Deck 5: Golden Age Athens and the Hellenic World: The School of Hellas

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Question
Socrates was brought to trial and condemned to death for

A)subversive behavior,impiety,and the corruption of Athens' youth.
B)engaging in homoerotic relationships with a politician.
C)speaking out against Athens' democratic system.
D)slandering the Sophists,and criticizing Pericles.
Use Space or
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to flip the card.
Question
Why were the Athenian citizens endowed with so much leisure time?

A)They imported their food,so they had no need to work the fields.
B)Revenue from the Delian League supported them.
C)Their humble living circumstances required minimal upkeep.
D)Slaves outnumbered Athenian citizens more than two to one.
Question
Doryphoros,or Spear Bearer was famous throughout the ancient world for its

A)use of the contrapposto stance.
B)deviation from Egyptian art.
C)demonstration of the sculptor's treatise on proportion.
D)use of nudity in the representation of the male body.
Question
Which of the following statements is true about Plato's idealistic Republic?

A)Men only would inhabit the city.
B)Citizens would be required to live in caves.
C)The arts would be banned.
D)Wine would be outlawed.
Question
The Sophists differed from the pre-Socratics in their focus on

A)the natural universe.
B)the actions of the gods.
C)the actions of human beings.
D)the basis of reality.
Question
Socrates differed from the Sophists,most notably,in his emphasis on

A)virtuous behavior.
B)humanism.
C)philosophical wisdom.
D)teaching.
Question
Why does Pericles claim in his funeral speech that Athens is "the school of Hellas"?

A)Athenians were the most educated of all the Greeks.
B)Athens boasted more philosophers as citizens.
C)Pericles established schools for all the Athenians.
D)Athens taught all of Greece by its example.
Question
The Parthenon's 40-foot ivory-and-gold statue of Athena was intended to represent

A)the Delian League's wealth.
B)the cult of the body.
C)Pericles's mistress,Aspasia.
D)Athens's political power.
Question
A common theme of many Greek tragedies is

A)the untimely death of a young protagonist.
B)conflict between an individual and the community.
C)treachery and murder among the upper class.
D)the threat of disguised foreigners to a city.
Question
The primary duty of women in Athenian society was to

A)maintain their husbands' businesses in the agora.
B)preside over their husbands' social activities.
C)produce male offspring for their husbands' households.
D)educate their children in reading and writing.
Question
Why did fifth-century BCE Greeks NOT see themselves as at the mercy of the gods?

A)They viewed their gods as benevolent,incapable of harming humans.
B)They believed natural forces were knowable,not punishment from a god.
C)They considered their fates to be of little interest to the gods.
D)They ceased to believe in the gods following the Persian War.
Question
Socrates and Plato share the notion that

A)each individual defines his own reality.
B)humans are capable of remembering the psyche's pure state.
C)man is the measure of all things.
D)all humans can become akin to the gods.
Question
Pericles commissioned the building of the Parthenon to

A)give thanks to Athena for Athens's salvation in the Persian Wars.
B)construct a treasury for the Delian League's funds.
C)provide employment for Athens's stonemasons and sculptors.
D)create a palace for himself that would rival the Persian Darius's.
Question
The development of contrapposto,or weight-shift,as in the Kritios Boy,seems to have been motivated by a desire to

A)dramatize the stories narrated in the decorative programs of temples and sanctuaries.
B)overturn the dictates of The Canon.
C)create a sculptural equivalent to entasis in architecture.
D)closely echo the writings of both Plato and Hippocrates.
Question
The chief occupation of typical Athenian citizens was

A)military service.
B)farming in the fields outside the polis.
C)work in one of the building trades.
D)the exercise of political duties.
Question
A komos,from which the word comedy is derived,is a

A)goat song.
B)drinking party.
C)phallic dance.
D)viewing space.
Question
The Greek word eudaimonia refers to

A)knowledge of the past.
B)success in athletics.
C)the good or flourishing life.
D)balance in all things.
Question
Drama was originally associated with the cult of

A)Mithras.
B)Isis.
C)Cybele.
D)Dionysus.
Question
Athens's Golden Age began and ended,respectively,with

A)victory over the Persians and defeat by Sparta.
B)the rise of Cleisthenes and the death of Pericles.
C)victory over the Spartans and the death of Socrates.
D)the rise of Alexander the Great and the death of Cleopatra.
Question
Sophocles's Antigone opposes her uncle,Creon,because she believes that

A)burying her brother is her democratic right.
B)Creon has denied her rights because she is female.
C)Creon unrightfully banished her father,Oedipus.
D)Creon has seized her father's throne unlawfully.
Question
Discuss the change in sculpture from the rigid Archaic (see Chap.4)to the more natural Classical of Athens' Golden Age in terms of the latter's reflection of a higher mathematical order and emphasis on the ideal harmony between the natural world and the intellectual or spiritual realm.
Question
Praxiteles's Aphrodite of Knidos maybe the first Greek sculpture to

A)aspire to a physical ideal.
B)impart sexual allure to the human form.
C)represent a fully nude woman.
D)represent a god in human form.
Question
Consider the role drama-both comedy and tragedy-played in the Greeks' understanding and pursuit of eudaimonia,"the good or flourishing life."
Question
Compare and contrast the role,position,and views of Athenian women with those of Spartan women,connecting these roles,positions,and views with what you know about the two societies in general.
Question
Compare a Classical statue (Doryphoros)to a Hellenistic one (Apoxyomenos),focusing on form and effect.
Question
During Alexander's time there was a growing taste for representations of men and women

A)with a quality of symmetria.
B)in dreamy,contemplative moods.
C)posed with contrapposto.
D)at an imposing scale.
Question
Aristotle considered catharsis to be important to a tragedy because it

A)instigated change in the audience.
B)completed the plot.
C)caused the protagonist to seem realistic.
D)elicited intellectual responses from the audience.
Question
Explore the Hellenistic use of art as propaganda,using Lysippus's likeness of Alexander the Great and Epigonos's (?)Dying Gaul as primary examples.
Question
According to Aristotle,one might attain the "good life" by

A)studying the works of the great philosophers.
B)balancing action between extremes of behavior.
C)experimenting and formulating a hypothesis.
D)discovering the essence of an individual.
Question
Hellenistic sculpture can be equated with Aristotle's idea of catharsis because both

A)portray brutal realism with characters.
B)require figures in tragic circumstances.
C)aim to elicit the viewer's emotional response.
D)involve subjects in high social positions.
Question
According to Aristotle,a person could come to know universal truths by

A)stripping away prejudice and historical conditioning.
B)studying the universal Forms of Justice,Beauty,and Love.
C)discovering how each individual human defines reality.
D)observing the material world itself,in which reality exists.
Question
Citing specifics,compare the primary concerns of the pre-Socratic philosophers to those of the Sophists,Socrates,Plato,and Aristotle.How are the two groups two sides of the same coin,and how did they together help to lay the groundwork for the Greeks' eudaimonia?
Question
Argue for or against Pericles's decision to rebuild Athens' Acropolis based upon his rationale and the funding source.
Question
Explore the relationship between Aristotle's Golden Mean and the Greek concepts of arête (see Chap.4)and eudaimonia.
Question
Match between columns
Aristotle
Medea
Aristotle
Lysistrata
Aristotle
Poetics
Aristotle
The scraper
Aristotle
Athena Parthenos
Aristotle
The Republic
Aristotle
The canon
Aristotle
Aphrodite of knidos
Aristotle
Antigone
Aristotle
History of the Peloponnesian Wars
Aristophane
Medea
Aristophane
Lysistrata
Aristophane
Poetics
Aristophane
The scraper
Aristophane
Athena Parthenos
Aristophane
The Republic
Aristophane
The canon
Aristophane
Aphrodite of knidos
Aristophane
Antigone
Aristophane
History of the Peloponnesian Wars
Sophocles
Medea
Sophocles
Lysistrata
Sophocles
Poetics
Sophocles
The scraper
Sophocles
Athena Parthenos
Sophocles
The Republic
Sophocles
The canon
Sophocles
Aphrodite of knidos
Sophocles
Antigone
Sophocles
History of the Peloponnesian Wars
Lysippus
Medea
Lysippus
Lysistrata
Lysippus
Poetics
Lysippus
The scraper
Lysippus
Athena Parthenos
Lysippus
The Republic
Lysippus
The canon
Lysippus
Aphrodite of knidos
Lysippus
Antigone
Lysippus
History of the Peloponnesian Wars
Thucydides
Medea
Thucydides
Lysistrata
Thucydides
Poetics
Thucydides
The scraper
Thucydides
Athena Parthenos
Thucydides
The Republic
Thucydides
The canon
Thucydides
Aphrodite of knidos
Thucydides
Antigone
Thucydides
History of the Peloponnesian Wars
Praxiteles
Medea
Praxiteles
Lysistrata
Praxiteles
Poetics
Praxiteles
The scraper
Praxiteles
Athena Parthenos
Praxiteles
The Republic
Praxiteles
The canon
Praxiteles
Aphrodite of knidos
Praxiteles
Antigone
Praxiteles
History of the Peloponnesian Wars
Polyclitus
Medea
Polyclitus
Lysistrata
Polyclitus
Poetics
Polyclitus
The scraper
Polyclitus
Athena Parthenos
Polyclitus
The Republic
Polyclitus
The canon
Polyclitus
Aphrodite of knidos
Polyclitus
Antigone
Polyclitus
History of the Peloponnesian Wars
Phidias
Medea
Phidias
Lysistrata
Phidias
Poetics
Phidias
The scraper
Phidias
Athena Parthenos
Phidias
The Republic
Phidias
The canon
Phidias
Aphrodite of knidos
Phidias
Antigone
Phidias
History of the Peloponnesian Wars
Plato
Medea
Plato
Lysistrata
Plato
Poetics
Plato
The scraper
Plato
Athena Parthenos
Plato
The Republic
Plato
The canon
Plato
Aphrodite of knidos
Plato
Antigone
Plato
History of the Peloponnesian Wars
Euripides
Medea
Euripides
Lysistrata
Euripides
Poetics
Euripides
The scraper
Euripides
Athena Parthenos
Euripides
The Republic
Euripides
The canon
Euripides
Aphrodite of knidos
Euripides
Antigone
Euripides
History of the Peloponnesian Wars
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Deck 5: Golden Age Athens and the Hellenic World: The School of Hellas
1
Socrates was brought to trial and condemned to death for

A)subversive behavior,impiety,and the corruption of Athens' youth.
B)engaging in homoerotic relationships with a politician.
C)speaking out against Athens' democratic system.
D)slandering the Sophists,and criticizing Pericles.
A
2
Why were the Athenian citizens endowed with so much leisure time?

A)They imported their food,so they had no need to work the fields.
B)Revenue from the Delian League supported them.
C)Their humble living circumstances required minimal upkeep.
D)Slaves outnumbered Athenian citizens more than two to one.
D
3
Doryphoros,or Spear Bearer was famous throughout the ancient world for its

A)use of the contrapposto stance.
B)deviation from Egyptian art.
C)demonstration of the sculptor's treatise on proportion.
D)use of nudity in the representation of the male body.
C
4
Which of the following statements is true about Plato's idealistic Republic?

A)Men only would inhabit the city.
B)Citizens would be required to live in caves.
C)The arts would be banned.
D)Wine would be outlawed.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
The Sophists differed from the pre-Socratics in their focus on

A)the natural universe.
B)the actions of the gods.
C)the actions of human beings.
D)the basis of reality.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Socrates differed from the Sophists,most notably,in his emphasis on

A)virtuous behavior.
B)humanism.
C)philosophical wisdom.
D)teaching.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Why does Pericles claim in his funeral speech that Athens is "the school of Hellas"?

A)Athenians were the most educated of all the Greeks.
B)Athens boasted more philosophers as citizens.
C)Pericles established schools for all the Athenians.
D)Athens taught all of Greece by its example.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
The Parthenon's 40-foot ivory-and-gold statue of Athena was intended to represent

A)the Delian League's wealth.
B)the cult of the body.
C)Pericles's mistress,Aspasia.
D)Athens's political power.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
A common theme of many Greek tragedies is

A)the untimely death of a young protagonist.
B)conflict between an individual and the community.
C)treachery and murder among the upper class.
D)the threat of disguised foreigners to a city.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
The primary duty of women in Athenian society was to

A)maintain their husbands' businesses in the agora.
B)preside over their husbands' social activities.
C)produce male offspring for their husbands' households.
D)educate their children in reading and writing.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Why did fifth-century BCE Greeks NOT see themselves as at the mercy of the gods?

A)They viewed their gods as benevolent,incapable of harming humans.
B)They believed natural forces were knowable,not punishment from a god.
C)They considered their fates to be of little interest to the gods.
D)They ceased to believe in the gods following the Persian War.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Socrates and Plato share the notion that

A)each individual defines his own reality.
B)humans are capable of remembering the psyche's pure state.
C)man is the measure of all things.
D)all humans can become akin to the gods.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Pericles commissioned the building of the Parthenon to

A)give thanks to Athena for Athens's salvation in the Persian Wars.
B)construct a treasury for the Delian League's funds.
C)provide employment for Athens's stonemasons and sculptors.
D)create a palace for himself that would rival the Persian Darius's.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
The development of contrapposto,or weight-shift,as in the Kritios Boy,seems to have been motivated by a desire to

A)dramatize the stories narrated in the decorative programs of temples and sanctuaries.
B)overturn the dictates of The Canon.
C)create a sculptural equivalent to entasis in architecture.
D)closely echo the writings of both Plato and Hippocrates.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
The chief occupation of typical Athenian citizens was

A)military service.
B)farming in the fields outside the polis.
C)work in one of the building trades.
D)the exercise of political duties.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
A komos,from which the word comedy is derived,is a

A)goat song.
B)drinking party.
C)phallic dance.
D)viewing space.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
The Greek word eudaimonia refers to

A)knowledge of the past.
B)success in athletics.
C)the good or flourishing life.
D)balance in all things.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Drama was originally associated with the cult of

A)Mithras.
B)Isis.
C)Cybele.
D)Dionysus.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Athens's Golden Age began and ended,respectively,with

A)victory over the Persians and defeat by Sparta.
B)the rise of Cleisthenes and the death of Pericles.
C)victory over the Spartans and the death of Socrates.
D)the rise of Alexander the Great and the death of Cleopatra.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Sophocles's Antigone opposes her uncle,Creon,because she believes that

A)burying her brother is her democratic right.
B)Creon has denied her rights because she is female.
C)Creon unrightfully banished her father,Oedipus.
D)Creon has seized her father's throne unlawfully.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Discuss the change in sculpture from the rigid Archaic (see Chap.4)to the more natural Classical of Athens' Golden Age in terms of the latter's reflection of a higher mathematical order and emphasis on the ideal harmony between the natural world and the intellectual or spiritual realm.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Praxiteles's Aphrodite of Knidos maybe the first Greek sculpture to

A)aspire to a physical ideal.
B)impart sexual allure to the human form.
C)represent a fully nude woman.
D)represent a god in human form.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Consider the role drama-both comedy and tragedy-played in the Greeks' understanding and pursuit of eudaimonia,"the good or flourishing life."
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Compare and contrast the role,position,and views of Athenian women with those of Spartan women,connecting these roles,positions,and views with what you know about the two societies in general.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Compare a Classical statue (Doryphoros)to a Hellenistic one (Apoxyomenos),focusing on form and effect.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
During Alexander's time there was a growing taste for representations of men and women

A)with a quality of symmetria.
B)in dreamy,contemplative moods.
C)posed with contrapposto.
D)at an imposing scale.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Aristotle considered catharsis to be important to a tragedy because it

A)instigated change in the audience.
B)completed the plot.
C)caused the protagonist to seem realistic.
D)elicited intellectual responses from the audience.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Explore the Hellenistic use of art as propaganda,using Lysippus's likeness of Alexander the Great and Epigonos's (?)Dying Gaul as primary examples.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
According to Aristotle,one might attain the "good life" by

A)studying the works of the great philosophers.
B)balancing action between extremes of behavior.
C)experimenting and formulating a hypothesis.
D)discovering the essence of an individual.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Hellenistic sculpture can be equated with Aristotle's idea of catharsis because both

A)portray brutal realism with characters.
B)require figures in tragic circumstances.
C)aim to elicit the viewer's emotional response.
D)involve subjects in high social positions.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
According to Aristotle,a person could come to know universal truths by

A)stripping away prejudice and historical conditioning.
B)studying the universal Forms of Justice,Beauty,and Love.
C)discovering how each individual human defines reality.
D)observing the material world itself,in which reality exists.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Citing specifics,compare the primary concerns of the pre-Socratic philosophers to those of the Sophists,Socrates,Plato,and Aristotle.How are the two groups two sides of the same coin,and how did they together help to lay the groundwork for the Greeks' eudaimonia?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Argue for or against Pericles's decision to rebuild Athens' Acropolis based upon his rationale and the funding source.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Explore the relationship between Aristotle's Golden Mean and the Greek concepts of arête (see Chap.4)and eudaimonia.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Match between columns
Aristotle
Medea
Aristotle
Lysistrata
Aristotle
Poetics
Aristotle
The scraper
Aristotle
Athena Parthenos
Aristotle
The Republic
Aristotle
The canon
Aristotle
Aphrodite of knidos
Aristotle
Antigone
Aristotle
History of the Peloponnesian Wars
Aristophane
Medea
Aristophane
Lysistrata
Aristophane
Poetics
Aristophane
The scraper
Aristophane
Athena Parthenos
Aristophane
The Republic
Aristophane
The canon
Aristophane
Aphrodite of knidos
Aristophane
Antigone
Aristophane
History of the Peloponnesian Wars
Sophocles
Medea
Sophocles
Lysistrata
Sophocles
Poetics
Sophocles
The scraper
Sophocles
Athena Parthenos
Sophocles
The Republic
Sophocles
The canon
Sophocles
Aphrodite of knidos
Sophocles
Antigone
Sophocles
History of the Peloponnesian Wars
Lysippus
Medea
Lysippus
Lysistrata
Lysippus
Poetics
Lysippus
The scraper
Lysippus
Athena Parthenos
Lysippus
The Republic
Lysippus
The canon
Lysippus
Aphrodite of knidos
Lysippus
Antigone
Lysippus
History of the Peloponnesian Wars
Thucydides
Medea
Thucydides
Lysistrata
Thucydides
Poetics
Thucydides
The scraper
Thucydides
Athena Parthenos
Thucydides
The Republic
Thucydides
The canon
Thucydides
Aphrodite of knidos
Thucydides
Antigone
Thucydides
History of the Peloponnesian Wars
Praxiteles
Medea
Praxiteles
Lysistrata
Praxiteles
Poetics
Praxiteles
The scraper
Praxiteles
Athena Parthenos
Praxiteles
The Republic
Praxiteles
The canon
Praxiteles
Aphrodite of knidos
Praxiteles
Antigone
Praxiteles
History of the Peloponnesian Wars
Polyclitus
Medea
Polyclitus
Lysistrata
Polyclitus
Poetics
Polyclitus
The scraper
Polyclitus
Athena Parthenos
Polyclitus
The Republic
Polyclitus
The canon
Polyclitus
Aphrodite of knidos
Polyclitus
Antigone
Polyclitus
History of the Peloponnesian Wars
Phidias
Medea
Phidias
Lysistrata
Phidias
Poetics
Phidias
The scraper
Phidias
Athena Parthenos
Phidias
The Republic
Phidias
The canon
Phidias
Aphrodite of knidos
Phidias
Antigone
Phidias
History of the Peloponnesian Wars
Plato
Medea
Plato
Lysistrata
Plato
Poetics
Plato
The scraper
Plato
Athena Parthenos
Plato
The Republic
Plato
The canon
Plato
Aphrodite of knidos
Plato
Antigone
Plato
History of the Peloponnesian Wars
Euripides
Medea
Euripides
Lysistrata
Euripides
Poetics
Euripides
The scraper
Euripides
Athena Parthenos
Euripides
The Republic
Euripides
The canon
Euripides
Aphrodite of knidos
Euripides
Antigone
Euripides
History of the Peloponnesian Wars
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.