Matthew’s Reviews > The Impulse of Power: Formative Ideals of Western Civilization > Status Update
Matthew
is on page 39 of 325
In the ideal of the hero there appeared the god-like qualities needed to imbue human goals with eternal value...Man, in Homer, begins to think of himself and his deeds as the product of the divine within himself, and although Homer still thought of those god-like features as coming to man from without, nevertheless he regarded them as innately human.
— Aug 21, 2020 03:39AM
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Matthew’s Previous Updates
Matthew
is on page 94 of 325
"In Syria Monasticism produced the concept of the holy man, a man to be reckoned with, a man capable of bringing upon the surrounding communities, and on the great cities, blessings or curses. Superstition and divination continued to be practiced in the name of Christianity."
— Aug 28, 2020 11:40PM
Matthew
is on page 64 of 325
"Philosophy (science), in Pythagoras’s view, is the means to the divinization
of man. When the soul, through much labor, has at last gazed upon the harmony and order of the divine cosmos, it will itself become harmonious and ordered, a belief that will re-emerge at the outset of the modern world with the Renaissance."
— Aug 23, 2020 11:05AM
of man. When the soul, through much labor, has at last gazed upon the harmony and order of the divine cosmos, it will itself become harmonious and ordered, a belief that will re-emerge at the outset of the modern world with the Renaissance."

