Editorial Random House
Fecha de edición septiembre 2011
Idioma inglés
EAN 9780099554059
288 páginas
Libro
We think the way we do because Socrates thought the way he did. His aphorism 'The unexamined life is not worth living' may have originated twenty-five centuries ago, but it is a founding principle of modern life. Socrates lived and contributed to a city that nurtured key ingredients of contemporary civilisation - democracy, liberty, science, drama, rational thought - yet, as he wrote nothing in his lifetime, he himself is an enigmatic figure. The Hemlock Cup gives Socrates the biography he deserves, setting him in the context of the Eastern Mediterranean that was his home, and dealing with him as he himself dealt with the world. Socrates was a soldier, a lover, a man of the people. He philosophised neither in grand educational establishments nor the courts of kings but in the squares and public arenas of Golden Age Athens. He lived through an age of extraordinary materialism, in which a democratic culture turned to the glorification of its own city; when war was declared under the banner of democracy; and, when tolerance turned into intimidation on streets once populated by the likes of Euripides, Sophocles and Pericles. For seventy years he was a vigorous citizen of one of the greatest capitals on earth, but then his beloved Athens turned on him, condemning him to death by poison. Socrates' pursuit of personal liberty is a vibrant story that Athens did not want us to hear, but which must be told. Bettany Hughes has painstakingly pieced together Socrates' life, following in his footsteps across Greece and Asia Minor, and examining the new archaeological discoveries that shed light on his world. In The Hemlock Cup , she reveals the human heart of the man, and relates a story that is as relevant now as it has ever been.
p b Bettany Hughes /b es una historiadora galardonada, reconocida por su labor en la difusión de la historia antigua y medieval durante más de veinticinco años. Académica de Oxford, ha enseñado en Oxford, Cambridge y otras universidades internacionales, además de ser profesora de Historia en el New College of the Humanities. Es autora de i best sellers /i como Estambul: i La ciudad de los tres nombres. /i Ha presentado más de cincuenta documentales para cadenas como BBC y Netflix, vistos por más de 250 millones de personas. Hughes ha recibido numerosos premios y condecoraciones: es dama de la Orden del Imperio británico y Cruz Dorada de la Orden de la Beneficencia de la República Helénica, por su contribución a la cultura y la historia.<br>
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