1. New
  2. Home
    1. Get Started - Activities
    2. Posting Policies
    3. Community Standards
    4. Terms of Use
    5. Moderator Team
    6. Member Announcements
    7. Site Map
    8. Quizzes
    9. Articles
      1. Featured Articles
    10. All Blog Posts
      1. Elli's Blog / Articles
  3. Wiki
    1. Wiki Home
    2. FAQ
    3. Classical Epicureanism
    4. Physics
    5. Canonics
    6. Ethics
    7. Search Assistance
    8. Not NeoEpicurean
    9. Foundations
    10. Navigation Outlines
    11. Key Pages
  4. Forum
    1. New Activity
    2. New Threads
    3. Welcome
    4. General Discussion
    5. Featured
    6. Activism
    7. Shortcuts
    8. Dashboard
    9. Full Forum List
    10. Level 3+
    11. Most Discussed
  5. Podcast
    1. Lucretius Today Podcast
    2. Episode Guide
    3. Lucretius Today At Youtube
    4. EpicureanFriends Youtube Page
  6. Texts
    1. Overview
    2. Diogenes Laertius
    3. Principal Doctrines
    4. Vatican Sayings
    5. Lucretius
    6. Herodotus
    7. Pythocles
    8. Menoeceus
    9. Fragments - Usener Collection
    10. Torquatus On Ethics
    11. Velleius On Gods
    12. Greek/Latin Help
  7. Gallery
    1. Featured images
    2. Albums
    3. Latest Images
    4. Latest Comments
  8. Calendar
    1. Upcoming Events List
    2. Zoom Meetings
    3. This Month
    4. Sunday Zoom Meetings
    5. First Monday Zoom Meetings
    6. Wednesday Zoom Meeting
    7. Twentieth Zoom Meetings
    8. Zoom Meetings
  9. Other
    1. Featured Content
    2. Blog Posts
    3. Files
    4. Logbook
    5. EF ToDo List
    6. Link-Database
  • Login
  • Register
  • Search
This Thread
  • Everywhere
  • This Thread
  • This Forum
  • Forum
  • Articles
  • Blog Articles
  • Files
  • Gallery
  • Events
  • Pages
  • Wiki
  • Help
  • FAQ
  • More Options

Welcome To EpicureanFriends.com!

"Remember that you are mortal, and you have a limited time to live, and in devoting yourself to discussion of the nature of time and eternity you have seen things that have been, are now, and are to come."

Sign In Now
or
Register a new account
  1. New
  2. Home
    1. Get Started - Activities
    2. Posting Policies
    3. Community Standards
    4. Terms of Use
    5. Moderator Team
    6. Member Announcements
    7. Site Map
    8. Quizzes
    9. Articles
      1. Featured Articles
    10. All Blog Posts
      1. Elli's Blog / Articles
  3. Wiki
    1. Wiki Home
    2. FAQ
    3. Classical Epicureanism
    4. Physics
    5. Canonics
    6. Ethics
    7. Search Assistance
    8. Not NeoEpicurean
    9. Foundations
    10. Navigation Outlines
    11. Key Pages
  4. Forum
    1. New Activity
    2. New Threads
    3. Welcome
    4. General Discussion
    5. Featured
    6. Activism
    7. Shortcuts
    8. Dashboard
    9. Full Forum List
    10. Level 3+
    11. Most Discussed
  5. Podcast
    1. Lucretius Today Podcast
    2. Episode Guide
    3. Lucretius Today At Youtube
    4. EpicureanFriends Youtube Page
  6. Texts
    1. Overview
    2. Diogenes Laertius
    3. Principal Doctrines
    4. Vatican Sayings
    5. Lucretius
    6. Herodotus
    7. Pythocles
    8. Menoeceus
    9. Fragments - Usener Collection
    10. Torquatus On Ethics
    11. Velleius On Gods
    12. Greek/Latin Help
  7. Gallery
    1. Featured images
    2. Albums
    3. Latest Images
    4. Latest Comments
  8. Calendar
    1. Upcoming Events List
    2. Zoom Meetings
    3. This Month
    4. Sunday Zoom Meetings
    5. First Monday Zoom Meetings
    6. Wednesday Zoom Meeting
    7. Twentieth Zoom Meetings
    8. Zoom Meetings
  9. Other
    1. Featured Content
    2. Blog Posts
    3. Files
    4. Logbook
    5. EF ToDo List
    6. Link-Database
  1. New
  2. Home
    1. Get Started - Activities
    2. Posting Policies
    3. Community Standards
    4. Terms of Use
    5. Moderator Team
    6. Member Announcements
    7. Site Map
    8. Quizzes
    9. Articles
      1. Featured Articles
    10. All Blog Posts
      1. Elli's Blog / Articles
  3. Wiki
    1. Wiki Home
    2. FAQ
    3. Classical Epicureanism
    4. Physics
    5. Canonics
    6. Ethics
    7. Search Assistance
    8. Not NeoEpicurean
    9. Foundations
    10. Navigation Outlines
    11. Key Pages
  4. Forum
    1. New Activity
    2. New Threads
    3. Welcome
    4. General Discussion
    5. Featured
    6. Activism
    7. Shortcuts
    8. Dashboard
    9. Full Forum List
    10. Level 3+
    11. Most Discussed
  5. Podcast
    1. Lucretius Today Podcast
    2. Episode Guide
    3. Lucretius Today At Youtube
    4. EpicureanFriends Youtube Page
  6. Texts
    1. Overview
    2. Diogenes Laertius
    3. Principal Doctrines
    4. Vatican Sayings
    5. Lucretius
    6. Herodotus
    7. Pythocles
    8. Menoeceus
    9. Fragments - Usener Collection
    10. Torquatus On Ethics
    11. Velleius On Gods
    12. Greek/Latin Help
  7. Gallery
    1. Featured images
    2. Albums
    3. Latest Images
    4. Latest Comments
  8. Calendar
    1. Upcoming Events List
    2. Zoom Meetings
    3. This Month
    4. Sunday Zoom Meetings
    5. First Monday Zoom Meetings
    6. Wednesday Zoom Meeting
    7. Twentieth Zoom Meetings
    8. Zoom Meetings
  9. Other
    1. Featured Content
    2. Blog Posts
    3. Files
    4. Logbook
    5. EF ToDo List
    6. Link-Database
  1. EpicureanFriends - Home of Classical Epicurean Philosophy
  2. Forum
  3. Meetings, Resources, and Activism
  4. EpicureanFriends Zoom Meetings
  5. Twentieth Gathering Via Zoom for Level 03 Members and Above
  • Sidebar
  • Sidebar

20th of October, 2023 - Twentieth Gathering Via Zoom

  • Kalosyni
  • October 11, 2023 at 11:24 AM
  • Go to last post
Regularly Checking In On A Small Screen Device? Bookmark THIS page!
  • Kalosyni
    Student of the Kepos
    Points
    17,229
    Posts
    2,095
    Quizzes
    2
    Quiz rate
    90.9 %
    • October 11, 2023 at 11:24 AM
    • #1

    This month there is much to celebrate! We are now in the time of year of fall harvest. Also, there are three forum members with birthdays in October!

    As we begin to feel the changing of the seasons, and the shortening of days, we can consider and enjoy the bounty of the earth and the sensual enjoyments of autumn. I am looking into doing something memorable during our Zoom meeting, to create an extra special celebration. Also, this month according to our memorial calendar we are honoring the following Epicureans: Titus Lucretius Carus, and Rabirius and Catius Insuber.

    This Zoom is open to Level 03 and above. If you are not yet a Level 03 but are interested, you can message me to find out how to begin the process of becoming one.

    Looking forward seeing you and celebrating this 20th!

  • Online
    Cassius
    05 - Administrator
    Points
    102,499
    Posts
    14,030
    Quizzes
    9
    Quiz rate
    100.0 %
    • October 19, 2023 at 11:47 PM
    • #2

    Happy Twentieth of October!

  • Godfrey
    Epicurist
    Points
    12,212
    Posts
    1,709
    Quizzes
    3
    Quiz rate
    85.0 %
    Bookmarks
    1
    • October 20, 2023 at 12:23 AM
    • #3

    Don't think that I'll be able to make it tomorrow, date night with wifey.

    Happy Twentieth, all!

  • Don
    ΕΠΙΚΟΥΡΕΙΟΣ (Epicurist)
    Points
    39,827
    Posts
    5,545
    Quizzes
    9
    Quiz rate
    92.8 %
    • October 20, 2023 at 7:54 AM
    • #4

    A joyous twentieth to everyone!

    I'm keeping with one focus on C. Amafinius, here's what I found on some morning googling:

    Until his own time, Cicero states, philosophy was available to the Romans only through Greek texts. 1 Those of his countrymen who had studied it were too intent on other matters to write about it in Latin; in consequence, only those of them who could travel to Athens or Rhodes, or who knew enough Greek to read that language easily, or who happened to make the acquaintance of wandering teachers were able to pursue philosophy. But while the other schools were producing nothing in Latin, the Epicurean C. Amafinius began to teach, orally at first. He presently published his books, which had many imitators; to his followers there flocked a great multitude from all over Italy.

    Modern scholars have debated the date of this man; the consensus of opinion has been that he worked at the end of the second or the beginning of the first century. A few writers have believed that he was a contemporary of Lucretius-a conjecture which is, perhaps, more in accord with our scanty evidence. Most of the debate has been carried on by scholars of Lucretius, examining the claim he makes in the De Rerum Natura (I, 922-950, V, 335-337) to being the first to expound Epicurean doctrines in Latin. But there is another aspect to the matter; if Amafinius lived only a few years before the composition of Cicero's philosophical works, it follows that popular Epicureanism had a meteoric rise in those years, and that the vigor of Cicero's attacks on the philosophy reflects his alarm at a serious and pressing threat to his own ideas, political as well as philosophical. The attacks found in the late works are different both

    in nature and intensity from those in the dialogues written before the Civil War; may not one of his purposes in writing the late dialogues have been to win over to the conservative cause a group of rich and influential Epicureans in the municipia of Italy?

    Amafinius is coupled with C. Catius (Cicero, Ad Fam., XV, 19, 2) who died a little before 45 (Ad Fam., XV, 16, 1), and with one Rabirius (Acad., I, 5), in terms which imply a vient de paraitre. Cicero's expressions of time are vague, and the primus cum primis of Lucretius could mean " the first (in excellence) among the first (in time)," as well as "definitely the best," the usual rendering.

    [Amafinius'] influence spread rapidly, so rapidly, indeed, that Cicero was moved only a decade later to attack their Epicureanism as a political danger. Thus the obscure and derided popularizer appears, not as a very minor

    forerunner of Lucretius, but as the instigator of a philosophy which, being acceptable under contemporary political conditions, exercised for a time at least a considerable influence on Roman

    history, and, by calling forth Cicero's counter-propaganda, on Roman letters.

    Source (excerpts):

    Amafinius, Lucretius, and Cicero

    Author(s): Herbert M. Howe

    Source: The American Journal of Philology , 1951, Vol. 72, No. 1 (1951), pp. 57-62

    Published by: The Johns Hopkins University Press

    Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/291962

  • Kalosyni
    Student of the Kepos
    Points
    17,229
    Posts
    2,095
    Quizzes
    2
    Quiz rate
    90.9 %
    • October 20, 2023 at 8:32 AM
    • #5

    Happy 20th Everyone! Here is some Greek dancing (from "Zorba" yet likely has some basis in ancient Greek dance, especially the circle dance, which I think illustrates well the following Vatican Saying:

    VS 52: "Friendship dances around the world, announcing to each of us that we must awaken to happiness".

    It is best to start watching at the 5 minute mark, enjoy!

    Hope to see as many of you as can join tonight! (Level 03+)

  • Online
    Cassius
    05 - Administrator
    Points
    102,499
    Posts
    14,030
    Quizzes
    9
    Quiz rate
    100.0 %
    • October 20, 2023 at 8:32 AM
    • #6

    Great clip Don, thank you! And I am beginning to think that I have underestimated how strong the Epicureans were and that this statement about a "meteroric rise" may be more true than I would have thought:

    Quote from Don

    it follows that popular Epicureanism had a meteoric rise in those years, and that the vigor of Cicero's attacks on the philosophy reflects his alarm at a serious and pressing threat to his own ideas, political as well as philosophical.

  • Don
    ΕΠΙΚΟΥΡΕΙΟΣ (Epicurist)
    Points
    39,827
    Posts
    5,545
    Quizzes
    9
    Quiz rate
    92.8 %
    • October 20, 2023 at 8:42 AM
    • #7
    Quote from Kalosyni

    ancient Greek dance, especially the circle dance, which I think illustrates well the following Vatican Saying:


    VS 52: "Friendship dances around the world, announcing to each of us that we must awaken to happiness".

    Absolutely! I always like to point out that the Greek in VS52 is "*dances around* the world" and not "dances *around the world*". The dancing is round, not the location in the world.

    περιχορεύω to dance round

  • Pacatus
    03 - Member
    Points
    6,202
    Posts
    778
    Quizzes
    5
    Quiz rate
    92.3 %
    • October 21, 2023 at 1:17 PM
    • #8

    Thank you, Kalosyni.

    Here, for anyone interested, is a paper by Maria Hnaraki – professor of anthropology, Greek culture, folklore and ethnomusicology at Drexel University – titled “Speaking Without Words: Zorba’s Dance.” (Academia.edu did not have a copy of this paper, but the author kindly provided a copy on request.)

    https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/2742/debb72b0b…NzQ3Mi41OS4wLjA.

    "We must try to make the end of the journey better than the beginning, as long as we are journeying; but when we come to the end, we must be happy and content." (Vatican Saying 48)

  • Pacatus
    03 - Member
    Points
    6,202
    Posts
    778
    Quizzes
    5
    Quiz rate
    92.3 %
    • October 21, 2023 at 2:22 PM
    • #9
    Quote from Kalosyni

    Greek dancing (from "Zorba" yet likely has some basis in ancient Greek dance, especially the circle dance, which I think illustrates well the following Vatican Saying:


    VS 52: "Friendship dances around the world, announcing to each of us that we must awaken to happiness".

    What I like about this is that it gives a better sense of Epicurus (and the Garden) as celebrating the robust, pleasurable exuberance of life – rather than succumbing to a quiescent contemplative philosophy. To laugh and to dance (perhaps especially inside) is part and parcel of an Epicurean philosophy aimed at fulfilling pleasure and enjoyment in the tides of everyday life. (To draw on Nietschze’s formulation, cited by Hnaraki, the Dionysian is not simply sublimated into the more sedate Apollonian.) [And I always thought that Frances Wright captured this robustness better than many of the academic philosophers.] * / **

    As Professor Hnaraki put it: “Greeks act life; indeed, as Zorba, their kinsman, they dance it as well. By doing so, Greeks subconsciously and creatively use dancing as a therapeutic means of self- and psychoanalysis, as they manage to liberate themselves by healing their egos. After all, the world of Greece is a world of culture, always with the human being centered.”

    +++++++++++

    * As an aside, I think this also goes to Don's objection to a word like “static” to translate katastematic pleasure, and (if I recall correctly) treating ataraxia as some kind of “tranquilized” state (as opposed to an active imperturbableness).

    ** A second aside: it also opposes any tendency to regard katastematic pleasures (and ataraxia) as somehow superior to kinetic pleasure, which sometimes seems to raise its head in the academic literature.

    "We must try to make the end of the journey better than the beginning, as long as we are journeying; but when we come to the end, we must be happy and content." (Vatican Saying 48)

Unread Threads

    1. Title
    2. Replies
    3. Last Reply
    1. Who are capable of figuring the problem out 5

      • Like 1
      • Patrikios
      • June 5, 2025 at 4:25 PM
      • General Discussion
      • Patrikios
      • June 6, 2025 at 6:54 PM
    2. Replies
      5
      Views
      294
      5
    3. Patrikios

      June 6, 2025 at 6:54 PM
    1. What fears does modern science remove, as Epicurean physics did in antiquity? 31

      • Like 5
      • sanantoniogarden
      • June 2, 2025 at 3:35 PM
      • General Discussion
      • sanantoniogarden
      • June 6, 2025 at 2:05 PM
    2. Replies
      31
      Views
      907
      31
    3. Don

      June 6, 2025 at 2:05 PM
    1. Porphyry - Letter to Marcella -"Vain Is the Word of the Philosopher..." 17

      • Like 1
      • Cassius
      • June 12, 2023 at 11:34 AM
      • Usener Collection
      • Cassius
      • June 3, 2025 at 11:17 PM
    2. Replies
      17
      Views
      5.8k
      17
    3. Bryan

      June 3, 2025 at 11:17 PM
    1. Daily life of ancient Epicureans / 21st Century Epicureans 38

      • Like 3
      • Robert
      • May 21, 2025 at 8:23 PM
      • General Discussion
      • Robert
      • May 29, 2025 at 1:44 PM
    2. Replies
      38
      Views
      2.8k
      38
    3. Pacatus

      May 29, 2025 at 1:44 PM
    1. Emily Austin's "LIving For Pleasure" Wins Award. (H/T to Lowri for finding this!)

      • Like 4
      • Cassius
      • May 28, 2025 at 10:57 PM
      • General Discussion
      • Cassius
      • May 28, 2025 at 10:57 PM
    2. Replies
      0
      Views
      250

Latest Posts

  • Tsouna's On Choices and Avoidances

    Robert June 8, 2025 at 1:37 AM
  • Episode 285 - Not Yet Recorded - Cicero Attacks Epicurus' PD04 And Says Virtue And Honor Is the Way To Overcome Bodily Pain

    Cassius June 7, 2025 at 3:12 PM
  • Updated Thoughts on the Question of "Peace and Safety" in the Works of Norman Dewitt

    Joshua June 7, 2025 at 2:02 PM
  • Who are capable of figuring the problem out

    Patrikios June 6, 2025 at 6:54 PM
  • What fears does modern science remove, as Epicurean physics did in antiquity?

    Don June 6, 2025 at 2:05 PM
  • Sunday, June 15 - Topic: The Letter of Cosma Raimondi

    Cassius June 6, 2025 at 1:46 PM
  • Welcome Balin!

    sanantoniogarden June 6, 2025 at 1:08 PM
  • Sunday, June 8, 2025 - Discussion Topic - "Practice" In Relation To Pain, Pleasure, and Happiness

    Cassius June 6, 2025 at 9:26 AM
  • What if Kyriai Doxai was NOT a list?

    Don June 5, 2025 at 7:12 AM
  • EpicureanFriends WIKI 2025 - Upgrades, Revisions, Planning

    Cassius June 4, 2025 at 2:23 PM

EpicureanFriends - Classical Epicurean Philosophy

  1. Home
    1. About Us
    2. Classical Epicurean Philosophy
  2. Wiki
    1. Getting Started
  3. Frequently Asked Questions
    1. Site Map
  4. Forum
    1. Latest Threads
    2. Featured Threads
    3. Unread Posts
  5. Texts
    1. Core Texts
    2. Biography of Epicurus
    3. Lucretius
  6. Articles
    1. Latest Articles
  7. Gallery
    1. Featured Images
  8. Calendar
    1. This Month At EpicureanFriends
Powered by WoltLab Suite™ 6.0.22
Style: Inspire by cls-design
Stylename
Inspire
Manufacturer
cls-design
Licence
Commercial styles
Help
Supportforum
Visit cls-design