I started the podcast very recently i.e. yesterday and I am working my way through from the beginning. Personally, I enjoy a number of different podcasts produced by people operating outside the normal media organisations so I am used to these podcasts' quality improving over time as the producers gain experience. Basically, I really appreciate the fact that these people are willing to share their insights and expertise with strangers.
Posts by Paquin
Listen to the latest Lucretius Today Podcast! Episode 223 is now available. In this episode, we address Cicero's accusation that Epicureans Are Undergoing the Exertions Of Life for The Equivalent Of A Drop of Honey.
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I am working my way through the 'Lucretius Today' podcasts and I have just finished no. 4. I am enjoying the discussion that goes with the text and translations. I would like to respond to an interesting point that Elayne made about
Quotehow they recognize what was done to Iphianassa was terrible
It struck me that Lucretius is not only inviting us the readers to share in the emotion of the tragic events, but also to recognise that this form of sacrifice is a defilement of Diana's altar i.e. to accept the existence of Diana as the virgin goddess and to see that this form of sacrifice would not be acceptable to her in any way.
I read that the animal sacrifices in Ancient Greece had water poured on their heads at the altar which produced a kind of bow that was interpreted as acceptance by the animal of its participation in the ritual. This makes Iphianassa's distress and trembling terror all the more disturbing. Also Diana the huntress was the only god where it was acceptable to sacrifice wild animals at her altar.
It seems to me that this is not an atheist position, it is not a position that rejects the gods as delined in Ancient Greek/Roman society, indeed both Venus and Diana have been referenced in the poem in ways that suggest that we all take their existence as given, but it is a position which rejects the human interpretation of the gods' behaviour and rejects the manipulation of human desire through justifications that rely on appeasing the divine.
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Thank you for the welcome. I have arrived here after listening to a couple of your podcast episodes which I appreciated - I liked the group dynamic and also found them an enjoyable way to read On the Nature of Things, which is a book that I have been trying to read for a while. I have been interested in Epicurean philosophy since I studied a short course on Hellenistic philosophy, but admit to having had the flighty approach of the dillitante. However, I now wish to seriously look at Epicurean philosophy with a view to applying it in my own life.