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| Management number | 220809455 | Release Date | 2026/05/03 | List Price | $13.61 | Model Number | 220809455 | ||
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Why These Books?The works selected for this series are not arbitrary. Each was chosen because it illuminates one of the permanent questions of human life, and because together they trace the development of key ideas that still structure our world.Plato’s Apology and Crito ask whether we should obey unjust laws, and what sort of life is worth dying for. The Republic examines justice in the soul and the city, testing the relation between personal virtue and political order. Sophocles’ Oedipus the King and Antigone confront fate, responsibility, and the collision between divine law and human law. Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics investigates happiness and virtue; the Politics examines the nature of the state and citizenship; the Metaphysics asks whether there is such a thing as objective reality and non-contradiction.The Athenian Constitution turns from theory to institutional detail, showing how law and civic structure embody moral beliefs. Aeschylus’ Prometheus Bound and the Oresteia dramatise rebellion, tyranny, revenge, and the birth of legal justice from blood-feud. Lucretius’ On the Nature of Things presents a materialist, atomistic worldview that dispenses with divine providence and asks whether such a universe can sustain meaning.Plutarch’s Lives explore character, leadership, ambition, and corruption through biography. The Book of Job faces the problem of undeserved suffering under a just God. Later volumes will turn to Augustine, Aquinas, Machiavelli, Bacon, Montaigne, and others, tracing the emergence of Christian theology, natural law, modern statecraft, empirical science, and sceptical introspection.The point is not to agree with all these authors. It is to let them interrogate us. Each text is an instrument for self-examination.The Demands of the SeriesThis programme is intentionally demanding. It does not flatter the reader with promises of instant insight. It assumes that to be free, one must be educated for freedom; that to think for oneself, one must first learn from those who thought better than oneself.The course requires reading primary texts in full, not in excerpts. It requires taking notes, re-reading, arguing in the margins, and perhaps discussing with others. It requires the intellectual honesty to recognise when an argument is stronger than one’s prejudices, and the courage to reject an argument when it is wrong, even if fashionable opinion applauds it.The reward is not a certificate or a credential. It is the slow acquisition of a mind that cannot be easily bullied, seduced, or manipulated. It is the ability to hear a political speech and identify the hidden premises; to read a news article and sense what facts are omitted; to spot the difference between a genuine argument and a mere slogan. It is the recovery of self-respect as a thinking being. Read more
| XRay | Not Enabled |
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| Edition | 1st |
| Language | English |
| File size | 1.9 MB |
| Page Flip | Enabled |
| Publisher | HWPE |
| Word Wise | Enabled |
| Book 1 of 1 | A Curriculum in the Foundations of Western Thought |
| Print length | 374 pages |
| Accessibility | Learn more |
| Screen Reader | Supported |
| Publication date | January 31, 2026 |
| Enhanced typesetting | Enabled |
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