Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle: The Thinkers Who Changed History — Fexingo History
In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna explore the mysterious fate of Aristotle's esoteric works — the detailed, technical treatises written for his Lyceum students, as opposed to the polished dialogues that charmed the wider Greek world. How did these dense compilations of lecture notes, research data, and philosophical argument survive the collapse of the Hellenistic kingdoms, the Roman civil wars, and the fires of Constantinople? We trace the perilous journey of Aristotle's library: from the hands of his student Theophrastus, to a hidden cellar in Skepsis to escape the Attalid kings, to the scholarly labors of Andronicus of Rhodes, who finally edited and published them in Rome around 30 BCE. We also confront the tantalizing possibility of lost works — the second book of the Poetics on comedy, the dialogues like the Protrepticus, the constitutions of 158 Greek city-states — and what their recovery might reveal. Along the way, we revisit the uneasy line between Aristotle's exoteric writings for the public and the esoteric core of the Peripatetic school. A story of preservation, destruction, and the fragility of knowledge. #Aristotle #LostWorks #Esoteric #Exoteric #Lyceum #Theophrastus #AndronicusOfRhodes #Skepsis #Neleus #Apellicon #StraitsOfMessina #Poetics #Protrepticus #ConstitutionOfTheAthenians #Peripatetic #Hellenistic #RomanRepublic #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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