Homeric psychology
id:
homeric-psychology-161-10606367
title:
Homeric psychology
text:
Homeric psychology is a field of study with regards to the psychology of ancient Greek culture no later than Mycenaean Greece, around 1700–1200 BCE, during the Homeric epic poems. The first scholar to present a theory was Bruno Snell in his 1953 German book. He argued that an ancient Greek person did not have a sense of self, and the Greek culture later "self-realized" or "discovered" what he considered the "modern intellect". Eric Robertson Dodds in 1951 wrote how ancient Greek thought may have
brand slug:
wiki
category slug:
encyclopedia
description:
original url:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homeric_psychology
date created:
2021-03-02T00:54:54Z
date modified:
2024-08-27T08:25:59Z
main entity:
{"identifier":"Q106432551","url":"https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q106432551"}
image:
fields total:
13
integrity:
14