ABSTRACT

Originally published in the UK in 1961 this was an unconventional book when first published but a powerful interpretation of Greek individualism. The author examines the influence of the Greeks on European philosophy, religion, literature, art and architecture and challenges many commonly held assumptions: ‘Those items in the Greek legacy which are most easily recognizable as such are in fact the least important.’

chapter I|14 pages

The Legacy and Its Distortions

chapter II|6 pages

Who Were the Greeks?

chapter III|13 pages

The Heroic Code

chapter IV|21 pages

The Supernatural

chapter V|15 pages

The Tragic View

chapter VI|15 pages

Man the Measure

chapter VII|18 pages

The Cult of Hellenism

chapter VIII|12 pages

Channels to Europe

chapter IX|8 pages

Humanist Revival

chapter X|10 pages

The Return

Machiavelli and Spinoza