
Prof Jiang’s Predictive History and other lectures Great Books #3: Poets And Prophets
Apr 8, 2026
A lecture tracing how Homer shaped Greek civic life through the Iliad and its teaching of excellence and flourishing. It explores speechmaking as a form of warfare and Odysseus’ persuasive strategies. The talk examines poetic techniques that make language memorable and argues poets help construct shared reality and moral imagination.
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Speech Is A Form Of Warfare
- For Greeks, fighting and speech are the same technology: each imposes a reality—force vs. persuasive narrative.
- Jiang analyzes Odysseus' long speech to Achilles as cinematic world-building designed to change Achilles' internal narrative.
How Odysseus' Speech Reframes Achilles' Mind
- Odysseus persuades by expanding Achilles' imagination across present, past, and future scenes rather than offering short bargains.
- Jiang shows the speech uses image sequences: feast, desert, fatherly promise, future glory to reshape Achilles' priorities.
Poetry Techniques Make Speeches Sticky
- The power of speeches comes from poetic techniques—imagery, metaphor, diction and syntax—that make narratives memorable.
- Jiang notes Greek education centered on memorizing the Iliad to teach these rhetorical tools and ritualize speech-making.





