In The Ancients and Shakespeare on Time Piotr Nowak depicts a world where tradition â devoid of gravity, âSans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans everythingâ â attempts to curb the young and new, while youth resists with all its power, vitality and characteristic insolence. The wars of generations, which Nowak explores in the works of Plato, Aristophanes and Shakespeare, pertain to the essence and meaning of time. They make up the dramatic tensions in the transgenerational dialogue between the old and the young.
âPiotr Nowak is an unusual phenomenon of both Polish and world philosophy; one can only wish that for the sake of philosophy itself and our sake as well, since we are its recipients and beneficiaries, there would be more people like him. Nowak does not follow paved and crowded paths. He does not submit to canons defined by the logic of academic life, but rather to dynamics of the inquiry into the sense of the world and of being-in-the-world. He is looking for the answers too seldom asked, yet essential questions in regions which a typical philosopher rarely visits, and from each of his thought ventures Nowak brings precious trophies that he generously shares with his readers. His essays are always an unforgettable intellectual adventure, and never a disappointment for all of those hungry of understanding. His writing is usually a reproach: in all my knowledge I am still ignorant of so many things; and an invitation: so many virgin lands, omitted on my map of knowledge, are still there to be exploredâ¦â â Zygmunt Bauman
Preface
Acknowledgements
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
Part One: The Ancients
Senility, Youth and Justice: Some Remarks on the First Book of The Republic
The Last Step in The Clouds
The City of Women
Part Two: Shakespeare King Lear, or the Battle of Generations
Gods and Children: Shakespeare Reads The Prince
Spelling The Tempest
Works Cited
About the Author
Index