As the next step in our introduction to our broad topic here of Greek and Roman mythology. I thought it would be good for us to take a look at a real ancient hero, and focus in on that character. And then, talk about that for just a second. So, soon enough, momentarily the lecture's gonna pause. And then there's gonna pop up a screen with a link on it. Just click on that link, have a look at the pictures there. And then, come on back to course, and we'll talk about what you just saw. So. Wait a minute, you're saying that's not a real ancient hero that we just saw. That's just this guy, Kevin Sorbo, who played Hercules in a campy United States version of a TV drama for kids back in the 1990's, produced by Sam Raimi. Good, good Sam, excellent good work there. But you kind of wonder this has nothing to do with this course right. This is just a version of the hero that has nothing to do with the ancient version. I mean you look at him and he's got this wispy hairstyle that's clearly an artifact of his time. He is bulky like a hero would be but his muscles are not chiseled. He doesn't seem to be too violent. He kind of approachable, He seems to be kind and gentle even. Ancient heroes are tough and there is a lot blood, and they are cunning, and they are extraordinarily effective in this kind of businesslike way when it comes down to getting down, comes time to getting down to business. This guy doesn't seem like that at all. So that can't have something to do with our course, can it? Well, let's advance a little bit and take a look at another version of this figure we're talking about. Okay. You will recognize here another version of what Hercules is all about. In this one, we're thinking to ourselves, well this looks a little bit more ancient. There it is, carved in stone. That's something that's clearly ancient. Looks like he's kind of a chiseled figure and a little bit frightening. So, okay, fair enough. And we see that he's got a lion skin there. And there's a club right next to him. And knowing what we know about Hercules, that's, clearly these are aspects of, of the real Hercules. So, this thing must be closer to what the real Hercules is all about than that, Kevin Sorbo thing that we saw. So, all this. All seems to be a little bit better. But let's take a little bit of a closer look at this representation. Well, you know. First of all what we have in front of us is actually, not a statue is it? It is just a well it's a computer image of a, representation of a statue that was originally. You can see here looking at the details involved an etching. And this etching is made in the nineteenth century. And looking over the details of this particular figure focusing in on the middle parts for example, there's a fig leaf right there. Well the Greeks didn't do fig leaves. At the time that this etching was made it seemed to be the parts in the middle were thought to be a little bit naughty. So they were covered up well Greeks and Romans didn't think that. So, we've already got kind of one removed from our you know, what we think is gonna be our real hero. We'll take another half step back and think about this for a second. The etching that this is a representation of on your computer screens was itself, made of some real ancient statue. Isn't that true? Well, yes and no. It was made of a Roman version of an ancient statue. So we go back one more representation and the etching is made of a real Roman statue. And, and the Romans had ideas about Hercules. In fact, they invented the name Hercules. He was made up on a Greek precedent of the Roman figure who dates back well before the Romans. So if we're looking for the real Hercules, we're going to have to go back, earlier than this Roman, statue. Well, the Roman statue is actually a copy of a Greek original that exists, many hundreds of years before the Roman statue that made up the, the subject matter for our etching. So the Greek original that must be where the real Hercules lived, right? And, in fact knowing what we do know we'll turn back the page one more set of centuries and see that the Romans are the first that invented the name Hercules. They base it on a Greek original, but the Greek original's pronounced differently. It's Heracles, close enough, but that wasn't a euphemus sounding, Roman kind of name. So they, just went ahead and changed it. So if we're looking for the true. Hercules. We're gonna have to go back to Heracles, which is the Greek original on which the Roman copy is based. Well, taking, liberty and assuming that our Roman copy is a utterly faithful Roman copy of a Greek original. And we're thinking to ourselves, okay. So we've got a etching of a Roman copy of a Greek original statue. And that Greek original statue surely must be what the real Hercules was about. Well, there's another problem with that. The Greek original on which the Roman copy, was based is only dates from, the end of classical times in ancient, Greece. and it really doesn't relate to mythic times. fortheGreeks. Those were already many, many centuries prior to classical Greece. So, where's the real Hercules and where are we gonna find him? Chances are we're really never gonna find him. A myth is a story that is always being retold. Searching around for some original moments, some originary version from which we can then talk about all the others as just being made up accretions. We're not gonna be able to do that. We're not gonna find ground truth when it comes to myth. In fact, I think myth defies our attempts to try to find some pure authentic representation of any of the great stories we're interested in. Myth is always going to be not just a telling but a retelling. These stores have existed functionally forever, and have been told and retold over generations. Subject matter they focus on has to do with our figure right here, this amazing person Heracles. Look at his strength, his capability. He's got right there his lion skin next to him as a trophy for a wild beast that he killed. He's got his club, so there's violence involved. There's edginess to what we're going to see these heroes are utterly really capable; their hands are incredibly strong. They just get stuff done. And they do it without thinking a lot about things. They're crafty, they're clever when they need to be, but when things need to get done, they just get it done. Or heroes are gonna be someone that we spend lots of time talking about. And when we talk about our figures like Odisius, or we'll talk about Oedipus, or any of the other arrestings, any of the other figures we're gonna talk about, we're gonna talk about versions of them by different poets, different myth tellers who go ahead and add their version of the story to long traditions. We're never gonna find very original. One, as we've already talked about, Homer, that great poet, Homer was already working at a time when lots of traditional versions were around him. His versions became extremely authoritative. But it's not, in any way the case that we're gonna be saying that Homer is the, kind of final answer, or Ovid is the final answer, or, Virgil is the final answer. All of the different versions of the myths we're gonna be seeing are just that. They're versions. And they're gonna help us get a window into what it is we're looking at. Now, in terms. As a subject matter, we're going to see lots of stuff in these myths. The thing that probably is most prominent in all of them is you and me. This species, of what it is to be human. This kind of question of what it is to be human is going to animate these storytellers and bring them to some of their highest heights. We're pretty amazing creatures. I mean, look at this, fellow right here. It seems like he's gonna hurl that discus five miles. He's got an amazing physique, beautiful form, worthy of representation. Not only can you appreciate the physical form behind the representation, but then you can also add a certain wonder at the representational art itself. Humans are capable of the great feats that this fellow represented is and also the feat of representation that the artist who made this statue represents for us. So, we're going to be front and center, we as humans, the human family are going to be front and center, in our midst. We're also going to spend a lot of time looking at this little fellow and his, brethren. Pigs, cows, bulls, animals of all kinds are going to populate our mythic stories. They're interesting to these ancients. They want to know how these. Animal tick, and particularly where you and I as human beings fit in relation to them. Also, there will be times when you and I as humans are gonna rely on animals to help us out. We can see here a famous characterization, those of you who already know the story of the cyclops will recognize Odysseus using a ram to help him escape the evil attack of the monster, the cyclops. And you and I as human beings are gonna rely on these animals to help us and having some connection with them is a beneficial thing. Heroes demonstrate that they have that. So, we're looking at humans, we're looking at animals and then lest we think that, that line between the two of us. As a groupings is distinct and utterly has never transgressed. Just have a look at the figure behind me here. Famously represented in Greek art you'll, you'll know there are these creatures that are half human and half animal. They're looked at with usually a certain kind of spookyness to them. They might have a role to play in society but they're not quite like you and I and we don't hang around with them. But we do hear about them and they will populate some interesting corners of our mythic tails. Now the other side of us on the one hand we've got the animals down beneath us. And then the half. Human, half animal mid-level creatures. On the other side we're going to meet the gods. The gods typically appear to us in visions so when we see mythic times representing a kind of usual interaction between humans and gods the gods will come down disguised. They may come down in dreams they may come down in a vision during the day with some kind of disguise on so they're representing themselves as if they were a mortal girl, or an old man, or whatever it might be. These disguises let them walk among us without us quite knowing. Usually what we'll see in the myths is that the smart people, the, the smartest people and the greatest heroes, they kind of know anyway. They can kinda tell when the gods are around. Dumb people never can. But when those gods are around, they have important things to do. And they're interested, interestingly, in you and I. This figure here, pretty imposing guy. Hello, Apollo. The fact that I'm looking at him eye-to-eye right now is already an offense. Sorry Apollo. I didn't mean to do that. You don't want to get Apollo mad at you. Gods are going to exist up there. Yeah, they'll come down, we'll see visions of them, but mostly their world is not our world. You and I are different from the gods. Real humans, in order to really know what they're all about, know that they're different from the gods. And when they speak of the gods they're, they speak with awe, reverence. The gods are in, in a world apart. And we usually don't see eye to eye with them in any way. We try to keep our distance in a respectful way and when we do have interactions with them, the gods call the shots. As they control what's happening. And you and I need to always respect that. Now another class of beings that we have to get ready for before we move on this fellow right next to me here. We saw Odysseus escaping his cave in the earlier slide. Our friend here, the cyclops. You can see the eye in the middle of his forehead. This guy is gonna run into some nasty treatment in our epic. We're gonna read Homer's Odyssey for, at a kind of nice slow and deliberate way the first few weeks of class. And it'll give us a wonderful introduction to all kinds of mythic themes, it'll also introduce us to some of our most memorable ugliness, scenes of ugliness in ancient myth, including our monsters. In this figure the Cyclops is among the most famous of those. Cyclops, poor guy, one had one eye in the middle of his forehead. He's giant, he's huge. He's very strong but he's just not too bright; makes the mistake of crossing Odysseus. And you don't really want to do that. It's a bad thing. Odysseus gets the better of him. And, we, we'll have, occasion to learn all the details of his story when we move through, The Odyssey. Now, I wanted to take a little bit of a minute It's taking a step back, and thinking about. So what does it mean to study myth in a contemporary world? In our class. I mean, we're obviously not quite in the ancient past, are we? We're quite a far bit different from them. You and I live in a world of microchips. We're, our interaction right now has been enabled by, almost, a fantasy like, scientific technology that's so extraordinarily sophisticated that all of us are [inaudible] rightly in a sense of awe and wonder at our own capacities to connect with one another. It's really amazing. I mean I say this with utter sincerity. The world that we live in is absolutely different from our mythic world it has it's own magic, and it's own amazingness. And it's built on, isn't it this sense of connection and interconnectedness. We live in a deeply networked world made possible by the technology of silicon such as is seen behind me. Now it's also the case though, that in the past there have been other times when people have talked about the deep connectedness of their world. Lets just back up here and have and have a look at our scene. Imagine, in the 1930s, it was thought that, yes, indeed people out there in the wider world would benefit from the knowledge of our tweety professor here. I seem to lack facial hair. But, I hope to be as authoritative as this person looks, in the representation. Looking up at a technology called the blackboard, and using something called a television pickup and a transmitter, he's gonna beam out from his university, all the wondrous, knowledge that he has to share through the technology of the television receiver and the loudspeaker. There'll be people out in their homes that are gathering that information. For a professor, and amazing things are going to happen. Now having a look back at this picture and the fantasies of the 1930's that vision of connectedness that animates this pictures. Well, surely at the time it was understood to be Utopian, transformative, quite amazing and like nothing before. Because all of a sudden we were able to use this medium of radio waves to send signals all the way across the air. So what we now look to silicon to do for us to make us interconnected, back then they were amazed by the capacity. Air to make us connected. Well, this actually prompts us to maybe take a second look at this ancient world and ask ourselves, well, yeah, sure, we're different but how different exactly are we? We're connected, you and I by silicone. [inaudible] lets us, have our interconnectedness. Back, back in the'30s is it was radio waves. Well, back in Homer's day, there was indeed, amazing technology available to people to stay connected. To actually make contact with people in distant far away lands that they'd only ever heard of. That they may never have met before. And that, no two human beings from these cultures had ever even seen one another. The technology they used was shipping. And they used, the medium that they used was the sea. The Mediterranean Sea is another kind of character in our story of Greek and Roman myth. It is a great connecting force in the ancient world. A recent, scholarly treatment of the Mediterranean Sea dubbed it the. Corrupting sea, which, is a wonderfully apt, description of what the Mediterranean, what role the Mediterranean plays in antiquity. Those who are searching for purity of culture, for example, some. Peel back the window on some pure Greek [inaudible] through this course, I'm probably looking for the wrong kind of thing. The purity in the Ancient Mediterranean is ephemeral. It doesn't really exist. Cultures around the great Mediterranean Basin are always interacting with one another. Its part we think, of what makes the Mediterranean such a special place, is its inter-connectedness. A connected mind is an intelligent mind and the Greeks, yes, were. Indeed interconnected with cultures all around the Mediterranean via shipping links that had them trading for many, many generations. Before our historical records starts they had contact with cultures in the far Western Mediterranean and definitely in the Far Eastern Mediterranean. And if you think about it and go around the Mediterranean in your mind say that you went to Rome and rented a motorcycle, think of all the amazing cultures that you would see from the Italians to the French to the Spanish to the North Africans the ancient Carthage you would pass on your way past North Africa. You could go to Egypt, the ancient [inaudible]. The Israelites you'd see Turkey, you'd see back to Greece just extraordinarily rich and ancient societies. Now each of them has their own distinctive ways of doing things, but all of them share this Mediterranean background, and as we press forward in our course we're going to see not only that the stories that we're concentrating on giving us a window into Greece or Rome, they're also gonna open us up to broad Mediterranean themes that are relevant across this body. Now what we're gonna do for most of the course is focus in this. Earlier you noticed my Greek and Roman Mythology class has mostly Greek with the couple of weeks closing on the Romans that just happens to be my expertise, so that's we'll be focusing on, so we're going to spend a lot of time looking at this Greek world and understanding how it works, its different ways. Some of the things we're going to see are going to remind us of things that are immediately accessible to us we can understand the kinds of rules that are made, the kinds of values that are being held, other things are going to be Exceedingly strange. We're gonna wonder how in the world they could have thought that or how in the world they could have valued this over that. So keeping track of both what's similar and what's different is gonna be one of the most interesting pieces of what this course is all about. What we're really going to be doing is joining our friend here. We are. Yes. Indeed I think. In many ways, quite like [inaudible], in so far as we're just trying to figure something out. We're curious by nature. Human beings like to know stuff. And Oedipus is a wonderful example for myth of someone on a, a human being on a quest for knowledge, trying to figure this out. And here he is interviewing the Sphinx. And indeed, sometimes, like Oedipus, we're gonna get the better of the world and we're gonna figure out more than the Sphinx ever knew. We're gonna solve the Sphinx's riddle and make it go away. We might win one or two of these contests of knowledge. But then also, the story of Oedipus introduces us to some other things. We human beings [inaudible; The more ignorance are going to make mistakes. Mistakes will be a, a theme in our course of the mistakes that people make. And we'll also, in our own attempt to piece together this rich, complex world. We're going to make our own share of mistakes and try to figure it out. But I think back to that theme of connectedness, that connected mind is an intelligent mind. So let's all stay connected. And we're looking for your own jumping into the course through the forum and other ways for us to share what thoughts we have. This vibrant ancient world of mythic