Thucydides and the Passions of City Life
This dissertation examines the role of the passions in political life in Thucydides’ work, reading Thucydides to a large degree as a political psychologist, focused on what motivates citizens and cities to take the actions that they do. It does so by looking at paradigmatic episodes in Thucydides’ narrative, namely those episodes that show a link between passions and the city. It concludes that cities are founded to provide for material security but that, once born, they give rise to certain passions that drive the city onward to its growth and eventual decay. There is something ultimately tragic about human life. Finally, it examines the relationship of the passions to rationality, concluding that a truly capacious rationality acknowledges the ineradicable element of the irrational in human life.
History
Date Modified
2020-05-24Defense Date
2019-12-11CIP Code
- 45.1001
Research Director(s)
Susan D. CollinsCommittee Members
Catherine H. Zuckert Michael P. ZuckertDegree
- Doctor of Philosophy
Degree Level
- Doctoral Dissertation
Language
- English
Alternate Identifier
1155203557Library Record
5503707OCLC Number
1155203557Additional Groups
- Political Science
Program Name
- Political Science