Gresham College | Lady Justice in Ancient Greece #gresham #shorts #ancientgreekphilosophy @GreshamCollege | Uploaded 8 months ago | Updated 5 hours ago
Taken from a Gresham lecture by Melissa Lane at Barnard's Inn Hall, London.
gresham.ac.uk/watch-now/greek-justice
In the poetry of the Athenian lawgiver Solon, justice (dikē) was a boundary stone marking out terms that rich and poor alike could respect. Yet ancient Greek authors also recognised the danger that the powerful will simply exploit those less powerful, and that Greek societies enforced slavery.
This lecture explores ancient Greek aspirations to justice - and how they fell short - as a call for recurrent interrogation of the terms governing power and vulnerability.
Taken from a Gresham lecture by Melissa Lane at Barnard's Inn Hall, London.
gresham.ac.uk/watch-now/greek-justice
In the poetry of the Athenian lawgiver Solon, justice (dikē) was a boundary stone marking out terms that rich and poor alike could respect. Yet ancient Greek authors also recognised the danger that the powerful will simply exploit those less powerful, and that Greek societies enforced slavery.
This lecture explores ancient Greek aspirations to justice - and how they fell short - as a call for recurrent interrogation of the terms governing power and vulnerability.