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Thursday, April 17, 2008

What is the importance of the Golden Age of Greece?


What is the importance of the Golden Age of Greece?

The Golden Age of Greece was from 450 to 322 BC. During this period, there wee many outstanding thinkers, writers and theoreticians who exerted a great influence on Western history.


Among the great minds that lived during this period, three name stand out – Socrates (469 – 399 BC), his student Plato (427 – 347 BC) and Aristotle (384 – 322 BC), who in turn was taught by Plato. Socrates was a witty orator and a brilliant philosopher, and many consider him to be the father of Western philosophy.


Socrates theorized that an ideal government was made up of wise men ruling for the general welfare of the society. Plato elaborated these ideals in his book, ‘The Republic’. Aristotle studied medicine along with philosophy, and he brought a method to the study of the relation between man other aspects of the world in which he lived. Alexander the Great was taught by Aristotle. Along with other great scholars who lived during this Golden Age, these three were largely responsible for formulating the basis of modern Western culture.

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