Thycydides and The Peloponnesian War

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The perspective that Thucydides took to write History of the Peloponnesian War gave his work, on a first read, the impression that his opinion was removed to provide an objective analysis of the destruction of the greatness of Athens over the period of the war. He began with a “medical history” of how humanity structured the first societies based on the interplay between fear, interest, and honor. Then, progressed to how war devolved the great Athenian society. Which took Thucydides from revisiting eloquent speeches over strategy to simpler retellings of brash disputes. Thoughtful placement displayed Thucydides’ opinion of Athens’ actions, how he viewed the other city-states’ positions on various issues in the book, and emphasized multiple philosophical ideals. In my reading, the shift in Thucydides’ perspective showed his ideal culture of argument was through eloquent language of “Pericles’ Funeral Oration” and why the war degraded it to a rasher reality in “Civil War in Corcyra”.
Thucydides’ loved his city-state of Athens and wrote his work to analyze war to understand the circumstances that lead up to the demise of greatness of Athens around him. Thucydides wrote this book and died before the war was over; even though he was amidst the chaos of the fighting he was able to discern and question the fall of Athens culture of argument and the respect of language. During his writing a figure named Pericles, who in Thucydides’ eyes embodied the culture of argument, artfully displayed a gift for rhetoric through the funeral oration given over the dead from the battle in the pervious year. From my reading, the way Pericles addressed his duties as a statesman embodied the ideals of the city-state of Athens for this moment in time was...

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...n prevented. My readings lead me to believe that it was only a matter of time until Athens collapsed. Nothing unfortunately can stand forever. That inevitability cannot be overcame because to have a true opportunity people would have to have infinite amounts of knowledge about the situation and the effects of every possible decision. Fortune can only favor a certain entity for so long. While it is still tragic that the institution of language fell to such a trivial foe of self desire nothing can stay forever. Thucydides would agree that the greatness of Athens could have been extended, but for how much longer?

Works Cited
Thucydides. History of the Peloponnesian War. Trans. Rex Warner. Ed. M. I. Finley. New York: Penguin, 1972. Print.

Works Cited
Thucydides. History of the Peloponnesian War. Trans. Rex Warner. Ed. M. I. Finley. New York: Penguin, 1972. Print.

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