Lucretius The Epicurean Poet

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
  • Titus Lucretius Carus, a man which carried within his work the legacy of Epicurus, one of the greatest philosophers of the Hellenistic age. Lucretius too would be considered by some to be not only the greatest philosopher, but also the greatest poet of Rome. So if you have found within Epicureanism something of value, or simply wish to learn more, then join me in discovering one of the primary reasons for its transmission from his day to our own.
    Music:
    • Spenta Mainyu - Jesse Gallagher
    Sources:
    • plato.stanford...
    • De Rerum Natura - Titus Lucretius Carus
    • The Greatest Minds and Ideas of All Time - Will Durant
    CC attribution:
    • Epicurus statue - en.wikipedia.o...
    • Professor Shotwell - en.wikipedia.o...
    • Astronomy - www.flickr.com...
    • Periodic table - en.wikipedia.o...
    • Sea life - www.flickr.com...
    • Homo Erectus - en.wikipedia.o...
    • Zeus statue - www.flickr.com...
    • De Rerum Natura - www.flickr.com...
    • Epicurus bust - en.wikipedia.o...
    • Epicurus bust 2 - en.wikiquote.o...
    • Epicurus sketch - commons.wikime...
    • Cicero Bust - flickr.com/pho...
    #Lucretius #DeRerumNatura #Epicureanism

Комментарии • 38

  • @SeekersofUnity
    @SeekersofUnity 2 года назад +14

    Beautiful presentation. Appropriate.

    • @LetsTalkPhilosophy
      @LetsTalkPhilosophy  2 года назад +2

      Thank you!

    • @hcct
      @hcct Год назад

      A Seekers of Unity episode in dialogue with Epicurean transcendental/spiritual qualities would be so cool! Karen Armstrong in the Case for God and Mary Jane Rubenstein in Pantheologies engage it a little bit, but I'd be so interested to see it discussed in the broader project of the channel.

    • @faza553
      @faza553 7 месяцев назад

      The Swerve: How the World Became Modern
      by Stephen Greenblatt
      (Superb work)

  • @blakepoetry2
    @blakepoetry2 9 месяцев назад +3

    One of the top 10 minds in human history

  • @SuzumeMizuno
    @SuzumeMizuno 2 года назад +7

    Thank you so much for your work, your narration is lovely clear and easy to follow!

    • @LetsTalkPhilosophy
      @LetsTalkPhilosophy  2 года назад

      Thank you, your words mean a lot. I think the part of creating the videos i struggle with the most is the audio. I can't tell you how many times I've had to re-record and re-upload due to audio volume or messing up the narration and pronunciation. Always a work in progress though! Cheers for the watch!

  • @greintje6941
    @greintje6941 7 месяцев назад +1

    Beautifull. Lucretius forsaw by his exceptional mind and intuition the realtity of quatum-physics. The factor of pure coincidence by the way elementairy parts are moving through space and time. He concluded on this thought there must then be a free will also. Limited by regullar physical 'laws' but decisive for change.
    This coincidental change of direction causes all changes in evolution and the Universe.
    With this thought and conclusion he ended all determenastic thoughts and dogma's on reality. Only 2000 years too soon.
    We had to wait till quantum-physics proofed he was right.
    Still he is a true materialist in his philosofy. He doesn't explain the origin of atoms or how those atoms get organized in producing organized live and consience. A live-force so clearly overcoming the general trend of decay and falling into chaos.
    But he certainly was a visionair.

  • @Jimmylad.
    @Jimmylad. 2 года назад +4

    Love ya vids

  • @ronruggieri9817
    @ronruggieri9817 Год назад +1

    Amazing this ancient Roman poet Lucretius' thoughts on THE NATURE OF THINGS so very long ago. Even today an honest thinker might despair wondering IF THAT 'S ALL THERE IS - ATOMS and the VOID ? Still it is an antidote to morbid supernatural and metaphysical fears. And a universe of natural order does suggest a SANE way for intelligent human beings to live.

  • @owlnyc666
    @owlnyc666 2 года назад +2

    If I.were not a Stoic I could be an Epicurean. Both are Philosophical Naturalist!🤔😉

    • @drycheck1493
      @drycheck1493 2 года назад +1

      be both... :)

    • @minui8758
      @minui8758 Год назад

      Read Lucretius and see what you can get from it. A combination of him and Marcus Aurelius is very possible. But more importantly the point about philosophical thinking is not to surrender oneself completely to one system of thought. Rather its about forming a personal coherent synthesis of whatever good sources you read and find convincing and the results of your own empirical experience and reasoning.
      If you want an all or nothing kind of world view Catholicism and Islam provide better models than ancient philosophy - although Christians and Muslims have tended to intelligently synthesise their revealed beliefs with philosophy in as many different creative ways as clever believers have synthesised

  • @iama2427
    @iama2427 8 дней назад

    Common era? Of what?

  • @TheUnknown-pp2fr
    @TheUnknown-pp2fr 2 года назад +2

    Super thanks, very informative and nice to watch 👍

  • @philipswain4122
    @philipswain4122 Год назад +1

    Excellent summary and very timely. I’m currently finishing Epicurus’s The Art of Happiness after which I’ll be tackling Lucretius. Then, based on Epicurus’s letter to Herodotus, I’ll re read The Histories.

    • @LetsTalkPhilosophy
      @LetsTalkPhilosophy  Год назад

      Cheers, thank you for taking the time to watch. I hope you find them fruitful!

  • @chuck8478
    @chuck8478 Год назад +1

    I stumbled on Lucretius by reading "On the Uncountable Nature of Things" by Ellen Hinsey. Thanks for the excellent vid essay - I'm more connected to the poem now

    • @LetsTalkPhilosophy
      @LetsTalkPhilosophy  Год назад

      You are most welcome, thank you for taking the time to watch!

  • @andrewf528
    @andrewf528 Год назад +1

    Epicurus was 4th century? 😅 Think you mean 4th BC lad.

    • @LetsTalkPhilosophy
      @LetsTalkPhilosophy  Год назад +2

      I think most can deduce that as the meaning, as it would make little sense for Lucretius to take influence from someone who lived long after him.

  • @doring4579
    @doring4579 4 месяца назад

    🙂🌎⏳🙏♥️

  • @kendallgraves4950
    @kendallgraves4950 2 года назад +2

    👌 ᵖʳᵒᵐᵒˢᵐ

  • @AidanDorrian-ji9cj
    @AidanDorrian-ji9cj Год назад

    Thank you, for an inspired thought

  • @hcct
    @hcct Год назад +1

    This was excellent!

  • @Sana-me4es
    @Sana-me4es 8 месяцев назад

    This was so good, thx

  • @Riri_is
    @Riri_is Год назад

    احب فلسفة...

  • @LynarMatal
    @LynarMatal 8 месяцев назад

    Thank you, this was quite useful

    • @LynarMatal
      @LynarMatal 8 месяцев назад

      Except the historian in me has to say that the inclusion of the Coloseum at the beginning of the video is a minomer as it was not to be built for over 100 years.

  • @mlfoo272
    @mlfoo272 Год назад +1

    Excellent!

  • @davidcabrita9753
    @davidcabrita9753 6 месяцев назад

    I love your reference of Spinoza as well ❤ thank you.

  • @frankiewally1891
    @frankiewally1891 4 месяца назад

    You are silly; greatest Roman poets to Virgil, Ovid. Lucretius is a good natural popularizer