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24 Jul 2011 10:09 AM #51Senior Apprentice

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Re: Modern Human Needs and Hellenic Religion
For the Pythagoreans rebirth was a merit for a virtuous life. According to the philosophy of Plato the souls had chosen for their physical life in the beyond. By Julian and Saloustios the metempsychosis (and rebirth) was dependent on a souls previous life on earth. In opposite to that the christians had rejected the metemspychosis in 325 on the council of Nicäa. For that reason a failed soul has no chance to improve in a second or any following life on the christian concept. But on the Hellenist path a soul can liberate itself throughout its reincarnations. There is hope in our afterlife!
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24 Jul 2011 10:41 AM #52Journeyman


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Re: Modern Human Needs and Hellenic Religion
There is no inherent meaning to life. Stop looking and give your life meaning.
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Chapter 91 of The Order War by L.E.Modesitt jr. If I could quote the entire thing I would.
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24 Jul 2011 11:28 AM #53Senior Apprentice

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Re: Modern Human Needs and Hellenic Religion
Last edited by Haganrix; 24 Jul 2011 at 11:28 AM. Reason: Correction
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24 Jul 2011 05:40 PM #54Apprentice

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Re: Modern Human Needs and Hellenic Religion
"The gods are cut off from that fate which is bound to the possibility of death. And so they are caught, frozen and preserved in their perfection, 'eternal beings', aien eontes." - Greek Religion by W. Burkert
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24 Jul 2011 06:06 PM #55
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24 Jul 2011 06:37 PM #56Master Member



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Re: Modern Human Needs and Hellenic Religion
Neoplatonism was a very late development in terms of Greek civilization, and Julian was a Roman hellenophile who idealized Greek polytheism during the decline of paganism. His version of paganism was quite different than traditional Greek polytheism from before Roman conquest. I don't doubt Julian's piety was sincere, but I don't see him as being as relevant to modern Hellenic polytheism as some people want to make him seem. Many foreign gods were worshipped in Rome at his time, and Neoplatonism does not represent the the views of the majority. Plato lived near the end of the Classical Period, and only the intellectual elite were familiar with his unorthodox take on cosmology. It has no relevance for how early Greek religion developed from the Archaic Period to the Classical. My opinion is that Platonic philosophy was the ancient Greek equivalent of the modern New Age movement or the celebrity fascination with Kabbalah. It was something the well-off people pursued as an alternative to traditional religion, though traditional worship was still popular with the common people.
Well, Greek ideas about the afterlife were so varied, there wasn't really a consensus about what happened after death. Generally speaking, they believed in the Underworld ruled by Hades, which was a gloomy place where the shades of dead people wandered around aimlessly for eternity. Some believed in Elysion and Tartaros, some believed dead souls inhabited beans and were reborn when a woman got pregnant by eating those beans. The more alternative cults and philosophical movements believed in the transmigration of souls, but it wasn't a common idea in ancient Greece.
It was a contrast to a culture like Egypt, where the majority of people did believe in a specific afterlife, the paradise of Osiris. Unlike the commonly gloomy conception of the afterlife in Greece, Egyptians believed that the world of the dead was an idealized version of the world of the living. This is probably why the Isis cult experienced popularity in the Greco-Roman world, and Christianity was probably embraced because it was similar to the foreign cults and philosophical schools that were popular during the Roman period, long after the glory days of the Hellenic civilization, which by then was just a Roman province.
There were a lot of social and political changes going on at the time, it wasn't like Hellenic civilization was eternally glorious until the evil Christians came and destroyed everything. It had long since peaked and declined by the time Christianity came around, and Rome was the major power, which extended so far, later Roman culture became such a mix of many different things. Most of the later Roman emperors weren't even Italian and hadn't even been to Italy. My personal opinion is that another reason Christianity was embraced by Roman emperors after Constantine (except for everyone's hero, the pretty insignificant Julian), was that it offered a way to unite the empire under one God and one faith, rather than maintaining the chaotic open system of paganism as the empire expanded to include many foreign lands and new gods.
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24 Jul 2011 06:49 PM #57Staff
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Re: Modern Human Needs and Hellenic Religion
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24 Jul 2011 07:07 PM #58Apprentice

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Re: Modern Human Needs and Hellenic Religion
I'm definitely not going to argue about Ancient Egypt's views on the afterlife because I agree with you on that. And I do agree that it was probably because of that that foreign cults were popular in the Roman Empire.
I see that the reason you think Greek thoughts about the afterlife are less developed is because there was basically no consensus about it when compared to the other religions.
And no one is saying that Christians are evil; I was just curious as to why you thought so."The gods are cut off from that fate which is bound to the possibility of death. And so they are caught, frozen and preserved in their perfection, 'eternal beings', aien eontes." - Greek Religion by W. Burkert
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24 Jul 2011 07:11 PM #59Staff
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Re: Modern Human Needs and Hellenic Religion
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24 Jul 2011 07:39 PM #60Apprentice

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Re: Modern Human Needs and Hellenic Religion
I meant "why you thought so" was why he thought that Greek afterlife was less developed. Sorry for that. But he did say it in a sarcastic way which didn't make sense since no one was referring to Christians as evil at all.
EDIT: And by "it" I mean evil Christians. Lol antecedents.
Last edited by Astani; 24 Jul 2011 at 07:41 PM. Reason: lol
"The gods are cut off from that fate which is bound to the possibility of death. And so they are caught, frozen and preserved in their perfection, 'eternal beings', aien eontes." - Greek Religion by W. Burkert
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