![]() Therefore, this is the goal that I propose (trying not to fall into a "gossip" banal and useless of history), I intend to collect tens, hundreds or even thousands of anecdotes and curiosities of the ancient Greco-Roman world that have some meaning for us today and I wil guides potentially serve as guides to our present and future. But the lives of our ancestors are also made up of countless less interesting or unimportant little facts, details and anecdotes.Most historical scholars usually do not deal with these details, although many of them are truly interesting, appealing, insightful and often even important. That history, no matter how unclear or imperfect it may be, is always a partial interpretation based on some generally important facts. Even those people that minimize the value of history would be foolish to dismiss our own past experience or to dismiss the experience of beings who once famously were so similar to us and lived centuries or millenniums ago. Past experience is undoubtedly useful to us. He lived in the first century BC, from year 106 to 43 BC. As Cicero, the philosopher and thinker said, “ History is the the teacher of life” ( magistra vitae). They analyze the facts and draw general conclusions that can be used in our lives today. Generally, the search for knowledge from the past is a matter for historians. Who knows the ancient world, he has the temptation to assume, again and again, the phrase from Ecclesiastes I, 10 (one of the books of the biblical canon) " nihil novum sub sole", " there is nothing new under the sun" he has de temptation to think that everything is already said or done before. We empathize with an ancient love poem, we are moved with by Greek tragedy, we are excited about watching a Doric temple of exact proportions, we are fascinated with a perfect classical sculpture and we are stunned by a slender Roman aqueduct. We find that the tools we use today have changed and improved greatly, but our feelings, our relationships, our ideas and our hopes and desires are essentially the same. Understanding the past reveals that deep down we are very similar to our ancestors. It gives also us self-confidence with regard to our present way of life, where everything runs very quickly and is very ephemeral or short-lived. Specifically it gives us insight about who or how we are. We certainly study the past with great interest because it helps us to explain ourselves. That period was an essential part of our past. ![]() In our western culture, we feel particularly attracted to the Greek and Roman past, to the so called " Classical Antiquity". Without going any further into these philosophical questions, the truth is that in very general terms, mankind is very interested and attracted by the past, by history. At that present moment, past and future are updated. Actually, everything is present, although present is a fleeting moment. Man is a being, perhaps the only one with a vital consciousness of time: past, present and future. Why are we so interested in the “old world”? Probably because it is not as old as some people could think …
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