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Aspects of Antiquity: Discoveries and Controversies

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Book Overview

Book by Finley, M. I. This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Trojan War

I was fascinayed by this book from page 1. It contains a well composed selection of subjects that should be of interest to every student of Antiquity. Even though not necessarily on the cutting edge of latest research, I found it deep enough to make it worth reading, in particular for amateur enthusiasts like me for whom the overview is more important than the precise scientific detail. Highly recommended reading. Jurgen Buschek

Finley's Imaginative Aspects, disciplined by Antiquity scholarship

"There is an eminent authority for the view that questions about the past can be answered, at least approximately, through the imagination, provided it is disciplined by an underpinning of sound scholarship." M. I. Finley, Introduction Antiquity: Antiquity is a broad term for an extended period of cultural history of the Mediterranean , which begins with various periods of ancient history, of Ancient Egypt, Mesopotamia, Greece and other early civilizations of the ancient world. It continues through the rise of Christianity and ends with the fall of Rome, in 453. CE, after which it is called Late Antiquity, followed by Middle ages. The term classical antiquity (the usual adjective is not "antique" but "ancient") is applied generally to the period in which ancient Greece and Rome achieved what are considered their greatest literary works, beginning with Homer. Ancient economic life: "..., the application of economic theory to the ancient economy was at best a futile exercise and at worst a source of grave misunderstandings. By 'ancient economy' Finley had in mind only the economy of classical civilization, i.e. of the Graeco-Roman area beginning roughly in the earlier first millennium BC." However, cautions Morris Silver, Professor Emeritus of Economics, City College UNY, in his review of 'The Ancient Economy,' that " Finley's perspective found completion and generalization in the works of the economic historian Karl Polanyi (1981). Polanyi argued forcefully that the ancient Near East did not know markets and, like Finley, was implacably opposed to the application of economic theory to ancient economic life." The Aspects of Antiquity: In this classical collection of essays on 'Discoveries and Controversies' in antiquity, the eminent historian of the ancient world's society, spans twenty centuries of ancient Mediterranean civilizations, argues retroactively on historical events, and socioeconomic life. He had a vivid archeological reconstruction imagination that dominated his continued dialogue relating past to present modernity. He communicates his reflection on recent events including Vatican II, feminist issues, and invites Renan, Reimarus, and Strauss to discuss the influence of Mystery religions on Christianity. But he tactfully starts with a blunter question, Who plagiarized from whom? quoting an ancient anon. writer, " ... that Orpheus, Homer and Solon were in Egypt, that they took advantage of the historical work of Moses, ..." p. 167. In this he anticipated the recent work of the great archeologist Jan Assmann in 'Moses, the Egyptian.' M. I. Finley: Sir Moses I. Finley (1912-1986) was an American scholar in English classics. The life of Finley is even as seductively fascinating as his books. He was educated at Syracuse and Columbia Universities. Most of his work was in the area of ancient world's society and economy. He taught at Columbia University and City College of New York. Finley was fired from his teaching job at Rutgers Uni

Outdated?

Any history book is subject to potential revision by data discovered subsequent to its publication. Finley's is no exception, but there are no "obvious...good reasons not to read a book whose scholarship is thirty-five old (26, where it was revised in 1977)" unless errors in scholarship are specified. Any number of seminal and valuable works are based on what is now "dated" scholarship. Finley's characteristic approach is that of a skeptic unwilling to speculate without sufficient factual data, which is precisely why his many books remain valuable long after original publication

Outstanding Critical Thinking

Here in a series of essays are some of the more important questions surrounding ancient societies. From the study of the Ancient Minoans, Crete, Troy, the Cynics, and the decline of the Roman Empire, they are arranged rather chronologically and are a good example of how the western intellectual mind functions outside the American model, where it is assumed that scholars have to have an ideological axe to grind in order to get things published (a la Victor Davis Hansen). Here is the sobering thought that there is not shred of credible evidence that Troy actually ever existed. That a whole world view of the Greeks has been set up on an edifice of Homer. The how and the why are not answered, but it is an interesting observation to assert such a thing and then to back it up with historical fact... even and analysis of the various ruins found in the area of Troy. There is also the legacy of Diogenes and the Cynics... a proud legacy based upon inquiry and challenging established authority. In one of the most cogent essays on the fall of Rome is a assertion that Rome, built for war, just could not maintain its edge on a sustained basis. Eventually barbarians were enrolled in her armed forces, the tax base was eroded and people, loathe to pay taxes for good govt., eventually found themselves with a policy that ensured neither security nor a bulkwark against dark ages thinking... a potent reflection on modern times. If someone is looking for truth in every statement about things we really know little about, then there is always Victor Davis Hansen. If one wants to know how to think roundly about complex issues, where vital, defining information is lacking, then this slender volume has a lot of food for thought. I have read some of essays three times.
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