Importance of the Pre-Socratics

Isocrates, a prominent Sophist philosopher.

From their government to their beliefs on creation, the Greek’s influence in Western Civilization cannot be understated. Sometimes earlier Greek philosophers are overshadowed by Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle. However, that doesn’t negate their prominence in Greek culture and Western Civilization as a whole. 

The Greeks loved two things: reason and asking questions. Greek philosophers often pondered and discussed the meaning of life and existence. This is reflected in their institutions: religion, literature, government, and the Olympics. These institutions were often intertwined with each other. For example, the Olympics were not just a show of one’s strength and athletic ability, but it was also a religious event, including sacrifices to Zeus and other gods. The Olympics also represented the Greeks’ rugged individualism. All of the games were one-man competitions, with no team events. This individualism is too shown in their government. Being one of the first ever democracies, the city-state of Athens created the basis for a type of government that is still used in many nations today. 

When one thinks of ancient Greek philosophers, people imagine men like Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle, although there were philosophers that predated these men and are just as important. These pre-Socratic thinkers mostly discussed matters of the foundation and cause of life. 

Thales of Miletus was of the belief that water was the cause of all things and that the Earth is a discus floating on water. Even though this sounds ridiculous, he was able to correctly predict eclipses and explain them factually. Later a man named Anaximander challenged Thales’ views. He taught that no physical thing could be the source for everything because that would mean that thing would have to be the source of its opposite. For example, water would have to be the source for fire, which he thought to be impossible. Anaximander believed the cause of everything was something he called the “unbounded” or the “limitless.” The Sophists came along later, teaching that all laws are mere convention, agreed upon arbitrarily. In saying this, they had effectively rejected the idea of morality and embraced the idea of subjective truth. Subscribing heavily to inherited morality, the Sophists would later be vehemently opposed by Socrates. 

Not all the pre-Socratic philosophers’ teachings were correct. However, it’s still vital to study and understand what they taught. Socrates and Plato would later oppose many of these early philosophers, so you must listen to the arguments for and against their beliefs. These teachers also influenced stances of religion, government, and sports, the impact of which can still be felt to this day.

Greek Art and Religion

The Playwright Aeschylus.

The first festivals were in Athens in the 5th century BC. They were held in the honor of the gods, and had competitions and dramatic plays. Dramatic plays were the most popular events at these festivals, and were composed of a chorus of twelve men and another actor (the main character) who was separated from the rest of the actors. Most of the Greek tragedies and dramas have been lost, and what we still have comes from only three playwrights. 

Aeschylus (525-456 BC) was one of the three main Greek playwrights. Of his over 80 plays, we only have six of them left today. Most of his plays had religious aspects and in his plays the gods often tempted people into doing wrong things. In his play about the Persian Wars, King Xerxes of Persia was tempted into invading Greece by Zeus. Oresteia was a series of three plays focusing on the character Orestes written by Aeschylus. 

The playwright Sophocles wrote the play Oedipus Rex in which oracles can tell the fate of someone. The Oracles said that the main character Oedipus would eventually kill his father and marry his mother, so when his parents heard this at his birth they threw him out. He lived with a Corinthian family, and on his way to Thebes, had an altercation with a man who happened to be his father, and he killed him. When he made it to Thebes, he married the queen of Thebes who happened to be his mother. 

Euripides.

Euripides was an anti-religious playwright and loathed the conservative politicians of Athens. Many of his plays were attacking Greek culture and traditions. On the other hand, Aristophanes was a conservative playwright who loved tradition and hated Euripides and the philosopher Socrates. Aristophanes even made a play making fun of Euripides called The Frogs. In the play Euripides and another playwright are weighed on a scale that measures virtue, and Euripides has ten times less virtue than his opponent. 

The Classical Period of Greek art was the period where many great temples and statues were built in Greece, like the Acropolis, the Parthenon, both dedicated to the goddesses Athena. There was also a giant marble statue of Athena, but it is mostly gone now. Many bronze sculptures were made in the 400s as well. The great sculptures Pheidias and Polykleitos made many of the great statues, like the giant statue of Zeus and the boy holding a spear. 

Modern-Day Ruins of the Parthenon.

The Greeks were much more religious than the other pagan nations at their time. They observed strict burial rites for their dead and every Greek home had an altar. The dead relatives must be provided offerings from their family. The domestic religion of the relatives existed alongside the religion of the Mount Olympus gods. The gods on Mount Olympus were all related to each other, and were often hostile to humans and sacrifices would nourish them. Most Greeks just prayed and sacrificed to their own gods in order to get a reward, and did not think of them as all-powerful. 

Themes of Proverbs and Biblical Literature

God’s Sanctions Can Come As a Punishment.

Starting in Proverbs chapter 8, King Solomon, the author of Proverbs, emphasizes wisdom regularly. Known as “Solomon the Wise,” he says that wisdom is the basis of civil rulership and everybody who hates wisdom loves death. 

Similar to earlier chapters in Proverbs, chapter 10 focuses more on God’s sanctions. The text states that God’s rewards and punishments will be predictable, but if you do not follow God’s rules, you will lose your inheritance, while the righteous will still gain their inheritance. 

Between Proverbs chapter 10 and 31, the verses about sanctions and wisdom are again reinforced in chapter 30 with King Solomon talking about how God’s word will always be pure, but He will give you negative sanctions in life if you disobey Him. The next chapter instructs Kings to avoid alcohol and only marry virtuous women. 

The two main themes of Proverbs are wisdom and sanctions. Virtuous men love wisdom and will strife to attain it, but some hate wisdom and will see the wrath of God. If you keep God’s commandments and do the right thing in all situations, then you will get a seat in heaven next to the Lord. Another theme stated multiple times is the importance of working for God, with Solomon explaining that you need to labor like an ant and do good works to please God. 

Inheritance of God’s kingdom will be taken away from those who disobey his word and  break away from God. Much of biblical literature is a warning of what will happen if you do not follow God, and a reward for what will happen if you obey God’s judgment.