Transcript archive

Civilization #17: Homer, Vergil, and the War for the Soul of Rome

Source-synced transcript for the compressed reading. Spans keep the original chronology, timestamps, and audit trail behind the public interpretation.

Jiang

Okay, good morning. So this is going to be a very long class today, and I'm going to throw a lot of information at you, okay? The reason why is I want to summarize and review what we've learned about Rome so far, compare and contrast it to the Greeks, and then look forward on how the Romans and the Greeks would influence the development of Western civilization, including Christianity, okay? So I'll be throwing a lot at you today, so if you have any questions, please let me know, okay? If I'm being unclear, please let me know, all right? Just raise your hand, okay? All right, so let's review what we know so far. So the Romans and the Greeks are very different civilizations. If you remember the Greeks, the Greeks are scattered across the Aegean and across the Mediterranean, okay? They have colonies all over the place. So the Greeks are primarily focused on trade, especially with the great empires of the Near East, okay?

Jiang

Primarily Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Persia, okay? The three great civilizations that we will discuss starting next week. And so the Greeks have colonies all over these three civilizations. And as such, the Greeks are able to absorb new ideas pretty easily. And because the Greeks are focused on trade, maritime trade, they're a very open -minded people, okay? So that's Greek civilization. The Romans are completely different because they are across the Adriatic in Italy, and they're inland. So they're a much more insular and conservative people. than the Greeks. Also the Romans have historically been surrounded by very aggressive people, including the Latins, the Sabians, the Atruscians. And so Rome has always had to struggle to survive in this very hostile environment. And in order to survive, they develop a cultural system that made them Urbans. the world's greatest military machine okay and the three pillars of this culture are piety

Jiang

right piety obedience and loyalty to the gods to Rome and to your fathers second principle is the idea of liberty which puts the nobility at the very heart and center of Roman society liberty means no Kings no no dictators no tyrants and the third and most important pillar is idea of Republic ah right the public good media here is everyone my sacrifice himself for the honor and glory of Rome in fact there's a competition you want you want prestige by winning new territory for Rome okay and this is the idea of the Republic of Rome the Republic of Rome is a great system if you are a poor small nation always at war and under threat from larger nations so remember in 216 BCE Hannibal destroyed every Roman army but the same time the Romans were able to rally themselves and ultimately defeat Carthage in a second Punic war okay so the great system if

Jiang

you're a small and poor and nation always at war with larger nations but this isn't breaks down when you become rich big Empire and you're the main major hegemon in the area and this system will lead to three major problems in the Roman Republic corruption division right civil wars and so on the decibels subirgtion and typeает anarlton� and also inequality so now the Rome is in crisis and the ultimate resolution to all these problems was the beginning of the Empirerics ever emperor gave his all of March briefly became the emperor he is now known as Augustus Caesar and again what he does is he centralizes all military authority in his hands Egypt is now his private estate and he uses it to bankroll the army which is now composed of professional soldiers before they were citizen soldiers so they only volunteered when Rome was at war but now in the Empire there's a professional standing

Jiang

army and they serve like 20 years or 30 years they're all paid by one man the Emperor through his land holdings in Egypt okay he also established something called the Praetorian Guard the Praetorian Guard is basically the secret police of Rome okay so there are no soldiers in Rome but there are there's a Praetorian Guard they're responsible for peace and security in Rome they're only responsible to one man okay the Emperor so even though but even though Augustus Caesar has conquered Rome and basically most of the world he still has three major problems that he must resolve if he has to be Emperor fully okay the first problem he must solve is the question of legitimacy why is he emperor and traditionally in the ancient world your legitimacy comes from the actual your family. How old is your family? How established is your family? Now, there are two major myths about the founding of Rome, okay?

Jiang

The first is Romulus, right? The first king of Rome. The second is Lucius Brutus and the founding of the Roman Republic. Now, Julius Caesar and Augustus Caesar are not, do not come from either of these two myths or families, okay? So, he has to construct a new myth that shows that his family, called the Julii, go way back. They go back, they go back to before Romulus, okay? So, while he was alive, Julius Caesar planted the seeds of this. Remember, Julius Caesar is a great myth maker, okay? So, the myth he came up with is this. There is a man, and he is a man, and he is a man, and he is a man, and he is a man, and he is a man, named Aeneas. And Aeneas is from Troy, right? When Troy was destroyed, Aeneas was able to escape with some survivors, and they came to Italy, and they built the foundations that would become Rome, okay?

Jiang

So, in other words, Romulus is descended from Aeneas, but Julius Caesar is also descended from Aeneas. Okay? So, that is how Augustus Caesar will cement his legitimacy, by promoting the idea that his ancestor was Aeneas, who is the real founder of Rome, okay? So, he's winning a new myth, and he's trying to popularize it. So, it's the first problem he's trying to solve, legitimacy. There's a problem he's trying to solve, is like a new Roman cultural identity. Okay? So, remember, the old Roman cultural identity was based on piety, liberty, and repulchre. And this creates problems in the emperor, because remember, Marcus Brutus and Decimus Brutus, they thought that they were descendants of, sorry, they thought they were descendants of Lucius Brutus, and therefore, they had a responsibility to kill all kings, all tyrants, and that's why they assassinated Julius Caesar. So, you can't allow this cultural identity to exist, right?

Jiang

Because it will encourage other Buddhists to come kill you, the emperor. So, you have to change this. You have to get rid of the idea of liberty and repulchre, okay? You have to promote a new Roman identity focused on obedience, piety and obedience. And then there's a third problem that Augustus Caesar must resolve as emperor. Which is this. Even though the Romans have conquered most of the world, okay? Basically, the Mediterranean world, culturally, it's the Greeks who are dominant. Because the Greeks have a superior culture. They have Homer. They have Plato. They have Thucydides. They have Aeschylus. Okay, so all Romans acknowledge the fact that Greek culture is superior. And as Romans embraced Greek culture, Augustus Caesar believes they are corrupted okay for Augustus Caesar he believes that Greek culture it is too hedonistic and that's ultimately what happened to Mark Anthony. Mark Anthony was this good Roman who went off to Egypt and became corrupted and seduced by Cleopatra and Greek culture.

Jiang

Mark Anthony became more Greek now that's why he betrayed Rome. Augustus Caesar also believe that's why Rome began descending into civil wars because Rome was starting to embrace Greek culture and it made everyone more individualistic, more hedonistic, more selfish and that's why they fought these civil wars okay? So Augustus Caesar now has to somehow destroy destroy Greek culture or the influence of Greek culture on the Roman soul. And he knows the very essence, the very basis of Greek culture is Homer, especially the Iliad and the Odyssey. These two books were essentially the bible of Greek civilization. This is how children were educated. When they were young, they memorized the Iliad and they memorized the Odyssey. That's what taught them how to speak well, how to think well, and how to debate well. So Augustus Caesar understands that to defeat Homer, he needs to create a Roman epic to replace Homer in the schools.

Jiang

So he invited a man named Virgil, who at this time is considered the greatest man in the world. He invited this living Roman poet to write another epic in Latin to replace Homer as a cornerstone of the education system. And he wrote something called the Iliad, which is really about the journey of Aeneas as he creates Rome, as he founds Rome. So from 29 BCE until 19 BCE, for about over 10 years, Virgil worked on the Iliad. And he wrote the Iliad under the direct supervision of Augustus Caesar. So they were basically co -authors. Virgil was the poet. He was the one who could put the words together. But it was Augustus Caesar who had the vision of what the Iliad should be. The Iliad will accomplish all three of these major challenges. It will establish the primacy of the July family as the first family of Rome.

Jiang

It will establish a new Roman cultural identity focused on Rome. piety over liberty and it will show that Greek culture is one of corruption and hedonism and it must be repelled okay so you can make the argument that Virgil's Ennead is the greatest work of propaganda ever in human history right so that's what I will show you today okay to do this what I will do is compare contrast the Iliad and the Odyssey with the Ennead to show you how different the Roman worldview is from the Greek worldview okay so before I start are there any questions about this framework is this clear to you okay all right so let's start with you the Iliad okay and remember this is a very important idea Homer and Virgil are two different individuals they're both poets but Homer was writing when Greek civilization was just beginning so he's trying to create the seeds of civilization okay he's

Jiang

trying to be a great teacher Virgil is writing when Rome is an empire that is everywhere and everything it's basically God okay so it's trying to teach people how to be part of this empire okay did you understand so so you can argue that Homer is an educator whereas Virgil is a propagandist all right okay so let's talk about the Iliad okay so um the first thing is the Iliad is a very complicated work it's a universe on a to itself with like dozens of characters okay I'm only going to focus on one character Achilles and tell his story okay but but but please be aware um the story I'm telling it is my interpretation there are different interpretations okay but it's a one interpretation found in the universe of the Iliad okay so the basic story it's very simple Helen is the queen of Sparta married to the king of Sparta Menelaus she is

Jiang

seduced by the prince of Troy named Paris they fall in love they run off together to Troy Menelaus and his brother Agamemnon they raised an army to rescue Helen or to retrieve Helen back from the Trojans who refused to give her up and what follows is a ten -year war between the Trojans and the Trojans and the Trojans and the Trojans and the ten year siege of Troy and the Greeks aren't really getting anywhere because Troy it is the um largest city in the world at this time it's a walled city and the Greeks don't know how to break through the trojan walls okay the Iliad starts when at Achilles who is the greatest warrior of the Greeks he gets into a fight with Agamemnon they get into a fight and Achilles calls Agamemnon You insult me. I fight for you. I will not refuse to fight for you. I will let the Trojans kill all of you.

Jiang

And Agamemnon, the king, wants to save face. So he tells Achilles, I don't need you. But in fact, the Greeks do need Achilles because the Trojans have a great warrior named Hector. And Hector recognizes that Achilles has retired from the battlefield. And Hector leads his army against the Greeks. And they push the Greeks so far back, the Greeks are now trapped on their ships by the coast. And what Hector wants to do is burn down these ships. Because if he burns down these ships, the Greeks cannot resupply themselves. And they will eventually die in Troy. So at this point, Agamemnon has no choice but to beg Achilles to return to the battlefield. Because only Achilles can defeat Hector in battle. But Agamemnon doesn't want to lose face. So he sends a delegation of generals led by a man named Odysseus to beg Achilles to return to the battlefield. So Odysseus goes and sees Achilles in a ship.

Jiang

And Odysseus says, listen Achilles, we're dying out here. If you don't fight for us, we're all going to die. Hector is destroying us. If you fight for us, Agamemnon will give you everything. All these treasures we are promised in Troy, we'll give to you. Agamemnon will give you anything you want. He'll give you the world. And Achilles, because he's an asshole, says, no, I want Agamemnon to come beg me himself. So this goes nowhere. And Agamemnon refuses to come beg. So the Trojans advance further and further. And they're about to burn their ships. Patroclus sees his best friends with Achilles. And he sees that Achilles is conflicted. Because Achilles wants to jump into the fray. Achilles had a prophecy before he came to Troy. And the prophecy is this. He has a choice. He can either choose to die an old man at home. And be a nobody. Or come to Troy, die young at battle, in the battle.

Jiang

And be remembered forever as the greatest champion of the Greeks. And for Achilles, that's not a choice. Because for him, as a warrior, he loves to fight. He can only achieve eudaimonia in battle. So for him to sit in a ship and watch the Greeks being destroyed, it is the worst punishment on earth. But at the same time, Achilles, he's arrogant. He's vain. And he demands Agamemnon to come apologize. Which Agamemnon is not going to do. Agamemnon would rather see the entire Greek army demolished than to apologize to Achilles. So Patroclus tells Achilles, listen. Let me jump into the battle to save the ships. And Achilles says, Fine. I will let you stop the Trojan advance. But do not, under any circumstances, fight Hector in battle. So Patroclus jumps into battle. And he fights the Trojans. And then what does he do? He fights Hector, right?

Jiang

And then what happens? He gets killed. Achilles hears about the death of Patroclus. And Achilles is so angry at the death of his best friend that he forgives Agamemnon. He lets go of his anger at Agamemnon and directs it at Hector. He jumps into battle. He challenges Hector to a duel. And he kills Hector. Okay? Then what he does is he takes Hector's dead body. He ties it to his chariot. And then he drags Hector's body around the walls of Troy. And on top of the walls of Troy are Hector's parents, King Priam and Queen Hecuba. And they are screaming in anguish. They hate this devil who not only killed their son Hector, but is now humiliating and mutilating him in front of the entire Trojan people. Okay? So at this point, you would think that Achilles has achieved immortality. He's defeated Hector in battle. He saved the Greek army. And he'd be very happy.

Jiang

But it turns out he falls into a deep depression. He cannot sleep. He cannot eat. All he does is think about Patroclus. But he's so depressed he can't even cry for Patroclus. So this is where Homer is really the first psychologist. Because Achilles is feeling this way. Because he is wrapped with guilt. If you think about it, it wasn't Hector who killed Patroclus. It was Achilles who killed Patroclus. Why? Because Patroclus wouldn't be dead if A Achilles did not get in that stupid fight with Agamemnon. Okay? B Achilles just forgave Agamemnon when Odysseus came begging. Okay? And C if Achilles did not agree for Patroclus to go into battle. Okay? So while knowing it, because Achilles lacks self -awareness, he is trapped by his guilt over the death of Patroclus. And he is taking out his rage on Hector. Okay? He is supposed to return Hector's body for a ransom to the Trojans. Because everyone

Jiang

believes at this time that the dead can only find peace in the afterlife if they're buried. Okay? So for Achilles to torment Hector's body like this means that Hector can never find peace in the afterlife. His father Priam is back in Troy and he can't sleep either because he's depressed over what's happened to his son. So eventually the gods broker a peace deal. Okay? And they tell Priam to go to Achilles and Achilles will return the body to Priam. Alright? So late one night, Priam sneaks into the tent and he's standing behind Achilles who is busy discussing military matters with his generals. And at this point, Priam can take out a knife and stab Achilles to death. And he wants to because he's so angry at this man who's killed and mutilated his son Hector. Instead, and this is the genius of Homer, okay? Priam kneels down and kisses the hand of Achilles, the man who has killed his beloved son.

Jiang

And in response, Achilles stands and he is in awe of this old man who at this moment has demonstrated more courage, more strength than Achilles has ever witnessed. Okay? So, in this act of submission, Priam has emotionally defeated Achilles. And Achilles is ashamed of himself. And by forgiving Achilles, Priam allows Achilles to now forgive himself. Okay? Does that make sense to you? Alright. And so, the two then start to become friends. Because in the face of Priam, Achilles sees his father, Peleus. And he pities Priam for having lost his son. And in the face of Achilles, Priam sees his son Hector. And they both hug and they cry. And this is the first time that Achilles has been able to cry since the death of Patroclus. And these tears release him from the ghost of Patroclus who is haunting him. Okay? And this is how the Iliad ends. What

Jiang

we've witnessed in the Iliad is the character transformation of Achilles from a cold -blooded, merciless, vain and arrogant warrior into a man who is capable of pity, self -reflection, and self -forgiveness. Okay? And you can argue that this is a process of civilization. And so, the point of the Iliad is even though it's about war, it's really making the argument that love is the basis of civilization. It is what unites us and inspires us. Love is the unifying force of the universe. Right? Even though Priam and Achilles are the most bitter enemies, because of Hector's love for Hector, because of Priam's love for Hector, and because of Achilles' love for his father, Peleus, they're able to find common ground and become friends. Right? That's the Iliad. Does that make sense? Right? So, again, it is arguably the greatest work of literature in human history. And this is only one interpretation. There are different interpretations. Okay?

Jiang

But you can see how rich and complex, sophisticated the Iliad is. Okay? It is, by reading it, you'll be inspired to reimagine yourself and the world around you. Okay? That's how powerful it is. All right. Now let's move on to the Odyssey. The Iliad is about Achilles and its transformation into self -awareness. The Odyssey is about Odysseus. And unlike Achilles, Odysseus does not want to go to the Trojan War. Okay? Achilles jumps at the chance to win glory at Troy. But Odysseus was given a prophecy, which is this. If he goes to Troy, he will be gone for 20 years. He lives in Ithaca with his wife, Penelope. And they just had a newborn son, Telemachus. Okay? And the prophecy is if you go to Troy, you'll be gone for 20 years. 10 years at war in Troy, 10 years lost at sea. And Odysseus, who loves his family, does not want to go to war.

Jiang

Okay? So, he pretends to be crazy, insane. And so, what he does is he takes salt and a plow. And he plows the field and salts it, which kills the field. Okay? So, clearly, this is a sign of insanity. But the Greek soldiers who come to retrieve him are determined to get him. Because they know that Odysseus is the most strategic and the wisest of the Greeks. He will be the one who will deliver victory to the Greeks. And so, Odysseus will come up with the Trojan horse strategy. Right? He will, it is his idea, the Trojan horse strategy. So, they need him. So, to test him, to see if he's really mad, they put his son, Tanarchus, who's only like six months old, in front of him. Okay? So, if he's really crazy, he would run over his son. If he's not crazy, then he would stop. And obviously, he's not going to run over his son.

Jiang

Okay? So, his trick has been revealed and he's forced to go to war. And he hates going to war. Okay? But he's determined to win the war for the Greeks. The first reason is he believes the Trojans are unjust. How dare you steal another man's wife? Right? Second reason is he wants to build a legacy for his son, Tanarchus. He wants to go home to Ithaca and tell his son what a hero he is. Okay? He wants to build a legacy for his son. Right? And the third thing is he wants to reunite the family which has been broken. Right? Menelaus and Helen. Just as he wants to return to his wife, Penelope. Okay? So this is what we call his worldview. The way he understands the world. And the worldview is what allows us to be human and to exist. Right? The worldview explains to us who we are, what do we want, and what we should do.

Jiang

The problem is after Odysseus comes up with a Trojan horse, they sneak into the city and they open the gates. The Greeks come flooding in. Okay? And now it's total mayhem because the Greeks are killing everyone inside the city. Odysseus kills a Trojan soldier who's attacking him. The Trojan soldier falls to the ground and then suddenly his wife screams at the death of her husband and she comes and sobs at the body of her dead husband. Okay? And this creates something called cognitive dissonance. Okay? Cognitive dissonance is when the worldview and the reality do not match. There's conflict between the reality and the worldview. Remember, Odysseus came to Troy to for justice, to build a legacy for his son Timarchus and to reunite a family. And what he's doing now is destroying families. The Greeks are just massacring everyone. It's not justice. It's just slaughter. It's just complete mayhem.

Jiang

And so what happens is Odysseus is traumatized by what he sees. Okay? And this is what we call PTSD, right? Post Traumatic Stress Order. And after Troy, Odysseus becomes lost at sea and he becomes like a sex slave called Calypso who's trapped him. And he's basically like a sex slave. Okay? And every day when he's not having sex with Calypso, which sucks, he's crying on the beach. Okay? He has PTSD. And he doesn't want to go home because he's ashamed to face his family. He's so ashamed by what's happening in Troy, he cannot face his family. So he's just stuck where he is. Meanwhile, at home, Penelope, his wife, she is waiting for him to return. But after some time, people think Odysseus must be dead. So there's about a hundred young men, hundred suitors, who come and demand her hand in marriage. Okay? But, she refuses to believe Odysseus is dead. So, she falls into depression as well.

Jiang

Right? She's waiting for her husband to return. But, all the signs are that he's dead. She's been courted by a hundred suitors, and she can't say no to any of them because she's afraid her husband is really dead and she doesn't want to be alone. Okay? So she becomes depressed as well. She becomes paralyzed. So she's stuck. Right? This means that Timarchus, the son, is stuck as well. And he becomes a depressed teenager because if Odysseus were dead, he would inherit his legacy. He could become his own man. But Odysseus is not dead yet. No one knows if he's dead or alive. So he's stuck where he is. If Penelope were just to marry and go somewhere else, he would inherit the property, right? But she's just stuck in her room. So he's depressed as well. So this entire family, okay, is depressed. Odysseus is depressed. Penelope, Timarchus, they're all depressed.

Jiang

So they're just stuck there. Athena, who is the goddess of wisdom, okay, and she favors Odysseus. And she pities the family. And she resolves to bring the family back together again. So she goes and tells Calypso, hey, you've had your fun, but you have to let Odysseus go, okay? So now Odysseus is free to go home. And Athena tells Odysseus, listen, do not, when you go home, you can tell Timarchus who you are, but don't tell Penelope and anyone else who you are because you might be killed, okay? There's 100 suitors who would kill you if they knew who you were. So Athena disguises him as a different person, as a beggar basically. Beggar. And when Odysseus returns to Ithaca, the first thing he wants to know is does Penelope still love him? Remember, Odysseus is suffering from post -traumatic stress disorder, okay? He's lost his ability to fight, to imagine. He's lost his capacity for love.

Jiang

So he doesn't even know if his wife still loves him. So he meets with Penelope, okay? And again, he's still this guy. Penelope has no idea who he is. And he cannot reveal himself to her. He sees Penelope is distraught. And he tries to comfort Penelope by telling her that he has seen Odysseus. Odysseus is still alive. Penelope breaks down in tears at the thought that her husband is still alive. And then she asks Odysseus, how do you know my husband is still alive? Prove to me that you've met my husband. And Odysseus says, I will describe something intimate about him. Okay? He has a brooch that he carries on his cloak. And this brooch is beautiful. And he goes into poetic detail and describes this brooch. And at this point, when Penelope hears this, she breaks down in complete tears because now she knows this beggar must be my husband, Odysseus, in disguise.

Jiang

How does she know? Because only Odysseus will know all the details of the brooch. What is the brooch? The brooch is what Penelope gave Odysseus as Odysseus set sail for Troy. Right? It is Penelope's gift to him. And it is Odysseus's promise to her that he will return. So, even though Odysseus has lost the brooch in war and at sea, the brooch is implanted in his mind. The brooch symbolizes his everlasting love for Penelope. Okay? So, now that Penelope knows Odysseus has returned, they still have to figure out how to get rid of these hundred suitors, okay? How to kill them because they're still a threat to the family. So, Penelope has this great plan, okay? She's going to organize an archery contest. Odysseus has a bow. If the suitors can string the bow and shoot a target, then Penelope will marry that suitor. So, she organizes competition and all the hundred suitors, they fail one by one, okay?

Jiang

They cannot string the bow together. Then the beggar, who is Odysseus, says, let me try. And the moment he strings the bow together, the suitors are afraid because they know this can only be Odysseus. Only Odysseus can string the bow together and use it. And then one by one, Odysseus takes his bow and he kills all the suitors. What the bow symbolizes is his identity, who he is. The bow, by stringing it together, it represents the resurrection, the stringing together of his worldview, okay? He now remembers that he's a father, a hero who fights for justice. He fights to protect his family. That's who he is really, okay? And so, this story is the power of love to heal trauma after war. And again, the main message is love is the unifying force of the world. It is what will heal you. It is what will bring people together.

Jiang

Okay? So that's the Iliad and the Odyssey. Does that make sense? And again, the argument is love is the basis of civilization. It is the thing that makes us human. It is what gives us our strength, our courage, our power. Okay. So, are you clear about the Iliad and Odyssey before I move on to the Iliad? Any questions? Okay. Let's do the Iliad. Okay. So, neither the Iliad or the Odyssey talks about the Trojan Horse. But the Iliad, the first thing it does is talk about the Trojan Horse. So, the Trojans wake up one day and they find this huge Trojan Horse, wooden horse, outside the gates. And most are like, this must be a Greek trick. Let's just burn it down. Okay. But then they capture a Greek soldier. And this Greek soldier is very eloquent. With logic and with beauty and with power, he tells a false story of how the Greeks became disheartened by the progress of the war.

Jiang

And they decide to sail home. And to ensure their safe journey home, they built a wooden horse for the gods to win their favor. Okay. And the story is so moving and so beautiful that Trojans believe him. Okay. And they let the Trojan Horse in. So, the Iliad is not as subtle as the Iliad. The real Trojan Horse is Greek culture. Right? Logic, philosophy, and theater. Okay? That's what Greek culture is. Logic, philosophy, and theater. And that's what the Greek soldier uses in order to manipulate the Trojans to lie to them. Okay? So, the message here is if we Romans embrace Greek culture, embrace logic, philosophy, and theater, then our culture will be destroyed. The real Trojan Horse is Greek culture. Therefore, we must resist it at all costs. So, Aeneas wakes up and he finds the city in flames. The Greeks are going around massacring everyone.

Jiang

Okay? So, Aeneas goes and he tries to save Priam. He runs to the palace and Priam is on his throne and he sees one of his sons being killed by Achilles' son, Neo -Ptolemus. Okay? Neo -Ptolemus. And Priam curses Neo -Ptolemus and he says, your father, you insult the honor of your father. Your father was an honorable man. We were friends. And then Neo -Ptolemus goes up to Priam and kills him and says, my father is dead. You should join him in the underworld. Okay? It is a horrific scene. Okay? So, what this is telling us, again, this is not subtle. Okay? There is no place for love, friendship, and forgiveness. That's all a lie. It's all just trickery. Okay? Only brutality and force will triumph in the end. Aeneas is trying to save Priam, but then Priam dies. And then he discovers that hiding somewhere, he sees Helen. Okay? And he thinks that Helen is the one responsible for all of this.

Jiang

She's a whore. She's a slut. If she just did her duty, if she just stayed at home where she was supposed to be, this war would have started. So, he really wants to kill her. Okay? In fact, he is about to kill her. Then suddenly, a goddess named Venus. Okay? Also, so the Romans call her Venus. The Greeks call her Aphrodite. And she is the mother of Aeneas. She appears before her son and says, my son, you are destined for greater things. Leave Helen. Return to your family. So, Aeneas has no choice but to obey his mother. And he runs home. And he sees that his family is fine. His son is named Julius. He has a father and a wife. And they're fine. So, he's like, okay, you guys are fine. I'm going to go and kill some Greeks. I'm going to die with this city.

Jiang

I'm going to fight until my dying breath to save my city. And the wife and the father are begging him to not go because you are one man against an entire army. You're going to get killed. But Aeneas is stubborn and he's angry right now. Suddenly, Julius here is on fire. And it's like a golden crown, okay? And the father says, you see, Aeneas, this is a sign. This is a sign that your son will be the founder of a great empire, okay? We know it's an empire to be called Rome, okay? And this is what stops Aeneas from committing suicide. He's like, okay, now I understand. It is my duty to save my son and my family. So he carries his father who is unable to walk. He carries his son and he carries both of them to safety. They're looking for ships, okay? And his wife follows behind. They get to the ship and Aeneas turns around and he discovers his wife has disappeared.

Jiang

He goes back and he's discovered that his wife has killed herself. Why? Because she knows that in this new world that they're going to she can only be a hindrance, okay? She wants him to embrace the future and let go of the past. Also she's afraid that if she lives she'll be captured and become a slave to the Greeks and she does not want to dishonor him like that, okay? So that's what a good wife is, right? That's a bad wife because she's independent and she's looking for love. But a good wife is someone who will kill herself for her husband, okay? So Aeneas and his people, they're on ships and they end up in Carthage and they're guests of a queen named Dido. And Dido falls in love with Aeneas. They get married and Aeneas is very happy in Carthage, okay?

Jiang

The gods look at Aeneas and says, hey man, we told you this many times but you have a destiny to go to Rome. Your son will be the founder of a great empire, okay? That's the plan, that's the destiny, that's your mission, that's your duty. Stop fooling around in Carthage and do what you're told. So Aeneas has to go see Dido and say, listen, I have to go, okay? And Dido goes insane because she's in love with Aeneas and she kills herself, okay? So the message here, again, this is not subtle, okay? The message here is love is a disease, right? Love is a disease, a plague upon the world. It was Helen's love that caused the Trojan War. It was Dido's love for Aeneas that will cause the war between Carthage and Rome, okay? Because before she dies, Dido instructs her people to destroy Rome. In the future, a great city called Rome will arise. You, the Carthaginian people, have a responsibility to honor my memory and destroy Rome.

Jiang

And that's why Hannibal went to attack Rome, okay? Again, this is that subtle propaganda. Aeneas ends up in Italy, like he's supposed to. And there, he meets the local king, his name is Latinus, and he's the king of the Latins, okay? And he is mesmerized, stunned by the nobility of Aeneas. And he wants his daughter to marry Aeneas. But his daughter has already, um, is already supposed to marry another prince called Churnus. And this starts a war between Aeneas and Churnus. And this war goes on for a very long time. It's like the Iliad. And Churnus kills one of Aeneas' friends, okay? And he sees that the friend of Aeneas has this really nice belt. He takes it for himself. And this belt was a gift from Aeneas to his friend, okay? Eventually, Aeneas and Churnus get into a duel. And Aeneas overpowers Churnus.

Jiang

He wants to show mercy. He's like, I've beaten you. You're no longer a threat. I can show some forgiveness, okay? I can be merciful. But then he sees the belt that he gave his friend. And he knows Churnus has killed his friend. And so he just plunges his spear into Churnus. And that's how the Aeneid ends, okay? Now, the Aeneid is very confusing for scholars because it's pretty awful. And so scholars have debated whether or not Virgil was able to finish the Aeneid. And the argument is, the ending is too abrupt and therefore Virgil couldn't have finished the Aeneid. Okay? It's unfinished. But you think about it, it is finished, okay? Because remember in the Aeneid we see a character transformation of Achilles, right? Well, we also see a character transformation of Aeneas in this book, alright? So remember, when Aeneas sees Helen he really wants to kill her. And it took the

Jiang

and he only stopped because the gods intervened, okay? Remember, Aeneas wanted to abandon his family and get killed in the streets of Troy. The gods had to send him a message, okay? So another divine intervention. Remember, Aeneas wanted to stay at Carthage and be with Dido. So the Greeks had to send a messenger to tell him, okay? But, at the very end, when Aeneas wanted to kill, when Aeneas wanted to kill Churnus, the gods didn't have to intervene, okay? He wanted to show mercy to Churnus and he recognized, no, my duty is to kill this guy. You understand? Okay? So Aeneas has become the embodiment of piety and duty. Before, do his duty. Now he recognizes what his duty is and he embraces it, okay? Now, what's important for us to just remember that throughout this play, oh, sorry, throughout this book, there's the idea of destiny. That what Aeneas is doing has been preordained

Jiang

by the gods because the real purpose of Aeneas is to go to Rome so that his son can build the Roman Empire. So another major message of this book is the end point of history is Augustus Caesar, okay? Everything that is happening is to move towards, converge to Augustus Caesar because Augustus Caesar will create the Pax Romana, what we call the Roman Peace, which is the idea of eternal peace. Peace on Earth. Remember that before Augustus Caesar, there were all these civil wars that were killing millions of people, right? Well, after Augustus Caesar became emperor, there is now the Pax Romana, eternal peace on Earth. And this is the end point of history. The Roman Empire will mean there will no longer be any wars. There will no longer be any conflicts. Why? Because what the Roman Empire will do is transition us from love to piety. Okay? Homer believed that love is the basis of civilization.

Jiang

What the Roman Empire will show is is that piety is the basis of civilization. Love is the force that comes from within you. Okay? It grows within you. Within. But piety is what is told to you. Okay? It is what you must accept. Love is what you can feel. Love is the embrace of your emotions. Piety means the rejection of your emotions. Don't listen to your feelings. Listen to what you are told. By embracing your emotions, you have imagination. Okay? But piety believes imagination is destructive. What matters is stability and harmony. Okay? Stability. Stability and obedience is what will give peace to the world. Okay? So, for Homer, love is the unifying force of the universe. But for Virgil, love is the force that creates conflict in the universe. Right? Think of Helen. Think of Diddle. For Homer, the imagination is the animating force of the universe. It is what gives life. But for Virgil, the imagination is the destructive force of the universe.

Jiang

It is what destroys. It is basically you disobey that creates chaos and conflict. And so, we now have a transition from the Greek world to the Roman world that is focused on piety. What Virgil is trying to create is the idea of eternity. Right? Eternity. Something that lasts forever. What Homer is trying to create is the idea of infinity. How we can create the world through our actions and emotions. Okay? In the Pax Romana and Augustus Caesar, all you have to do is obey and the world will be perfect. We have come to the end of history. History has stopped because we have found the perfect, we have found perfection. We have found the perfect model to organize human civilization. We are the perfection. We are the end. Okay. And so, this is the idea of Roman, Roman eternity. And this marks a radical transition in Western civilization.

Jiang exchange

Okay? Does that make sense? Any questions? One last point is this. Okay? The Romans were like the most non -creative people in the world. They were anti -creative. So, everything that they had they sold somewhere else. Somewhere else. Okay? So, the question then is where do they get the idea of eternity from? Can you guess? Egypt. Okay? Next class I will show you that the Romans are using the Egyptian sense of eternity. Alright? So, I know this is a lot to take in. So, feel free to ask for clarification on any point. Okay? Are you okay with this? Sure. Well, Augustus Caesar wants them to reject the Roman culture because it's so powerful. Right? So, okay. So, this lecture is not about what happens in reality. This lecture is about the new conception of reality as introduced by the Roman Empire. Okay? But eventually this will become the new reality. It will take time.

Jiang

Okay? Okay. So, looking ahead the Romans will introduce a new idea that will make piety and obedience the cornerstone of society. Okay? This idea is called Christianity. Okay, looking ahead, right, I, like, this is not happening right now because the Roman conception is not as appealing as the Greek conception. Okay? But eventually the Romans will create a new religion called Christianity that will dominate and make piety the cornerstone of society and civilization. But looking ahead. Any questions? Okay. So, next class we will discuss Egypt.