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{{Short description|Greek philosopher}}
{{Orphan|date=February 2009}}
{{more citations needed|date = March 2019}}
{{Infobox philosopher
| region = ]
| era = ]
| name = Dimitris Liantinis
| image =
| caption =
| birth_date = {{birth date|1942|7|23|df=yes}}
| birth_place = Liantina, ], ], Greece
| death_date = unknown; disappeared on {{disappeared date and age|1998|6|1|1942|7|23|df=yes}}
| death_place = in ], Peloponnese, Greece
| education = ] (], 1966)<ref name="official"></ref><br>]<ref name="official"/><br>University of Athens (], 1977)<ref name="official"/>
| institutions = University of Athens
| school_tradition = ]
| main_interests = ], the ]
| notable_ideas = Revival of ] and ]
| influences = ], ], ], ]
| influenced =
}}
'''Dimitris Liantinis''' ({{IPAc-en|ˌ|l|iː|ə|n|ˈ|t|iː|n|ɪ|s}}; {{langx|el|Δημήτρης Λιαντίνης}} {{IPA-el|ʎa(n)ˈdinis|}}; born 23 July 1942, disappeared 1 June 1998) was a ] ]. He was associate professor at the Department of Pedagogy of the Faculty of Philosophy, Pedagogy and Psychology of the ], teaching the course "Philosophy of Education and Teaching of Greek Language and Literature".<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.liantinis.org/content.php?category=45 |title=Biography at Liantinis.org |access-date=2014-08-30 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140325011636/http://www.liantinis.org/content.php?category=45 |archive-date=2014-03-25 |url-status=dead }}</ref> He has written nine books. His last and most seminal work '']'' (''Γκέμμα'') has been translated into several languages.


A great lover of ] culture, he devoted his life in studying and reinterpreting their cultural heritage. He wrote on various philosophical issues, including education, morality and death. He emphasised the need of incorporating the Ancient Greek ideas and morals into the modern Greek education system and also held explicit views on the decline of Western culture.
'''Dimitris Liantinis''' (born 23 July 1942, in ]: '''Δημήτρης Λιαντίνης''', also transliterated as '''Dimitris Liadinis''') was a ] deputy ] for Philosophy of education and Didaktic of the old and new greek literature at ] and writer of 8 ]s. His last book is '']'' (''Γκέμμα'').


He has achieved popularity in ] because of his strange and unexplained disappearance in the morning of 1.6. 1998 at the age of 56 years. It is thought that he committed suicide in 1998 on the mountains of ]. His last university ] was delivered on 27 May 1998. In his letter to his family he wrote "I go away by my own will. I disappear standing, strong, and proud."<ref name="letter">http://www.liantinis.gr/gramma.shtml</ref> He has achieved popularity in ] because of his strange and unexplained disappearance in the morning of 1 June 1998 at the age of 55 years. It is thought that he committed suicide in 1998 on the mountains of ]. His last university ] was delivered on 27 May 1998. In his letter to his family he wrote "I go away by my own will. I disappear standing, strong, and proud."<ref name="letter">{{Cite web |url=http://www.liantinis.org/%CE%B7-%CF%80%CF%81%CE%AC%CE%BE%CE%B7-%CF%84%CE%BF%CF%85/ |title=The Last letter |access-date=2018-09-12 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190427124816/http://www.liantinis.org/%ce%b7-%cf%80%cf%81%ce%ac%ce%be%ce%b7-%cf%84%ce%bf%cf%85/ |archive-date=2019-04-27 |url-status=dead }}</ref>


== Life and work ==
An online resource www.liantinis.gr written and managed by his wife Professor Nikolitsa Georgopoulou contains letters to her, manuscripts, un-edited texts and critical comments for his books.
Liantinis was born in the ]n village of Liantina (Λιαντίνα) as Demetrios Nikolakakos (Νικολακάκος). He later changed his surname to Liantinis to honour his village. He graduated in 1966 from the University of Athens curriculum of Philosophy and worked as a teacher. He moved to ] in 1970 to study the German language, where he remained until 1972 while at the same time teaching at the Greek school of Otto Gesellschaft. In 1977 he completed his PhD thesis (titled "The Presence of the Greek Spirit in '']'' by ]"<ref>"Η παρουσία του ελληνικού πνεύματος στις ελεγείες του Duino του Ράινερ Μαρία Ρίλκε" in Greek.</ref>) under the supervision of Evangelos Moutsopoulos.<ref name="official"/> From 1975 to 1988 he was a lecturer and later professor in the ].


He was the author of nine books, principally on philosophy and education and has translated Friedrich Nietzsche's '']'' in the Greek language.
== Core Philosophical Views ==


In 1973 he married philosophy professor Nicolitsa Georgopoulou, with whom he had a daughter, Diotima, who is currently a professor at the faculty of Social Theology of the Theological School of the University of Athens.
Liantinis' beliefs stem directly from ancient Greek philosophy infused with the works of ] and the Romantics. Much of his writings focus on what he saw as the great moral and intellectual decline of modern Greek culture as contrasted with its ancient equivalent. To establish his position further, he devotes a big part of his work in defining with precision what the value of ancient Greece is and why it has always played a central role in all of western though. Specifically, he argues against the popular notion that Ancient Greece, although ahead of its time for most of antiquity and perhaps the middle ages was eventually superseded by the advancements in Europe during and after the Renascence. In contrast he believed that the Ancient Greeks possessed a complete culture, a kind of superset of all Western cultures, past and present. "The Greeks" he argued in his book Gemma, "did not need psychoanalysis because they had Tragedy". In contrast, today, Greeks are relatively unknown. "For the Europeans" he writes quite harshly in Gemma "... we, 'New-Greeks', are but a faceless bunch, something of a Balko-Turkish Negro. We are the 'Ortodox' with the Russian-like writing ... and the domes on our village houses".


== Core philosophical views ==
He often touched upon the highly controversial issue of the alleged superiority of Greek to Jewish culture, one expressed through the ancient philosophers and folk mythology and the latter through the great Judaic religions of Christianity, Islam and Judaism.
Liantinis' system of ideas was greatly influenced by the philosophy of Ancient Greece as well as the ideals of the ] and the works of ]. He made numerous references to the scientific achievements of his time, especially in the realm of ], and he attempted to formulate a connection between it and questions concerning the existence and nature of God. He wrote extensively about education (παιδεία '']'') which was his own field of work, and some of his writings focus on what he saw as the moral and intellectual decline of modern Greeks as contrasted with their ancestors. To establish his position further, he devotes a part of his work in an effort to define exactly what the real value of Ancient Greece was as well as the true world-view that they proposed. He argues against the notion that Ancient Greece, although ahead of its time for most of antiquity and perhaps the Middle Ages, was eventually superseded by the advancements in Renaissance Europe. In contrast, he believed that the Greeks possessed a ''complete'' culture, a kind of super-set for all Western cultures, past and present. As an example, in his book ''Gemma'' he argued that "The Greeks did not need ] because they had ]". This period of intellectual brilliance was to be short lived and Liantinis wrote that "it would be a sign of honesty if the Greeks were to stop philosophizing right after ]" . In contrast, today, Greeks are completely unknown as "...for the Europeans we, the 'New-Greeks', are but a faceless bunch, something of a Balko-Turkish Arab. We are the '''Ortodox''' with the Russian-like writing and the domes on our village houses" .


On this topic, he often touched upon the highly controversial issue of the alleged superiority of Greek to Jewish culture, the former being expressed through the ancient philosophers and folk mythology and the latter through the great Judaic religions of Judaism, Islam and most importantly Christianity.
Death was another big issue in his work. He adhered and emphasised the Ancient Greek notion of death as a final end with no defined views about an afterlife and especially about any moral rewards like the Heaven and Hell we know through Christianity, all in great contrast to the rest of Judaic religions. In one of his lectures he mentions a passage from Homer's Ulysses where the hero is said to visit the Underworld in order to ask the dead about their experience of afterlife so that he can judge Calypso's offer of immortality in exchange of his eternal companionship. There he finds even the greatest of heros like Achilles to be mere shadows, "without mind or will", in need of blood to drink in order to remember, momentarily, who they where before so that they can answer Ulysses questions. The Hero willingly choses to continue his quest to return to Ithaca, knowing that he will die and suffer the same fate instead of accepting the nymph's offer. These views can shed a new light on his alleged suicide since it infuses it with great moral courage.


Death was also central to his work and (as he claimed) that of the Ancient Greeks. He denied the notion of Greece as a culture of playful joyfulness and argued that the Greeks had instead presented us with a world of infinite ], an idea that is consistent with that of ] whom he greatly admired. Their philosophy was a study of death and their conclusions were absolute and hard to accept since they saw death as a final end, with no afterlife or moral rewards for the life lived on earth. Liadinis adhered to that notion and once again contrasted it to the less heroic view held in the Judaic religions. This could shed new light on his alleged suicide, by potentially infusing it with great moral courage as he ponders on the distance that separates the man who "honours the natural knowledge that once dead he will vanish and the one who is taught to believe that once dead, he will migrate in some heavenly America" .
=== Views on Education ===


=== Classicism and Romanticism ===
Education was central to what he though of as a future renascence of Greek (and beyond) culture. He emphasised on the need to distinguish between different levels of value amongst the various Greek intellectuals instead of presenting them as the single entity of "the Greats of Greek letters". This distinction is carried in other fields as well most notable being a lecture on the sacred hill of the Acropolis about what he called the "slate of shame". He refereed to a slate raised in the memory of ] and ] who, during the WW2 German occupation of Greece, lowered the Nazi Swastika flag from the Acropolis. The reason for Liantinis anger was that we cannot distinguish between something of eternal value (the Parthenon) and of common value (a heroic act), the second being one of many similar event in Greece and global culture in general.
Liantinis believed that ] and ] are the only "valid" world-views that constitute both an artistic style and a way of life. He believed these two to be antithetical in nature, as the former is an expression of pure emotions while the latter of logic. In his view, the poet ] tried to marry the two and his failed experiment was recorded in the ], appropriately called "The Quest for Helen". There, Faust, representing the ] lies in bed with ] only to produce a still-born child. Although the story symbolizes the impossibility of a task it was deemed so important that many others, like Greece's national poet ], took it upon themselves to complete.


=== Jewish vs Greek culture === === Views on education ===
Education was central to what he saw as the long struggle of humanity to rise above the animal level and into something so elaborate that it could in turn explain the Universe that created it, a view that is consistent with the ] to which he has made reference. Education is the carrier of this monumental effort and contains the living memories of its People in the forms of language and poetry. These views are expressed mainly in ''Homo educandus'' and ''Τα Ελληνικά'' (roughly translated as 'The Greek Language'), where he blamed a part of the moral decline of his contemporaries on the shallowness and rigidity with which modern day teachers transmit knowledge, focusing on form rather than content. Instead he argued for a qualitative understanding of literature and poetry as for example in the need to distinguish between the different value levels of various Greek intellectuals, rather than presenting them as the single entity of "the Great Men of Greek letters". He also spoke about the great difficulty in understanding and teaching poetry within this rigid framework in which formal explanations are valued over deep understanding of meaning.


He advocated for a total separation of Church and State, especially in matters of education since he considers Christianity to be antithetical to Greek thought and one must choose one or the other. Following this stance, he warned against the increasing influence of the then ] for his involvement in Greek politics.
These are vast and controversial view points and, to their most extreme criticism, has led Liantinis to be accused for anti-semitism. To understand this position better, we must look at mediaval Greek history and the Byzantine Empire where the Christian church, in league with the Emperors drove the final nail into what remained of ancient Greece, often through brutal means. Liantinis' argument however is not merely historical. He claims that the Greeks where morally superior as they did not conceive of morality as imposed by a higher power but stemming from human intellect.


=== Views on Death === === Greek vs Jewish culture ===
This is a vast and highly controversial issue. Liantinis thought of Christianity as the main vessel of Jewish culture in the West and to understand his position better we might want to look at medieval Greek history and the ], when the church, aligned with the Emperors destroyed what remained of Ancient Greek alongside other Pagan religions, often through ] (This somewhat common presupposition of the relation between the rise and confirmation of Christianity (in society) and Paganism, ought to be studied in great detail when considering the same relation in the east between Christians and Pagans; for the violence and harshness which characterises the western Christian stand against Paganism, bears little relevance to what occurred in the east. Therefore, it is perhaps his pro-enlightenment mentality that led Liantinis to suppose that the western Christian action toward Paganism was the same as the eastern Christian one.)


Liantinis' argument, however, is not historical. He claims that the Greeks were morally superior, as they had the courage to create a morality that reflected the finite nature of existence rather than imposing it as the divine law of an imaginary God who guarantees eternal life in the heavens. "The sorrowful longing of death, for the Greeks, gave birth to art. Where the fear of death for other people gave birth to religions" . This harshly realistic view proved hard to maintain and in ''Gemma'' he writes that "the Jews cultivated the land of faith. The Greeks cultivated the land of knowledge the Jews were executioners, the Greeks were judges ... that is why the Jews won". {{anchor|Giant Jews of science}}This alleged defeat of Greek culture is featured frequently in his work and is illustrated with a thought experiment found in the same book, where contemporary Europeans are asked about ], ], ] and other somewhat lesser known yet important philosophers. He presumes that few if any will answer with conviction, yet the same sample would immediately recognise the biblical figures of ], ] and ]. He extends these thoughts to seminal thinkers like ], ] and ], the "giant Jews of science" as he called them , while contemporary Greeks are totally unable to offer anyone of equivalent importance.
The only form of immortality that Liantinis (and the Greeks according to him) believed in was what he called "intra-world immortality" (ενδοκοσμική αθανασία) which translates to the memories a man has left behind through his deeds and life example. This is indeed in accordance to the immense value the ancient Greeks placed on post-thymus reputation (υστεροφυμία).


=== Views on death ===
On the same subject he also emphasised the Greek hero's individualism (oposite to the Eastern dissolution of the self inside the Great Universe) even to the point of chosing his own death. In Gemma he writes poetically: "I will die, Death, when I want and not when you want. In this last act, your desire is not going to be realised, it is my desire which will be realised. I fight against your will. I fight your power. I fight all of your entity. I will enter into the earth when I decide, not when you decide." .
According to Liadinis, the notion of death occupied the ancients to such a degree that one could see their whole culture as arising from the radical views they held on the subject. They saw death as an unchanging cosmic law, much like today's notion of ], and did not associate whatever ] they had conceived with a moral system of reward and punishment (like the ones found in the great Judaic religions). Although individual myths, like that of ] who was condemned to eternal punishment in the realms of ], ''did'' exist, they were largely exceptions to the rule and never developed into a proper system of beliefs about life after death. In one of his lectures,<ref>{{Citation|last=dukephilip|title=Liantinis, Zoi meta thanaton, YouTube video|date=2008-07-24|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fRftd7Px_ho |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/youtube/20211221/fRftd7Px_ho |archive-date=2021-12-21 |url-status=live|accessdate=2017-07-12}}{{cbignore}}</ref> Liantinis says that Homer describes a scene where the hero, before engaging him in battle, says to his opponent: "the race of men is related to that of leaves" ("οἵη περ φύλλων γενεὴ τοίη δὲ καὶ ἀνδρῶν"), as we momentarily stand fresh on the tree branch, then quickly surrender to the wind and rain. The lyric poet ] also questions in his works: "What are we but dreams of shadows..." ("σκιᾶς ὄναρ ἄνθρωπος"), "...not even shadows proper" as Liantinis points out.


The only form of immortality that Liantinis (and the Greeks according to him) believed in was what he called "intra-world immortality" (ενδοκοσμική αθανασία), which comes from the memories a man leaves behind him, through his deeds and life example. This is indeed in accordance to the immense value the ancient Greeks placed on posthumous reputation (υστεροφημία).
He has also written that ] and ] are the related, something known to the Greeks before Freud.


On the same subject, he also emphasised the Greek hero's individualism (opposite to the Eastern dissolution of the self inside the Great Universe) even to the point of choosing his own death. In ''Gemma'', he writes poetically: "I will die, Death, when I want and not when you want. In this last act, your desire is not going to be realized, it is my desire which will be realised. I fight against your will. I fight your power. I fight all of your entity. I will enter into the earth when I decide, not when you decide." .
== Disappearance and Death==


==Disappearance and death==
Liantinis disappeared in 1.6.98. A taxi driver in Sparta claims that he drove the professor on the same day near ] (near Taigetos) and that he was wearing a blue shirt and white footwear.
Liantinis disappeared on 1 June 1998. A taxi driver claimed that he drove the professor on the same day near ] (near Taygetos) and that he was wearing a blue shirt and white footwear.


Liantinis had instructed his cousin to reveal to his daughter, after seven years, the location of the crypt where his remains could be found. His cousin did so. In July 2005 human bones were found in the area of the mountain Taygetos; forensic examinations verified that it was the body of Liantinis. No lethal substances were found to determine the cause of death.<ref></ref><ref></ref>
In 2005 some human bones where found in the area of the mountain Taigetos. Some people believe that Liantinis took his own life as a protest against what he saw as the lack of values in modern Greek society. In his last letter to his daughter he wrote: "My last act has the meaning of protest for the evil that we, the adults, prepare for the innocent new generations that are coming. We live our life eating their flesh. A very bad evil. My unhappiness for this crime kills me."<ref name="letter"/>


Some people believe that Liantinis took his own life as a protest against what he saw as the lack of values in modern Greek society. In his last letter to his daughter he wrote: "My last act has the meaning of protest for the evil that we, the adults, prepare for the innocent new generations that are coming. We live our life eating their flesh. A very bad evil. My unhappiness for this crime kills me."<ref name="letter"/>
==References==
Liantinis D. (1997) Gemma Pub: Vivliogonia ISBN: 9789607088239


==Bibliography (selection)==
Liantinis D. (n.d.) Is There Life after Death? Available from: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fRftd7Px_ho
* Liantinis D. (1984). ''Homo Educandus''. Pub.: Vivliogonia.
Liantinis D. (n.d.) Exemplary Teaching Available from: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ESwyPoO6Ur4&feature=related
* Liantinis D. (1992). ''Τα Ελληνικά''. Pub.: Vivliogonia.
<references/>
* Liantinis D. (1997). ''Gemma''. Pub.: Vivliogonia. {{ISBN|978-960-7088-23-9}} (English translation by Yiannis Tsapras. {{ISBN|1492179698}} and as a ; German translation by Nikolaos Karatsioras as ''Gemma'': ''Wie man Mensch wird''. Pub. Frank & Time).

An online resource (Liantinis.gr) written and managed by his wife Professor Nikolitsa Georgopoulou contains letters to her, manuscripts, un-edited texts and critical comments for his books.

==See also==
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==References==
{{reflist}}


== External links == == External links ==
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Latest revision as of 17:37, 27 October 2024

Greek philosopher
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Dimitris Liantinis
Born(1942-07-23)23 July 1942
Liantina, Laconia, Peloponnese, Greece
Diedunknown; disappeared on 1 June 1998 (aged 55)
in Taygetos, Peloponnese, Greece
EducationUniversity of Athens (B.A., 1966)
University of Munich
University of Athens (Ph.D., 1977)
Era20th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolContinental philosophy
InstitutionsUniversity of Athens
Main interestsAncient Greek philosophy, the Romantic movement
Notable ideasRevival of Classicism and Romanticism

Dimitris Liantinis (/ˌliːənˈtiːnɪs/; Greek: Δημήτρης Λιαντίνης [ʎa(n)ˈdinis]; born 23 July 1942, disappeared 1 June 1998) was a Greek philosopher. He was associate professor at the Department of Pedagogy of the Faculty of Philosophy, Pedagogy and Psychology of the University of Athens, teaching the course "Philosophy of Education and Teaching of Greek Language and Literature". He has written nine books. His last and most seminal work Gemma (Γκέμμα) has been translated into several languages.

A great lover of Ancient Greek culture, he devoted his life in studying and reinterpreting their cultural heritage. He wrote on various philosophical issues, including education, morality and death. He emphasised the need of incorporating the Ancient Greek ideas and morals into the modern Greek education system and also held explicit views on the decline of Western culture.

He has achieved popularity in Greece because of his strange and unexplained disappearance in the morning of 1 June 1998 at the age of 55 years. It is thought that he committed suicide in 1998 on the mountains of Taygetos. His last university lecture was delivered on 27 May 1998. In his letter to his family he wrote "I go away by my own will. I disappear standing, strong, and proud."

Life and work

Liantinis was born in the Laconian village of Liantina (Λιαντίνα) as Demetrios Nikolakakos (Νικολακάκος). He later changed his surname to Liantinis to honour his village. He graduated in 1966 from the University of Athens curriculum of Philosophy and worked as a teacher. He moved to Munich in 1970 to study the German language, where he remained until 1972 while at the same time teaching at the Greek school of Otto Gesellschaft. In 1977 he completed his PhD thesis (titled "The Presence of the Greek Spirit in Duino Elegies by Rainer Maria Rilke") under the supervision of Evangelos Moutsopoulos. From 1975 to 1988 he was a lecturer and later professor in the National and Kapodestrian University of Athens.

He was the author of nine books, principally on philosophy and education and has translated Friedrich Nietzsche's Ecce Homo in the Greek language.

In 1973 he married philosophy professor Nicolitsa Georgopoulou, with whom he had a daughter, Diotima, who is currently a professor at the faculty of Social Theology of the Theological School of the University of Athens.

Core philosophical views

Liantinis' system of ideas was greatly influenced by the philosophy of Ancient Greece as well as the ideals of the Romantic movement and the works of Friedrich Nietzsche. He made numerous references to the scientific achievements of his time, especially in the realm of cosmology, and he attempted to formulate a connection between it and questions concerning the existence and nature of God. He wrote extensively about education (παιδεία paideia) which was his own field of work, and some of his writings focus on what he saw as the moral and intellectual decline of modern Greeks as contrasted with their ancestors. To establish his position further, he devotes a part of his work in an effort to define exactly what the real value of Ancient Greece was as well as the true world-view that they proposed. He argues against the notion that Ancient Greece, although ahead of its time for most of antiquity and perhaps the Middle Ages, was eventually superseded by the advancements in Renaissance Europe. In contrast, he believed that the Greeks possessed a complete culture, a kind of super-set for all Western cultures, past and present. As an example, in his book Gemma he argued that "The Greeks did not need psychoanalysis because they had Tragedy". This period of intellectual brilliance was to be short lived and Liantinis wrote that "it would be a sign of honesty if the Greeks were to stop philosophizing right after Aristotle" . In contrast, today, Greeks are completely unknown as "...for the Europeans we, the 'New-Greeks', are but a faceless bunch, something of a Balko-Turkish Arab. We are the Ortodox with the Russian-like writing and the domes on our village houses" .

On this topic, he often touched upon the highly controversial issue of the alleged superiority of Greek to Jewish culture, the former being expressed through the ancient philosophers and folk mythology and the latter through the great Judaic religions of Judaism, Islam and most importantly Christianity.

Death was also central to his work and (as he claimed) that of the Ancient Greeks. He denied the notion of Greece as a culture of playful joyfulness and argued that the Greeks had instead presented us with a world of infinite melancholy, an idea that is consistent with that of Nietzsche's whom he greatly admired. Their philosophy was a study of death and their conclusions were absolute and hard to accept since they saw death as a final end, with no afterlife or moral rewards for the life lived on earth. Liadinis adhered to that notion and once again contrasted it to the less heroic view held in the Judaic religions. This could shed new light on his alleged suicide, by potentially infusing it with great moral courage as he ponders on the distance that separates the man who "honours the natural knowledge that once dead he will vanish and the one who is taught to believe that once dead, he will migrate in some heavenly America" .

Classicism and Romanticism

Liantinis believed that Romanticism and Classicism are the only "valid" world-views that constitute both an artistic style and a way of life. He believed these two to be antithetical in nature, as the former is an expression of pure emotions while the latter of logic. In his view, the poet J. W. Goethe tried to marry the two and his failed experiment was recorded in the second part of Faust, appropriately called "The Quest for Helen". There, Faust, representing the romantic hero lies in bed with Helen of Troy only to produce a still-born child. Although the story symbolizes the impossibility of a task it was deemed so important that many others, like Greece's national poet Dionysios Solomos, took it upon themselves to complete.

Views on education

Education was central to what he saw as the long struggle of humanity to rise above the animal level and into something so elaborate that it could in turn explain the Universe that created it, a view that is consistent with the Anthropic Principle to which he has made reference. Education is the carrier of this monumental effort and contains the living memories of its People in the forms of language and poetry. These views are expressed mainly in Homo educandus and Τα Ελληνικά (roughly translated as 'The Greek Language'), where he blamed a part of the moral decline of his contemporaries on the shallowness and rigidity with which modern day teachers transmit knowledge, focusing on form rather than content. Instead he argued for a qualitative understanding of literature and poetry as for example in the need to distinguish between the different value levels of various Greek intellectuals, rather than presenting them as the single entity of "the Great Men of Greek letters". He also spoke about the great difficulty in understanding and teaching poetry within this rigid framework in which formal explanations are valued over deep understanding of meaning.

He advocated for a total separation of Church and State, especially in matters of education since he considers Christianity to be antithetical to Greek thought and one must choose one or the other. Following this stance, he warned against the increasing influence of the then Archbishop Christodoulos of Athens for his involvement in Greek politics.

Greek vs Jewish culture

This is a vast and highly controversial issue. Liantinis thought of Christianity as the main vessel of Jewish culture in the West and to understand his position better we might want to look at medieval Greek history and the Byzantine Empire, when the church, aligned with the Emperors destroyed what remained of Ancient Greek alongside other Pagan religions, often through brutal means (This somewhat common presupposition of the relation between the rise and confirmation of Christianity (in society) and Paganism, ought to be studied in great detail when considering the same relation in the east between Christians and Pagans; for the violence and harshness which characterises the western Christian stand against Paganism, bears little relevance to what occurred in the east. Therefore, it is perhaps his pro-enlightenment mentality that led Liantinis to suppose that the western Christian action toward Paganism was the same as the eastern Christian one.)

Liantinis' argument, however, is not historical. He claims that the Greeks were morally superior, as they had the courage to create a morality that reflected the finite nature of existence rather than imposing it as the divine law of an imaginary God who guarantees eternal life in the heavens. "The sorrowful longing of death, for the Greeks, gave birth to art. Where the fear of death for other people gave birth to religions" . This harshly realistic view proved hard to maintain and in Gemma he writes that "the Jews cultivated the land of faith. The Greeks cultivated the land of knowledge the Jews were executioners, the Greeks were judges ... that is why the Jews won". This alleged defeat of Greek culture is featured frequently in his work and is illustrated with a thought experiment found in the same book, where contemporary Europeans are asked about Empedocles, Anaximander, Leucippus and other somewhat lesser known yet important philosophers. He presumes that few if any will answer with conviction, yet the same sample would immediately recognise the biblical figures of Moses, Abraham and Noah. He extends these thoughts to seminal thinkers like Sigmund Freud, Albert Einstein and Karl Marx, the "giant Jews of science" as he called them , while contemporary Greeks are totally unable to offer anyone of equivalent importance.

Views on death

According to Liadinis, the notion of death occupied the ancients to such a degree that one could see their whole culture as arising from the radical views they held on the subject. They saw death as an unchanging cosmic law, much like today's notion of entropy, and did not associate whatever afterlife they had conceived with a moral system of reward and punishment (like the ones found in the great Judaic religions). Although individual myths, like that of Sisyphus who was condemned to eternal punishment in the realms of Hades, did exist, they were largely exceptions to the rule and never developed into a proper system of beliefs about life after death. In one of his lectures, Liantinis says that Homer describes a scene where the hero, before engaging him in battle, says to his opponent: "the race of men is related to that of leaves" ("οἵη περ φύλλων γενεὴ τοίη δὲ καὶ ἀνδρῶν"), as we momentarily stand fresh on the tree branch, then quickly surrender to the wind and rain. The lyric poet Pindar also questions in his works: "What are we but dreams of shadows..." ("σκιᾶς ὄναρ ἄνθρωπος"), "...not even shadows proper" as Liantinis points out.

The only form of immortality that Liantinis (and the Greeks according to him) believed in was what he called "intra-world immortality" (ενδοκοσμική αθανασία), which comes from the memories a man leaves behind him, through his deeds and life example. This is indeed in accordance to the immense value the ancient Greeks placed on posthumous reputation (υστεροφημία).

On the same subject, he also emphasised the Greek hero's individualism (opposite to the Eastern dissolution of the self inside the Great Universe) even to the point of choosing his own death. In Gemma, he writes poetically: "I will die, Death, when I want and not when you want. In this last act, your desire is not going to be realized, it is my desire which will be realised. I fight against your will. I fight your power. I fight all of your entity. I will enter into the earth when I decide, not when you decide." .

Disappearance and death

Liantinis disappeared on 1 June 1998. A taxi driver claimed that he drove the professor on the same day near Sparti (near Taygetos) and that he was wearing a blue shirt and white footwear.

Liantinis had instructed his cousin to reveal to his daughter, after seven years, the location of the crypt where his remains could be found. His cousin did so. In July 2005 human bones were found in the area of the mountain Taygetos; forensic examinations verified that it was the body of Liantinis. No lethal substances were found to determine the cause of death.

Some people believe that Liantinis took his own life as a protest against what he saw as the lack of values in modern Greek society. In his last letter to his daughter he wrote: "My last act has the meaning of protest for the evil that we, the adults, prepare for the innocent new generations that are coming. We live our life eating their flesh. A very bad evil. My unhappiness for this crime kills me."

Bibliography (selection)

  • Liantinis D. (1984). Homo Educandus. Pub.: Vivliogonia.
  • Liantinis D. (1992). Τα Ελληνικά. Pub.: Vivliogonia.
  • Liantinis D. (1997). Gemma. Pub.: Vivliogonia. ISBN 978-960-7088-23-9 (English translation by Yiannis Tsapras. Available on Amazon ISBN 1492179698 and as a Kindle e-book; German translation by Nikolaos Karatsioras as Gemma: Wie man Mensch wird. Pub. Frank & Time).

An online resource (Liantinis.gr) written and managed by his wife Professor Nikolitsa Georgopoulou contains letters to her, manuscripts, un-edited texts and critical comments for his books.

See also

References

  1. ^ Liantinis.gr – official biography
  2. "Biography at Liantinis.org". Archived from the original on 2014-03-25. Retrieved 2014-08-30.
  3. ^ "The Last letter". Archived from the original on 2019-04-27. Retrieved 2018-09-12.
  4. "Η παρουσία του ελληνικού πνεύματος στις ελεγείες του Duino του Ράινερ Μαρία Ρίλκε" in Greek.
  5. dukephilip (2008-07-24), Liantinis, Zoi meta thanaton, YouTube video, archived from the original on 2021-12-21, retrieved 2017-07-12
  6. Dimitris Liantinis - Short Biography
  7. Biography at Philosophia.gr

External links

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