What shall I read read when I've finished with the Greeks?
Return to the Reddits
>implying you'll start
The romans
>>9477788
http://explorer.opensyllabusproject.org/
Skip everything between Aristotle and Wittgenstein.
Depending on how pleb you are
>The Bible
>Virgil, Ovid, Lucretius, Tacitus, Cicero, Juvenal, Catullus, Plautus, Terence, Seneca, Epictetus, Marcus Aurelius, Julius Caesar, Saint Augustine, I rrmember no one else.
>The Greeks again
>The Bible again
>>9477788
Only because you have a full house, eights in sevens, do I deign to reply:
>the shirt uses eta for lowercase n
Is that how pic is Greek-related?
>>9477788
The romans/chuch fathers
>>9478048
I wouldn't recommend the bible unless one is reading it for religious reasons, in which case one should have already read the bible anyway.
>>9477788
1. Romans
2. Medieval Europe
3. Early Modern Europe (Renaissance & Enlightenment)
4. Pre-Modern World Literature
5. Modern Literature (Post-1789) by country
i. UK
ii. France
iii. Germany
iv. Russia
v. USA
vi. Canada, ANZAC and rest of Europe
vii. Latin America
viii. East Asia, South-East Asia, Oceania
xi South and West Asia
x. Africa
>>9478217
pic related
>>9480005
That isn't a useful post.
>>9480946
Are you seriously suggesting that you can read the bible effectively without believing in it? Most of the meaning is lost on someone who doesn't have the concept of monotheistic faith. I suppose you read it for the entertainment value? Fucking hedonist.
Please be kind to the poster above me; he has autism and is easily startled
>>9482036
It has literary and philosophical value.