additional Pythagorean texts; any further corrections or clarifications needed in the introduction.
4. As you probably noticed, the channel is active again, for now. I will mostly emphasize moral education.
1. I have corrected a handful of typos, formatting errors, etc. since the release a couple weeks ago. If you download the PDF again, you should get the updated version. At this point, I think it's pretty stable.
2. A hard copy will be available for purchase, but it is a work in progress and I don't have a release date yet. It will be a paperback. A hardcover edition may follow later. The book will be smallish, intended for practical use and convenient for carrying around.
3. The hard copy will be in essence the same as the PDF but with the following differences: a general index at the end of the book; a profile of the god Dionysus; possibly, additional Pythagorean texts; any further corrections or clarifications needed in the introduction.
4. As you probably noticed, the channel is active again, for now. I will mostly emphasize moral education.
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"The sacrifices of fools are food for the fire, and the offerings which they bring supply the temple robbers."
The Pythagorean Sentences of Demophilus 22
The Pythagorean Sentences of Demophilus 22
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"Reason, like a good potter, introduces a beautiful form to the soul."
The Similitudes of Demophilus 5
The Similitudes of Demophilus 5
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"Remember that you are an actor in a drama of such sort as the author chooses. If short, then in a short one. If long, then in a long one. If it be his pleasure that you should enact a poor man, see that you act it well; or a cripple, or a ruler, or a private citizen. For this is your business, to act well the given part; but to choose it belongs to another."
Epictetus, The Handbook 17
Epictetus, The Handbook 17
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"And do those things which will not harm you, and reflect before your deed."
The Golden Verses of the Pythagoreans 39
The Golden Verses of the Pythagoreans 39
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"Do not ever dare to taunt a man for deadly poverty, which eats out the heart; it is sent by the deathless gods. The best treasure a man can have is a sparing tongue, and the greatest gift, one that moves in measure; for if you speak evil, you yourself will soon be worse spoken of."
Hesiod, Works and Days 717-721
Hesiod, Works and Days 717-721
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"We worship God rightly if we render our intellect pure from all vice, as from some stain."
Iamblichus, Exhortation to Philosophy Chapter 2 gnômê 11
Iamblichus, Exhortation to Philosophy Chapter 2 gnômê 11
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"Excess destroys many a fool, because it is hard to know the due measure when good things are at hand."
Theognis, Elegies 693-694
Theognis, Elegies 693-694
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"Since the roots of our natures are established in God, we should tenaciously cling to our root; for streams of water, and other offspring of the earth, when their roots are cut off, also become rotten and dry."
The Pythagorean Sentences of Demophilus 38
The Pythagorean Sentences of Demophilus 38
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"Duties are measured on the whole by social relations. Is a certain man your father? In this are implied taking care of him; submitting to him in all things; patiently receiving his reproaches, his correction. 'But he is a bad father.' Is your natural tie, then, to a good father? No, but to a father. Is a brother unjust? Well, preserve your own just relation towards him. Do not consider what he does, but what you are to do, to keep your own will in a state conformable to nature. For another cannot hurt you unless you choose it. You will then be hurt when you consent to be hurt. In this manner, therefore, if you accustom yourself to contemplate the relations of neighbor, citizen, commander, you can deduce from each the corresponding duties."
Epictetus, The Handbook 30
Epictetus, The Handbook 30
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