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The Useful versus the Pleasurable in History

Should history teach or merely delight? Thucydides chose instruction over applause — and drew a battle line that runs through the whole tradition.

Greek historians faced a choice: write to entertain a crowd, or write to teach those who want to understand how the world really works. Thucydides made the break famous, renouncing the mythical, ear-pleasing storytelling of his predecessors and offering instead a "possession for all time" — useful to anyone who would grasp the patterns of human affairs. Centuries later Polybius sharpened the same divide into open polemic, mocking "tragic" historians who chased sensation and pity at the expense of truth. The split between the useful and the merely pleasurable became a defining standard by which serious history judged itself.

How it traveled

  1. Histories
    Megalopolis · -118
    explains
  2. Quomodo historia conscribenda sit
    Samosata · 180
    explains
  3. Historical Library
    Syracuse (Sicily)
    explains

Key passages(20)

Quomodo historia conscribenda sit · Lucian of Samosata

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Historical Library · Diodorus Siculus

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Quomodo adolescens poetas audire debeat · Plutarch

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Deipnosophistae · Athenaeus of Naucratis

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Historical Library · Diodorus Siculus

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Historical Library · Diodorus Siculus

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Noctes Atticae · Aulus Gellius

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Antidosis · Isocrates

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Quomodo historia conscribenda sit · Lucian of Samosata

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Quomodo historia conscribenda sit · Lucian of Samosata

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Quomodo historia conscribenda sit · Lucian of Samosata

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De Josepho · Philo Judaeus

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De Vita Mosis (Lib. I-II) · Philo Judaeus

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De Pythiae oraculis · Plutarch

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