Wednesday, September 18, 2019
The Clouds by Aristophanes Essay examples -- Classical Greek Literatur
"The Clouds" by Aristophanes - Relevant in Today's World      "The Clouds" by Aristophanes, is a play centrally concerned  with education. Aristophanes employs satire to illustrate his  conservative beliefs. It is intended to show readers that in the  tendency to philosophical subtleties lies the neglection of the  real needs of the Athenians. According to Aristophanes,  philosophical speculation only acts to shake the established  foundations of accepted religion, gods, and ideals of morality.  Specifically, as it was even discused in "The Apology,"  Aristophanes believed that philosophical attitudes held by the  Sophists enabled those who held them to convince others of wrong  or weaker beliefs simply by sounding as if they knew what they  were talking about -- when in reality they didn't. It seems as  if Aristophanes would approve of an education based souly around  the reading of clasiscal literature and some physical excersize.  I believe the fact that Athenian youth were starting to ask  questions of the elders in the city really bothered  Aristophanes. I think he really thought it to be dangerous and  detrimental to society; as can be seen through the line  Strepsiades yells towards the end, "revenge for the injured gods  (II.i.1506)." I believe Aristophanes to be part of the group  that accused Socrates of not accepting the recognized gods of  state, which many believed to be a part of the corruption of  Athenian youth. While I don't agree with that accusation --  primarily because of Socrates recognition of Apollo through the  Oracle at Delphi -- I can see some Aristophanes' points of  contention with what he thought the Sophists and other  philsophers stood for.    Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  The Clouds, who form the chorus in Aristophanes' play, are a  physical representation of the "philosophical speculation" that  Aristophanes speaks of. According to Aristophanes, these  speculations do not come from a grounded sense of experience,  but rather float about without definite framework and  actualization, simply in the realm of possibility. I found it  interesting that Aristophanes chose to illustrate this metaphor  between the clouds and the Sophists' beliefs into a literal  representation. He furthered this illustration by choosing to  bring Socrates on his first appearance floating in on a basket  down to the stage.    Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Another aspect I find interesting in Aristoph...              ...    Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Essentially, I think that "The Clouds," can be a piece of  classical Greek literature applicable to our own modern world.  If we do not take the time to examine practices and beliefs,  they have the potential to lose the weight and value that they  were once based or formed on. While Aristophanes aimed at  entertaining his audience through comedic satire, he also had a  very serious warning -- that ended up holding true -- for the  people of Athens. A nation too proud and too sure in it's own  beliefs and politics, has proven through history, never to work.  Sadly, while I believe the United States is a great nation with  moral goals and hopes, I believe we exemplify some of the  problems that the Athenian state suffered from, and eventually  died from. We often times refuse to examine our beliefs. We  automatically view them as "the best," or "the most moral." This  can be seen in our current struggle. If we constantly  leave our borders to try and convince others around the world that  American knows best, we're doomed for failure. As exemplified in  "The Clouds," we then become the ones throwing stones at people  we don't agree with -- a fate almost worse than death.                         
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