Test Bank: Sources of the Western Tradition Volume I From Ancient Times to the Enlightenment, 10th Edition, Marvin Perry, ISBN-10: 1337397601, ISBN-13: 9781337397605
Table of Contents
VOLUME I
Part I: THE ANCIENT WORLD.
1. The Near East.
Epic of Gilgamesh: Mesopotamian Protest against Death — Poem of the Righteous Sufferer: Forsaken by the Gods. Mesopotamian Concepts of Justice — Code of Hammurabi. Divine Kingship in Egypt — Hymns to the Pharaohs; Guidelines for the Ruler. Religious Inspiration of Akhenaten — Hymn to Aton. Empire Builders: The Assyrians and Persians — Inscription of Tiglath-Pileser I; Fusion of Cultural Tradition in Persian Empire. The Myth-Making Outlook of the Ancient Near East — Lament for Ur.
2. The Hebrews.
Hebrew Cosmogony and Anthropology — Genesis. Human Sinfulness — Genesis, The Origins of Sin. The Covenant and the Ten Commandments — Exodus, The Covenant; Exodus, The Ten Commandments. Humaneness of Hebrew Law — Exodus, Crime and Punishment; Leviticus, Neighbor and Community; Deuteronomy, Judges, Witnesses, and Justice. God’s Greatness and Human Dignity — Psalm 8; Psalm 104. The Age of Classical Prophecy — Amos and Isaiah, Social Justice; Isaiah, Peace and Humanity.
3. The Greeks.
Homer: The Educator of Greece — Homer, The Iliad. Lyric Poetry — Sappho, Love, Passion, and Friendship. The Emancipation of Thought from Myth — Hippocrates, The Sacred Disease: The Separation of Medicine from Myth; Thucydides, Method of Historical Inquiry; Critias, Religion as a Human Invention. Human Excellence and Weakness: Humanism and Hubris — Pindar, The Pursuit of Excellence; Aeschylus, Hubris. The Persian Wars — Herodotus, The Histories. Athenian Greatness — Thucydides, The Funeral Oration of Pericles. The Status of Women in Classical Greek Society — Euripedes, Medea; Aristophanes, Lysistrata. The Peloponnesian War — Thucydides, The Melian Dialogue and the Revolution at Corcyra. Socrates: The Rational Individual — Plato, The Apology. Plato: The Philosopher-King — Plato, Epistle VII; Plato, The Republic. Aristotle: Ethical and Political Thought — Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics; Aristotle, Politics. Hellenistic Culture: Rationalism, Universalism, and Individualism — Plutarch, Cultural Fusion; Plutarch, Alexander and Cultural Fusion; Epicurus, Self-Sufficiency; Philo Alexandria, Jewish Appreciation of Greek Culture and Synthesis of Reason Revelation.
4. The Roman Republic.
Rome’s March to World Empire — Polybius, The Roman Army; Frontinus, Enforcing Discipline. The Punic Wars — Livy, The Second Punic War: The Threat from Hannibal; Appian of Alexandria, The Third Punic War: The Destruction of Carthage. The Spread of Greek Philosophy to Rome — Lucretius, Denunciation of Religion; Cicero, Advocate of Stoicism; Cato the Elder, Hostility to Greek Philosophy. Roman Slavery — Diodorous Siculus, Slaves: Torment and Revolt; Appian of Alexandria, The Revolt of Spartacus. Women in Republican Society — Quintus Lucretius Vespillo, A Funeral Eulogy for a Roman Wife. The Decline of the Republic — Plutarch, Tiberius Gracchus; Cicero, Justifying Caesar’s Assassination; Dio Cassius, In Defense of Caesar and Monarchy; Velleius Paterculus, The Triumph of Octavian; Sallust, Moral Deterioration.
5. The Roman Empire.
The Imperial Office — Tacitus, The Imposition of One-Man Rule. Imperial Culture — Virgil, The Aeneid; Ovid, Art of Love; Quintilian, The Education of an Orator; Juvenal, The Satires. Roman Stoicism — Seneca, Stoic Humanitarianism; Marcus Aurelius, Meditations; Musonius Rufus, Enlightened Lectures on Women. Roman Law — Justinian, Corpus Iuris Civilis. The Roman Peace — Aelius Aristides, The Roman Oration: The Blessings of Pax Romana; Tacitus, The Other Side of The Pax Romana; Josephus, “nor does fear frighten them.” Third-Century Crisis — Dio Cassius, Caracalla’s Extortions; Petition to the Emperor Philip. The Demise of Rome — Ammianus Marcellinus, The Battle of Adrianople; Salvian, Political and Social Injustice; Saint Jerome, The Fate of Rome; Pope Gregory I, The End of Roman Glory.
6. Early Christianity.
The Teachings of Jesus — The Gospel According to Saint Mark; The Gospel According to Saint Matthew. The Dead Sea Scrolls — Josephus, The Essenes. Christianity and Greco-Roman Learning — Tertullian, What Has Jerusalem To Do With Athens?; Clement of Alexandria, In Defense of Greek Learning; Saint Augustine, Appropriating Pagan Learning and Institutions for Christian Ends. The Persecutions — The Martyrdom of Blandina. Monastic Life — Saint Benedict of Nursia, The Benedictine Rule. Christianity and Society — Lactantius, Acquisitiveness as the Source of Evil; Justin Martyr, Christian Morality; Saint Benedict of Nursia, The Christian Way of Life; The Apostle Paul, The Submissive Role of Women; A Bishop’s Sermon, Breaking the Vow of Virginity. Jews in the Era of Early Christianity — Saint John Chrysostom, Christian Demonization of Jews; Rabbinic Judaism, Ethical Concerns. The Christian Worldview; Saint Augustine, The City of God.
Part II: THE MIDDLE AGES.
7. The Early Middle Ages.
Islam — The Koran. Legal Texts and Decrees: Restrictions on Dhimmis. Jihad — Sayings Attributed to the Prophet; Ibn Taymiyyah, The Religious and Moral Doctrine of Jihad. Islam and Greek Learning — Avicenna, Love of Learning; Rhazes, Muslim Medicine. Converting the Germanic Peoples to Christianity — Bede, History of the English Church and People; Einhard, Forcible Conversion under Charlemagne. The Transmission of Learning — Cassiodorous, The Monk as Scribe. The Carolingian Renaissance — Einhard, Charlemagne’s Appreciation of Learning; Charlemagne, An Injunction to Monasteries to Cultivate Letters. The Feudal Lord — Galbert of Bruges, Commendation and the Oath of Fealty; Bishop Fulbert of Cartres, Obligations of Lords and Vassals; Dhouda, Loyalty to Lord and King. The Burdens of Serfdom — Bishop Adalbero of Laon, The Tripartite Society; Manorial Justice; William of Juieges and Wace, Failed Rebellion.
8. The High and Late Middle Ages.
The Revival of Trade and the Growth of Towns — How to Succeed in Business; Ordinances of the Guild Merchants of Southampton. The Lure of Combat — Bertran de Born, “For no man is accounted good/Till blows he’s given and withstood”; Geoffroi de Charny, Deeds of Arms Bring the Highest Honor. Medieval Entertainment — William Fitz-Stephen, Sports in Medieval London. Papal Supremacy — Pope Gregory VII, The Dictatus Papae; Pope Innocent III, “Royal Power Derives its Dignity from the Pontifical Authority.” The Crusades — Robert the Monk, Appeal of Urban II to the Franks; William of Tyre, The Capture of Jerusalem; James of Vitry, The Remission of Sins and the Reward of Eternal Life. Religious Dissent — Thomas Aquinas, Death for Unrepentant Heretics; Emperor Frederick II, Punishing Heretics; Peter of les Vaux-Cernay, Exterminating the Cathars. Medieval Learning: Synthesis of Reason and Christian Faith — Adelard of Barth: A Questioning Spirit; Peter Abelard, Inquiry into Divergent Views of Church Fathers; Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologica. Medieval Universities — Geoffrey Chaucer, An Oxford Cleric; A Wandering Scholar, “Am Driven By Poverty To Madness”; Jacques de Vitry, Ethnic Conflicts at the University of Paris. The Jews in the Middle Ages — Albert of Aix-la-Chapelle, Massacre of the Jews of Mainz; Pope innocent III, A Decree on the Jews; The Libel of Ritual Murder; Philip II Augustus, Expulsion of the Jews from France; Maimonides, Jewish Learning. Troubadour Love Songs — Love as Joyous, Painful, and Humorous. The Status of Women in Medieval Society — Jacopone da Todi, Praise of the Virgin Mary “O Thou Mother, Fount Of Love”; Christine de Pisan, The City of Ladies. Sexual Nonconformity: Satan’s Lures — Robert of Flamborough, Prohibition of Sexual Sins; Peter Damian, Condemnation of Homosexuality. Medieval Contributions to the Tradition of Liberty — John of Salisbury, Policratus: A Defense Of Tyrannicide; The Magna Carta. The Fourteenth Century: An Age of Adversity — Giovanni Boccaccio, The Black Death; Jean de Venette, Extremist Behavior During the Plague; Sir John Froissart, The Peasant Revolt of 1381; John Bromyard, Virulent Denunciation of the Rich and Powerful. The Medieval Church in Crisis — Marsilius of Padua, Attack on the Worldly Power of the Church. The Medieval Worldview — Lothario dei Segni (Pope Innocent III), On the Misery of the Human Condition; Andreas Gryphius, “The Vanity of this World”; Dante Alighieri, The Divine Comedy.
Part III: EARLY MODERN EUROPE.
9. The Renaissance.
The Humanists’ Fascination with Antiquity — Petrarch, The Father of Humanism; Leonardo Bruni, Study of Greek Literature and a Humanist Educational Program; Petrus Paulus Vergerius, The Importance of Liberal Studies; Lorenzo de’ Medici, The Pursuit of Fame and Glory. Human Dignity — Pico della Mirandola, Oration on the Dignity of Man. Individualism — Montaigne, Self-Examination. The Ideal Gentleman — Baldassare Castiglione, The Book of the Courtier. Break with Medieval Political Theory — Niccolo Machiavelli, The Prince. Renaissance Art — The Genius of Leonardo da Vinci; Giorgio Vasari, The Genius of Michelangelo. Learned Renaissance Women — Moderata Fonte, The Worth of Women. The Spread of the Renaissance — Francois Rabelais, Celebration of the Worldly Life; William Shakespeare, Human Nature and the Human Condition.
10. The Reformation.
Late Medieval Attempts to Reform the Church — Thomas á Kempis, The Imitation of Christ. A Catholic Critic of the Church — Desiderius Erasmus, In Praise of Folly. The Lutheran Reformation — Martin Luther, Critique of Church Doctrines; Ulrich von Hutten, Resentment of Rome. The German Peasants’ Revolt — The Twelve Articles; Martin Luther, Against the Thievish, Murderous Hordes of Peasants. Luther and the Jews — Martin Luther, On the Jews and Their Lies. The Calvinist Reformation — John Calvin, The Institutes of the Christian Religion. The Catholic Response to Protestantism — Canons and Decrees of the Council of Trent. Religious Persecution — The Persecution Of Anabaptists: The Examination of Elizabeth Dirks; Menno Simons, An Anabaptist Rejection of the Use of Force.
11. Early Modern Society and Politics.
Spanish Oppression of Amerindians — Juan Lopez de Palacios Rubios, Justifying Spanish Domination of Amerindians; Bartolome de Las Casas, The Tears of the Indians. Toward the Modern Economy: The Example of Holland — William Carr, The Dutch East India Company. The Jews of Spain and Portugal: Expulsion, Forced Conversion, Inquisition — Andres Bernaldez, An Early Account of the Spanish Inquisition; Damiao de Gois, The Forced Conversion of Portuguese Jews. The Atlantic Slave Trade — Seventeenth-Century Slave Traders, Buying and Transporting Africans; John Newton, Thoughts Upon the African Slave Trade; Malachy Postlethwayt, Slavery Defended. John Wesley, Slavery Attacked. The Witch Craze — Heinrich Kramer and Jakob Sprenger, The Hammer of Witches; Friedrich Spee, The Ordeal of an Accused Witch; Johannes Junius, A Confession of Witchcraft Explained. Absolutism — Duc de Saint-Simon, Louis XIV’s Spies; Bishop Jacques-Benigne Bossuet, Justifying Rule by Divine Right; James I, A Speech to Parliament. A Secular Defense of Absolutism — Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan. Constitutional Resistance to Royal Absolutism — Philippe du Plessis-Mornay, Defense of Liberty Against Tyrants; The Triumph of Constitutional Monarchy in England: The Glorious Revolution; The English Declaration of Rights.
12. The Scientific Revolution.
Galileo: Confirming the Copernican System — Galileo Condemned by the Inquisition. Advocacy Of Experimental Science — Prophet of Modern Experimental Science; William Harvey, The Circulation of the Blood; Herman Boerhaave, A New Method of Chemistry. The Autonomy of the Mind — Rene Descartes, Discourse On Method. The Mechanical Universe — Isaac Newton, Principia Mathematica. The Limitations of Science — Blaise Pascal, Pensées.
13. The Enlightenment.
The Enlightenment Outlook — Immanuel Kant, “What Is Enlightenment?”. Enlightenment Political Thought — John Locke, Second Treatise on Government; Thomas Jefferson, Declaration of Independence; Montesquieu, The Spirit of Laws; Jean Jacques Rousseau, The Social Contract; Thomas Paine, Rights of Man. Attack on Religion — Voltaire, A Plea for Tolerance and Reason; Thomas Paine, The Age of Reason; Baron d’Holbach, “Religion is a mere castle in the air”. Epistemology — John Locke, Essay Concerning Human Understanding; Claude-Adrien Helvetius, Essays on the Mind and a Treatise on Man. Compendium of Knowledge — Denis Diderot, Encyclopedia. Humanitarianism — Caesare Beccaria, Condemning Torture; John Howard, State of Prisons in England and Wales; Denis Diderot, Encyclopedia: “Men and Their Liberty Are Not Objects of Commerce. . . . “. Literature as Satire: Critiques of European Society — Voltaire, Candide; Montesquieu, The Persian Letters. Madam du Chatelet: A Woman of Brilliance — Madame du Chatelet, An Appeal for Female Education. On the Progress of Humanity — Marquis de Condorcet, Progress of the Human Mind.



