Great Books

Imagine hearing hundreds of the foundational texts of civilization for free. It would reshape how you think, argue, perceive time, and understand human life.

Here is a complete four year program [1] of classic works in philosophy, literature, political science, psychology, history, religion, economics, math, chemistry, physics, biology, astronomy, music, language, and more. Start here to see the world through a much wider lens, and think more deliberately than most people around you.

Start Exploring the Great Books Today

Senior Year — Great Books

Now we read some of the most challenging philosophy… Hegel, Nietzsche, and Heidegger and explore more contemporary modern problems and interpretations of human life. Amber cards are Global Perspective — parallel texts from outside the Western tradition. Dark red = under copyright. Listen free on HearCandy.

War and Peace cover
War and Peace
Leo Tolstoy
Napoleon’s invasion of Russia seen through the lives of five aristocratic families. One of the longest and most celebrated novels ever written — a panorama of history, philosophy, love, and death.
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Phenomenology of Spirit cover
Phenomenology of Spirit
Hegel
Hegel’s account of consciousness coming to know itself — through stages of sense-certainty, self-consciousness, reason, and spirit — until it reaches Absolute Knowing. The founding text of German Idealism.
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Democracy in America Vol I cover
Democracy in America, Vol. I
Tocqueville
The French aristocrat’s penetrating analysis of American political institutions: the township system, federalism, the press, and the tyranny of the majority. Written after his 1831 tour of the United States.
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Democracy in America Vol II cover
Democracy in America, Vol. II
Tocqueville
The second volume turns from institutions to culture — how democracy shapes thought, feeling, manners, and the arts, and how it threatens to produce a new “soft despotism” of administrative tutelage.
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Capital cover
Capital, Vol. I
Karl Marx
Marx’s analysis of the commodity, surplus value, and the dynamics of capitalist accumulation. The most influential work of political economy ever written — a critique of the hidden logic of everyday economic life.
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The German Ideology 1932 first edition
The German Ideology
Marx & Engels
Marx and Engels’ early materialist theory of history — rejecting German idealism for the claim that consciousness is determined by social and economic conditions. Not published until 1932.
Not yet available
Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts cover
Economic & Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844
Karl Marx
Marx’s early notebooks on alienated labor, private property, and human nature — written before his mature economic theory but essential to understanding his humanism. Not published until 1932.
Not yet available
Fear and Trembling cover
Fear and Trembling
Kierkegaard
A meditation on Abraham’s willingness to sacrifice Isaac — the “teleological suspension of the ethical.” Kierkegaard’s most intense examination of faith as a leap beyond rational justification.
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Philosophical Fragments original cover
Philosophical Fragments
Kierkegaard
Kierkegaard asks whether truth can be learned — contrasting Socratic recollection with the Christian claim that truth enters from outside through the Teacher who is also the God in time.
Not yet available
Beyond Good and Evil cover
Beyond Good and Evil
Nietzsche
Nietzsche attacks the dogmatic assumptions of past philosophy, diagnoses the “slave morality” of Christianity and democracy, and calls for a new philosopher who creates values beyond the old categories.
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Heart of Darkness cover
Heart of Darkness
Joseph Conrad
Marlow travels up the Congo River to find the legendary ivory trader Kurtz — and confronts the savagery at the heart of European imperialism. A short novel of immense moral and literary weight.
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Things Fall Apart cover
🌍 Global Perspective
Things Fall Apart
Chinua Achebe · Nigeria, 1958
Okonkwo, a proud Igbo warrior, watches his world shatter under British colonial rule. Achebe wrote this novel explicitly in response to Conrad — to tell the African story from the African side. One of the most important novels of the 20th century.
Open Library →
Freud Selected Essays cover
Selected Essays
Sigmund Freud
SJC assigns three essays: “Remembering, Repeating, and Working-Through” (1914), “Mourning and Melancholia” (1917), and Beyond the Pleasure Principle (1920) — the core of Freud’s mature clinical and metapsychological theory.
Not yet available
Benito Cereno cover
Benito Cereno
Herman Melville
An American sea captain boards a seemingly stricken Spanish slave ship, only slowly grasping the horror of what has occurred. Melville’s dark masterpiece of deception, race, and the limits of perception — published the same year as Leaves of Grass.
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Les Fleurs du Mal cover
Les Fleurs du Mal
Charles Baudelaire
One hundred poems on beauty, evil, ennui, and the abyss — published in 1857, the same year as Madame Bovary and the Dred Scott decision. Baudelaire invented literary modernism; Nietzsche called him the first true European artist.
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Brothers Karamazov cover
The Brothers Karamazov
Dostoevsky
Three brothers — the sensualist Dmitri, the intellectual Ivan, and the saintly Alyosha — are drawn into their father’s murder. Contains the “Grand Inquisitor,” one of the most powerful passages in all literature.
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Tristan und Isolde cover
Tristan und Isolde
Richard Wagner
Wagner’s opera of doomed love — the supreme musical expression of Romantic longing, Schopenhauerian metaphysics, and the desire that can never be satisfied in life. Furtwängler conducting, freely streamable.
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The Metamorphosis cover
The Metamorphosis
Franz Kafka
Gregor Samsa wakes one morning as an insect. His family’s gradual disgust and abandonment is rendered with precise, bureaucratic calm. Kafka’s most perfectly achieved story — a parable of alienation, guilt, and the modern condition.
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To the Lighthouse cover
To the Lighthouse
Virginia Woolf
A family’s summer on the Isle of Skye, spanning ten years. Woolf’s stream-of-consciousness masterpiece dissolves plot into perception — time, memory, loss, and the effort to render the world in paint and words.
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Portrait of Dred Scott
Dred Scott Decision & Curtis Dissent
U.S. Supreme Court, 1857
The Supreme Court’s ruling that enslaved people were not citizens and had no right to sue in federal court — and Justice Curtis’s powerful dissent. The most consequential and reviled decision in American legal history.
Not yet available
Lincoln Speeches cover
Selected Speeches
Abraham Lincoln
Lincoln’s major addresses including the Cooper Union Speech, the two Inaugurals, and the Gettysburg Address — the most eloquent political speeches in the American tradition, shaped by the Bible and Shakespeare.
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Frederick Douglass cover
Selected Speeches & Writings
Frederick Douglass
Douglass’s oratory is among the greatest in American history — his 1852 address “What to the Slave is the Fourth of July?” stands as a searing indictment of American hypocrisy from within its own stated ideals.
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Up from Slavery cover
Up from Slavery
Booker T. Washington
Washington’s autobiography recounts his rise from slavery to found the Tuskegee Institute — and articulates his controversial philosophy of industrial education, economic self-reliance, and accommodation with white society.
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Souls of Black Folk cover
The Souls of Black Folk
W.E.B. Du Bois
Du Bois’s landmark essays on race in America — introducing the concepts of “double consciousness” and “the veil.” A direct challenge to Washington’s accommodationism and the founding text of the civil rights tradition.
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Phaedrus cover
Phaedrus
Plato
Plato’s dialogue on love, beauty, and rhetoric. Socrates delivers his great myth of the soul as a winged chariot — and argues that true rhetoric must be grounded in knowledge of the soul and of truth.
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Junior Year — Great Books

We continue with early modern science & philosophy and study the formation of modern science and political thought. We read works by Galileo, Newton, Descartes, Hobbes, Darwin, etc., which helped shape modern knowledge. Amber cards are Global Perspective — parallel texts from outside the Western tradition. Listen free on HearCandy.

Don Quixote Vol 1 cover
Don Quixote, Part I
Cervantes
The ingenious gentleman of La Mancha sets out to revive chivalry, tilts at windmills, and mistakes inns for castles. The first modern novel, and an inexhaustible meditation on illusion and reality.
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Don Quixote Vol 2 cover
Don Quixote, Part II
Cervantes
Ten years later, the Don rides again — but now the world knows his story. Cervantes turns metafictional as characters from Part I encounter a hero who has read the book about himself.
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Journey to the West cover
🌍 Global Perspective
Journey to the West
Wu Cheng’en · China, c. 1592 AD
The Monkey King escorts a Buddhist monk across Central Asia to retrieve sacred scriptures from India. China’s most beloved novel — comic, mythic, and philosophical — published the same decade as Don Quixote, and equally a meditation on the pilgrim’s progress.
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One Thousand and One Nights - Dulac illustration
🌍 Global Perspective
One Thousand and One Nights
Anonymous · Persia/Arabia/India, c. 800–1500 AD
Scheherazade staves off execution by telling the king an endless chain of tales — Sinbad, Aladdin, Ali Baba. Like Don Quixote, a frame narrative that interrogates the relationship between storytelling, reality, and survival. The great counter-tradition to Western literary fiction.
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Meditations cover
Meditations on First Philosophy
Descartes
Six meditations in which Descartes systematically doubts everything he believes until he finds bedrock certainty in the cogito, then rebuilds knowledge of God, the world, and the self.
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Pensées cover
Pensées
Pascal
Fragments of Pascal’s unfinished apology for Christianity. Ranges from the famous “wager” on God’s existence to searing observations on human wretchedness, diversion, and the heart’s reasons that reason cannot know.
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Paradise Lost cover
Paradise Lost
John Milton
The greatest epic in the English language. Milton retells the Fall of Man with Satan as its towering anti-hero — raising deep questions about free will, obedience, and whether it is better to reign in Hell than serve in Heaven.
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Leviathan cover
Leviathan
Thomas Hobbes
Hobbes argues that human life in a state of nature is “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short” — and that only a sovereign Leviathan-state can secure peace. The founding text of social contract theory.
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Ethics cover
Ethics
Spinoza
Written in the style of Euclid — definitions, axioms, and proofs — Spinoza’s Ethics argues that God and Nature are one substance, that free will is an illusion, and that blessedness comes through understanding necessity.
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Discourse on Metaphysics cover
Discourse on Metaphysics
Leibniz
A compact summary of Leibniz’s metaphysics: that the world consists of simple substances (monads), that God chose the best of all possible worlds, and that every individual substance contains within it the predicate of all its future states.
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Monadology cover
Monadology
Leibniz
Ninety brief paragraphs outlining Leibniz’s vision: the universe is composed of indestructible, soul-like monads with no windows — each mirroring the whole from its own perspective, in pre-established harmony.
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Middlemarch cover
Middlemarch
George Eliot
Often called the greatest English novel. A panoramic portrait of provincial life in 1830s England, centered on the idealistic Dorothea Brooke and the doomed physician Lydgate — a profound study of marriage, vocation, and the limits of reform.
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Treatise of Human Nature cover
Treatise of Human Nature
David Hume
Hume’s ambitious attempt to introduce the experimental method into moral philosophy. He argues that our beliefs about causation, the self, and the external world rest not on reason but on habit and custom.
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Critique of Pure Reason cover
Critique of Pure Reason
Kant
Kant’s “Copernican revolution” in philosophy: the mind doesn’t conform to objects — objects conform to the mind. Space, time, and causality are structures we impose on experience, not features of things in themselves.
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Foundations of Metaphysics of Morals cover
Foundations of the Metaphysics of Morals
Kant
Kant’s concise statement of his moral philosophy and the categorical imperative: act only according to that maxim by which you can also will that it should become a universal law.
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Two Treatises cover
Second Treatise of Government
John Locke
Locke argues that legitimate government rests on the consent of the governed to protect natural rights — life, liberty, and property. The philosophical bedrock of the American founding.
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Emma cover
Emma
Jane Austen
Emma Woodhouse, “handsome, clever, and rich,” is convinced she knows what is best for everyone around her — and is systematically wrong. Austen’s most technically accomplished novel, and her most forgiving account of self-deception.
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Pride and Prejudice cover
Pride and Prejudice
Jane Austen
The sparring match between Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Darcy is the most beloved courtship in the English novel — a comedy of manners that cuts to the bone about class, judgment, and self-knowledge.
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Discourse on Inequality cover
Discourse on Inequality
Rousseau
Rousseau argues that natural man was peaceful and free, and that civilization — property, vanity, inequality — is the source of human misery. One of the most radical critiques of modern society ever written.
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Social Contract cover
The Social Contract
Rousseau
“Man is born free, and everywhere he is in chains.” Rousseau asks how a just political order is possible — answering with the general will: a sovereign formed by all citizens acting for the common good.
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Fables of La Fontaine cover
Fables
Jean de La Fontaine
Two hundred and forty verse fables — fox and crow, grasshopper and ant, the lion and the mouse — that encode a complete philosophy of human nature. The moral wit of La Fontaine is as sharp as La Rochefoucauld, but deployed through animals.
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Maximes cover
Maximes
La Rochefoucauld
Five hundred aphorisms on pride, self-interest, and the masks of virtue. “Self-love is the greatest flatterer of all.” The most ruthlessly honest account of human motivation in French literature — Pascal’s contemporary, Molière’s neighbor.
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Phèdre cover
Phèdre
Racine
Racine’s masterpiece revisits the Hippolytus myth: a queen consumed by forbidden desire for her stepson, unable to act, unable to stop. The perfection of French classical tragedy — Euripides recast in Versailles.
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🌍 Global Perspective
Narrow Road to the Deep North
Matsuo Bashō · Japan, 1689 AD
Bashō’s haibun travel diary of a pilgrimage through northern Japan — prose poetry in which landscape, impermanence, and solitude are a single subject. Written the same decade as Locke’s Second Treatise; the Western and Eastern answers to mortality could not be more different.
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The Misanthrope
Molière
Alceste despises all flattery and demands absolute sincerity from everyone — including from Célimène, the coquette he loves. Molière’s darkest comedy asks whether uncompromising honesty is a virtue or a vice.
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Don Giovanni cover
Don Giovanni
Mozart
Mozart’s supreme opera follows the serial seducer Don Giovanni through conquest and sacrilege to his spectacular damnation by the stone Commendatore. Drama, comedy, and metaphysics in two acts.
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Gulliver’s Travels
Jonathan Swift
Four voyages to impossible lands — Lilliput, Brobdingnag, Laputa, the land of the Houyhnhnms — that strip away every human pretension. Swift’s savage satire on politics, science, and human pride.
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Wealth of Nations cover
Wealth of Nations
Adam Smith
The founding text of modern economics. Smith examines the division of labor, the price mechanism, and the invisible hand — arguing that free exchange of self-interested individuals produces general prosperity.
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US Historical Documents cover
U.S. Historical Documents
Various
The Declaration of Independence, Articles of Confederation, and Constitution of the United States — the founding charters that established the principles and structure of American self-government.
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Federalist Papers cover
The Federalist Papers
Hamilton, Madison & Jay
Eighty-five essays written to argue for ratification of the Constitution. The most authoritative commentary on the American founding — on separation of powers, checks and balances, and the extended republic.
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Faust Part I cover
Faust, Part I
Goethe
The aging scholar Faust makes a wager with Mephistopheles: if any moment can satisfy him completely, his soul is forfeit. Goethe’s supreme work — a philosophical drama that defines the Romantic soul’s restless striving.
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Huckleberry Finn cover
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
Mark Twain
Huck and the escaped slave Jim float down the Mississippi on a raft. Hemingway called it the source of all American literature — a novel about conscience, freedom, and the moral education of an American boy.
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On the Origin of Species cover
On the Origin of Species
Charles Darwin
Darwin’s 1859 argument for evolution by natural selection — one of the most consequential books ever written. Patient, methodical, and quietly radical, it reshaped how humanity understands life itself.
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St. Matthew Passion cover
St. Matthew Passion
J.S. Bach
Bach’s monumental setting of the Passion narrative from Matthew’s Gospel. Many consider it the greatest choral work ever composed — a meditation on suffering, love, and redemption in music.
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Sophomore Year — Great Books

In a transition to theology & medieval thought, the program focuses on Christian books and medieval authors to integrate of early theology, philosophy, and literature. Amber cards are Global Perspective — parallel texts from outside the Western tradition. Listen free on HearCandy.

Bible Old Testament cover
Bible (KJV): Old Testament
King James Version
Selections assigned at SJC: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Deuteronomy, Samuel, Kings, Psalms, Amos, Jonah, Isaiah, and Job — the foundational texts of the Hebrew canon.
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Qur'an cover
🌍 Global Perspective
Qur’an (Selections)
Anonymous · Arabia, c. 610–632 AD
The sacred scripture of Islam, received by the Prophet Muhammad. Al-Fatiha, Sura 2 (Al-Baqara), and Sura 112 (Al-Ikhlas) present the core of Islamic theology: divine unity, covenant, and the nature of God — a direct parallel to the Old and New Testaments.
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Popol Vuh cover
🌍 Global Perspective
Popol Vuh
K’iche’ Maya · Guatemala, c. 1000–1500 AD
The Mayan creation epic: humanity fashioned from maize after failed attempts with mud and wood; the Hero Twins descend into the underworld and defeat the lords of death. The Genesis of the Americas — read alongside the Bible’s creation narrative.
Open Library →
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Gospel of Matthew (KJV)
King James Version
Matthew’s Gospel opens the New Testament, tracing the genealogy and ministry of Jesus, the Sermon on the Mount, and the great commission — written for a Jewish audience to show Jesus as the promised Messiah.
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Gospel of Luke cover
Gospel of Luke (KJV)
King James Version
Luke’s Gospel is the most literary of the four — written for a Gentile audience, emphasizing Jesus’s compassion for the poor, women, and outsiders, and containing the parables of the Prodigal Son and Good Samaritan.
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Acts of the Apostles cover
Acts of the Apostles (KJV)
King James Version
The sequel to Luke’s Gospel, narrating the founding of the Christian church — Pentecost, the spread of the gospel through the Roman Empire, and Paul’s missionary journeys from Jerusalem to Rome.
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Gospel of John cover
Gospel of John (KJV)
King James Version
The most theological of the Gospels. John opens with the cosmic prologue “In the beginning was the Word” and presents Jesus as the divine Logos — through signs, discourses, and the raising of Lazarus.
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1 Corinthians cover
1 Corinthians (KJV)
Paul · King James Version
Paul’s letter to the church at Corinth addresses division, sexuality, lawsuits, and the Lord’s Supper — and concludes with the great hymn to love: “Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels…”
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Romans cover
Romans (KJV)
Paul · King James Version
Paul’s most systematic letter — a sustained argument that all humanity stands under judgment, that righteousness comes through faith alone, and that God’s purposes embrace both Jew and Gentile.
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Epistle of James cover
Epistle of James (KJV)
King James Version
The most practical of the New Testament epistles. James argues that faith without works is dead — calling believers to tame the tongue, care for the poor, and endure suffering with patience.
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De Rerum Natura cover
De Rerum Natura
Lucretius
An Epicurean epic poem arguing that the universe is composed entirely of atoms and void, that the soul is mortal, and that death should hold no terror. A cornerstone of ancient materialism.
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Aeneid cover
Aeneid
Virgil
Rome’s great founding epic follows the Trojan hero Aeneas as he flees the ruins of Troy, descends into the underworld, and wars his way to Italy to establish the lineage of Rome.
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Parallel Lives
Plutarch
Paired biographical portraits comparing great Greek and Roman statesmen. SJC assigns the lives of Caesar and Cato the Younger — rivals whose clash defined the fall of the Roman Republic.
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History of Rome cover
History of Rome
Livy
Livy’s monumental narrative of Rome from its legendary founding through the early Republic. SJC assigns the first five books (the Preface and the early kings and consuls) — the Roman founding myth in prose.
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Annals cover
Annals
Tacitus
A meticulous and unflinching history of the Roman Empire from the death of Augustus through the reign of Nero, renowned for its dark portrayal of power, tyranny, and moral decay.
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Enchiridion cover
Enchiridion
Epictetus
A concise handbook of Stoic ethics by the freed slave turned philosopher. Epictetus teaches that freedom lies not in controlling events but in mastering one’s own judgments and desires.
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Discourses
Epictetus
The fuller record of Epictetus’s teaching, transcribed by his student Arrian. Where the Enchiridion summarizes, the Discourses argue — probing freedom, role, death, and the examined life in the Socratic tradition.
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Enneads cover
Enneads
Plotinus
The central text of Neoplatonism, describing a hierarchy of being from the One at the apex down through Intellect, Soul, and matter. A decisive bridge between Plato and Christian mystical theology.
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Confessions cover
Confessions
Augustine
The first great autobiography in Western literature. Augustine recounts his restless intellectual and moral journey — through Manicheism, Neoplatonism, and sensual excess — to Christian faith.
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Anselm manuscript
Proslogium
Anselm of Canterbury
Anselm’s famous ontological argument for the existence of God: “that than which nothing greater can be conceived” must exist in reality, not merely in the mind. A cornerstone of medieval theology.
Not yet available
Guide for the Perplexed cover
🌍 Global Perspective
Guide for the Perplexed
Moses Maimonides · Egypt, 1190 AD
The great synthesis of Aristotelian philosophy and Jewish theology — written the same generation as Averroes’ Islamic synthesis and a century before Aquinas’s Christian one. Three traditions, one Aristotle, three very different answers.
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Summa Theologiae
Thomas Aquinas
The masterwork of scholastic philosophy. Aquinas systematically reconciles Aristotelian reason with Christian faith through a structured method of question, objection, and reply.
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Divine Comedy cover
Divine Comedy
Dante Alighieri
The supreme work of Italian literature. Dante journeys through Hell, Purgatory, and Paradise guided first by Virgil and then by Beatrice — a vision of sin, redemption, and the love that moves the stars.
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🌍 Global Perspective
Masnavi (Selections)
Jalal ad-Din Rumi · Persia, 1258–1273 AD
Rumi’s monumental spiritual epic in six books of rhyming couplets — the same century as Dante’s Comedy. Often called “the Qur’an in the Persian tongue.” Stories of love, separation, and the longing of the soul for its divine origin.
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🌍 Global Perspective
Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám
Omar Khayyam · Persia, 1048–1131 AD
A sequence of quatrains on wine, love, mortality, and the inscrutability of fate. Written the same century as Dante’s journey through the afterlife, Khayyam’s Persian poet embraces the mystery rather than resolving it. FitzGerald’s translation is one of English literature’s great achievements.
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Tale of Genji cover
🌍 Global Perspective
The Tale of Genji
Murasaki Shikibu · Japan, c. 1008 AD
Often called the world’s first novel, written at the Japanese imperial court three centuries before Chaucer. The life, loves, and decline of the “shining prince” Genji — a meditation on beauty, impermanence, and the evanescence of worldly glory.
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Li Bai painting by Liang Kai
🌍 Global Perspective
Tang Poets: Li Bai, Wang Wei & Du Fu
China, 8th Century AD
The three masters of the Tang dynasty’s golden age of poetry — contemporary with the Carolingian Renaissance in the West. Li Bai’s ecstatic Romanticism, Wang Wei’s Buddhist quietism, Du Fu’s Confucian moral gravity: three philosophies in verse.
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Canterbury Tales
Geoffrey Chaucer
A raucous and tender collection of tales told by pilgrims journeying to Canterbury. Chaucer’s gallery of medieval characters — knight, miller, wife of Bath — illuminates the full range of human folly and virtue.
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As You Like It cover
As You Like It
Shakespeare
Shakespeare’s romantic comedy of exiles in the Forest of Arden. Featuring Rosalind’s witty cross-dressing disguise and Jaques’ famous “All the world’s a stage” meditation on the seven ages of man.
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Richard II cover
Richard II
Shakespeare
The first of Shakespeare’s Henriad tetralogy. A poetic meditation on kingship, legitimacy, and identity as the eloquent but ineffectual Richard II is deposed by the practical Bolingbroke.
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Henry IV, Part 1
Shakespeare
Prince Hal carouses with Falstaff in the taverns of Eastcheap while his father King Henry faces rebellion. The great drama of honor, duty, and the making of a king.
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Henry IV, Part 2
Shakespeare
The conclusion of Hal’s education. As King Henry lies dying, Falstaff grows old and fat while Hal prepares for the crown — culminating in the famous rejection of his old companion.
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Othello
Shakespeare
The Moorish general Othello is manipulated by the malevolent Iago into jealousy and murderous rage against his faithful wife Desdemona. A devastating study of racism, trust, and self-destruction.
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Hamlet cover
Hamlet
Shakespeare
Perhaps the greatest play in the English language. Prince Hamlet is commanded by his father’s ghost to avenge his murder, but hesitates — raising questions of action, mortality, and the nature of the self.
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Macbeth cover
Macbeth
Shakespeare
Ambition and prophecy drive the Scottish general Macbeth to murder King Duncan. The play descends into tyranny and madness as Macbeth and Lady Macbeth are consumed by guilt and paranoia.
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King Lear cover
King Lear
Shakespeare
The aged king Lear divides his kingdom between his daughters, banishes the one who truly loves him, and descends into madness on the heath. Shakespeare’s most searching drama of power, filial ingratitude, and wisdom.
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The Tempest cover
The Tempest
Shakespeare
The magician Prospero conjures a storm to strand his enemies on his enchanted island. Often read as Shakespeare’s farewell to the stage, exploring art, power, colonialism, and the act of forgiveness.
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Essays cover
Essays
Montaigne
The inventor of the essay form, Montaigne turns his gaze inward with candor and curiosity. “What do I know?” is his guiding question — probing custom, experience, and the self with disarming honesty.
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The Prince cover
The Prince
Machiavelli
The founding text of modern political science. Machiavelli advises rulers on how to acquire and hold power with ruthless pragmatism — separating political necessity from traditional moral philosophy.
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Art of War cover
🌍 Global Perspective
The Art of War
Sun Tzu · China, c. 500 BC
Thirteen chapters on military strategy, deception, terrain, and the relationship between commander and state. Written during China’s Warring States period, it prefigures Machiavelli by two millennia — strategy divorced from moralism.
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Discourses on Livy
Machiavelli
Machiavelli’s republican masterwork, analyzing the constitution and decline of Rome through Livy’s history. More expansive than The Prince — a study in how free states are founded, maintained, and corrupted.
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Muqaddimah cover
🌍 Global Perspective
Muqaddimah
Ibn Khaldun · Tunisia/Morocco, 1377 AD
The introduction to Ibn Khaldun’s universal history — and arguably the first work of sociology and philosophy of history. His theory of ‘asabiyya (group solidarity) explains the rise and fall of civilizations a century before Machiavelli.
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Selected Works
Martin Luther
Luther’s most important Reformation writings, including Concerning Christian Liberty — his argument that salvation comes through faith alone, not works, which ignited the Protestant Reformation.
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St. Matthew Passion cover
St. Matthew Passion
J.S. Bach
Bach’s monumental sacred oratorio setting the Passion narrative from the Gospel of Matthew. Many consider it the greatest choral work ever composed — freely streamable via archive.org.
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Novum Organum cover
Novum Organum
Francis Bacon
Bacon’s proposal for a new method of scientific inquiry based on inductive reasoning and systematic observation. A founding document of the Scientific Revolution and the empiricist tradition.
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Discourse on Method cover
Discourse on Method
Descartes
“I think, therefore I am.” Descartes’ short, revolutionary essay establishes the method of radical doubt and rebuilds knowledge on the foundation of the thinking self — launching modern philosophy.
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Freshman Year — Great Books

The program begins with the Greeks and the origin of disciplines. Amber cards are Global Perspective — parallel texts from outside the Western tradition. Listen free on HearCandy.

Odyssey cover
Odyssey
Homer
Homer’s epic follows Odysseus on his perilous decade-long journey home from the Trojan War, forming the template for virtually every adventure story in the Western tradition.
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Iliad cover
Iliad
Homer
The great epic of the Trojan War, describing the rage of Achilles and the final year of the ten-year Greek siege of Troy.
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Flood Tablet of Gilgamesh
🌍 Global Perspective
Epic of Gilgamesh
Anonymous · Ancient Mesopotamia
The oldest written epic, c. 2100 BC. The Sumerian king Gilgamesh seeks immortality after his companion Enkidu dies — and encounters the great Flood story a thousand years before Genesis.
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Ramayana cover
🌍 Global Perspective
Ramayana
Valmiki · Ancient India
India’s great epic (c. 400 BC) follows Prince Rama’s exile, the abduction of his wife Sita, and his war to rescue her. As fundamental to South and Southeast Asian culture as Homer is to the West.
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Mahabharata cover
🌍 Global Perspective
Mahabharata
Vyasa · Ancient India, c. 400 BC–400 AD
The longest poem in world literature — the war of the Pandavas and Kauravas for the throne of Hastinapura. Contains the Bhagavad Gita. In scope and moral seriousness, it is India’s Iliad and its Bible simultaneously.
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Agamemnon cover
Agamemnon
Aeschylus
The first play of the Oresteia trilogy. Agamemnon returns from Troy only to be murdered by his wife Clytemnestra — beginning a cycle of vengeance that shakes the House of Atreus.
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Libation Bearers cover
Libation Bearers
Aeschylus
The second play of the Oresteia. Orestes returns to Argos to avenge his father’s murder by killing his own mother Clytemnestra.
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Eumenides cover
Eumenides
Aeschylus
The final play of the Oresteia. Orestes, pursued by the Furies, seeks refuge with Athena, who establishes the first court of law to resolve the cycle of blood vengeance.
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Prometheus Bound cover
Prometheus Bound
Aeschylus
The Titan who gave fire to humanity is chained to a cliff on Zeus’s orders. A drama of power, prophecy, and defiance — Aeschylus stages the punishment of a god who chose humanity over Olympus.
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Herodotus Histories cover
History
Herodotus
The first work of history in Western literature, written around 440 BC, chronicling the war between the Persian Empire and the Greek city-states.
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The Clouds cover
The Clouds
Aristophanes
A comic satire in which Strepsiades enrolls his son in Socrates’ Thinking Shop to learn rhetoric, only for the scheme to spectacularly backfire.
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Apology cover
Apology
Plato
Plato’s account of Socrates’ speech defending himself at trial in 399 BC against charges of impiety and corrupting the youth of Athens.
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Meno cover
Meno
Plato
A Socratic dialogue that attempts to determine the definition of virtue and asks whether virtue can be taught — introducing the famous doctrine of recollection.
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Gorgias cover
Gorgias
Plato
Socrates confronts the sophist Gorgias and his followers on the nature of rhetoric, power, and justice — arguing that doing wrong harms the wrongdoer more than the victim.
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Phaedo cover
Phaedo
Plato
A depiction of Socrates’ final hours and his arguments for the immortality of the soul — one of the most moving and philosophically dense of Plato’s dialogues.
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Bhagavad Gita cover
🌍 Global Perspective
Bhagavad Gita
Anonymous · Ancient India
On the battlefield of Kurukshetra, the warrior Arjuna hesitates to fight his kinsmen. Krishna’s counsel on duty, the soul, and right action — written around the same time as Plato’s dialogues on death and the soul.
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Oedipus Rex cover
Oedipus Tyrannus
Sophocles
Oedipus investigates a murder and uncovers the terrible truth of his own origins — considered by Aristotle to be the perfect tragedy.
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Oedipus at Colonus cover
Oedipus at Colonus
Sophocles
The blind and exiled Oedipus arrives at Colonus seeking rest, and his death becomes an unexpected blessing for the city that shelters him.
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Antigone cover
Antigone
Sophocles
Antigone defies King Creon’s decree to bury her brother Polynices, setting up a tragic conflict between divine law and the law of the state.
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Ajax cover
Ajax
Sophocles
The mightiest Greek warrior after Achilles goes mad when the armor of Achilles is awarded to Odysseus instead of him. A tragedy of honor, shame, and the limits of heroic identity.
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Medea cover
Medea
Euripides
Abandoned by Jason for a Greek princess, Medea takes a terrible and calculated revenge — one of the most psychologically intense tragedies of the ancient world.
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Bacchae cover
The Bacchae
Euripides
Dionysus arrives in Thebes to punish those who refuse to worship him, in a drama that explores the tension between reason, power, and ecstatic religion.
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Hippolytus cover
Hippolytus
Euripides
Phaedra, wife of Theseus, is consumed by a forbidden love for her stepson Hippolytus. Her false accusation against him sets off a catastrophe — Euripides’ unflinching study of desire, denial, and divine cruelty.
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Philoctetes cover
Philoctetes
Sophocles
Odysseus and Neoptolemus must persuade the wounded, abandoned hero Philoctetes to give up his bow and join them at Troy — a drama about betrayal, honor, and necessity.
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Shakuntala cover
🌍 Global Perspective
Shakuntala
Kalidasa · Classical India, c. 400 AD
The Sanskrit masterpiece of Kalidasa — often called India’s Shakespeare. King Dushyanta falls in love with the forest maiden Shakuntala, loses her through a curse, and must find her again. Goethe called it the greatest drama he had ever read.
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Symposium cover
Symposium
Plato
Athenian intellectuals take turns delivering speeches on the nature of Love at a drinking party, culminating in Socrates’ account of love as the desire for immortality and beauty itself.
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Republic cover
Republic
Plato
Plato’s masterwork on justice, the ideal city, the nature of the soul, and the philosopher-king — including the allegory of the cave.
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Phaedrus cover
Phaedrus
Plato
Socrates and Phaedrus discuss love, beauty, rhetoric, and the soul’s wings — containing Plato’s famous image of the soul as a charioteer driving two winged horses.
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Parmenides cover
Parmenides
Plato
A challenging dialogue in which the young Socrates discusses the theory of Forms with the philosopher Parmenides, subjecting his own ideas to rigorous critique.
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Theaetetus cover
Theaetetus
Plato
Socrates examines the nature of knowledge through the image of himself as a philosophical midwife helping Theaetetus give birth to ideas — and then testing them to destruction.
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Sophist cover
Sophist
Plato
The Eleatic Stranger leads a hunt for the definition of the sophist, and in doing so confronts the puzzle of non-being — one of Plato’s most technically demanding dialogues.
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Timaeus cover
Timaeus
Plato
Plato’s account of the origin and structure of the universe, in which a divine craftsman fashions the world from eternal forms — the closest thing in Plato to a creation myth.
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Upanishads cover
🌍 Global Perspective
Upanishads
Anonymous · Ancient India, c. 800–200 BC
Philosophical dialogues probing the nature of Brahman (ultimate reality) and Atman (the self) — asking whether they are one and the same. Written during the same era as Plato’s Timaeus and Pre-Socratic cosmology.
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Parallel Lives cover
Lives (Lycurgus & Solon)
Plutarch
Plutarch pairs the Spartan lawgiver Lycurgus with the Athenian statesman Solon, comparing two founding legislators who shaped their civilizations through radically different visions of justice.
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Peloponnesian War cover
History of the Peloponnesian War
Thucydides
Thucydides’ account of the war between Athens and Sparta is a foundational work of political thought, remarkable for its unsentimental analysis of power, democracy, and human nature.
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Nicomachean Ethics cover
Nicomachean Ethics
Aristotle
Aristotle’s inquiry into what constitutes the good life, arguing that happiness is the highest human goal and that it is achieved through the exercise of virtue.
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Analects of Confucius cover
🌍 Global Perspective
Analects
Confucius · China, c. 479 BC
The collected sayings and dialogues of Confucius — on virtue, ritual, filial piety, and the ideal of the junzi (exemplary person). Written within years of Socrates’ death; two traditions of ethical inquiry arising simultaneously.
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Politics cover
Politics
Aristotle
Aristotle examines the nature of the city-state, comparing constitutions and arguing that man is by nature a political animal whose fullest development requires life in community.
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Tao Te Ching cover
🌍 Global Perspective
Tao Te Ching
Laozi · China, c. 400 BC
Eighty-one brief chapters on the nameless principle underlying all things. Laozi’s vision of the Tao — yielding, formless, inexhaustible — echoes Heraclitus’ Logos and inverts Aristotle’s political animal with a radically different ideal of governance.
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Poetics cover
Poetics
Aristotle
Aristotle’s foundational study of tragedy, comedy, and epic poetry — defining plot, character, and catharsis in terms that have shaped literary criticism for two millennia.
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Physics cover
Physics
Aristotle
Aristotle’s investigation of nature, motion, time, place, and causation — the framework of natural philosophy that dominated Western thought for nearly two thousand years.
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Metaphysics cover
Metaphysics
Aristotle
Aristotle’s inquiry into the nature of being, substance, and first causes — the work that gave “metaphysics” its name and set the agenda for philosophy ever since.
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De Anima cover
On the Soul
Aristotle
Aristotle’s treatise on the nature of life, examining the souls of plants, animals, and humans according to their capacities for nutrition, sensation, movement, and reason.
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📖
Crito
Plato
Crito visits Socrates in prison and urges him to escape. Socrates refuses, arguing that it would be unjust to break the laws of Athens that have governed his life.
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Euclid's Elements papyrus
Elements
Euclid
The thirteen books of Euclid (c. 300 BC) present geometry from first principles through proof. One of the most influential works ever written — still used to teach mathematical reasoning two millennia later.
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[1] This aggregation was inspired by the St. John’s College Undergraduate Reading List , including the works available in audio on LibriVox, as well as selections from the SJC Eastern Classics Program .