It’s here: our last episode on the Iliad! Achilles continues to mourn Patroclus, and to try to disfigure Hector’s body. After days of this, Apollo intervenes, and the gods help Priam to retrieve his son’s body from Achilles’ tent. Brian, Shilo, and Jeff consider Achilles’ “foreign policy” in his dealings with Priam, and the meaning of Homer’s epic as a whole. Does the end of the Iliad portray a decline to a world run by liars and dancers, or an ascent to an almost joyful tragic insight into human power? In the final analysis, is it better to be a human being than to be a god? Do we need to read the Odyssey together to answer these questions?
Brian,
Are you aware that your website may be infected with malware? I was just blocked from opening Combat and Classics. Is this something that is being addressed?
Jim Rice
It’s opening fine for me: https://www.combatandclassics.org/. I thought they might just not have sprung for the Secure Socket Layer (HTTS), but it appears they have…
Thanks for responding, Mark. I can open the Combat and Classics Podcast through The Partially Examined Life with no problem. However, when I go directly to their site I get the attached message on my screen.
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Website blocked due to trojan
Website Blocked: http://www.combatandclassics.org
v2.6.15 | Trojan: 2.0.202311242217
Malwarebytes Browser Guard blocked this page because it may contain malicious activity.
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We strongly recommend you do not continue. You may be putting your safety at risk by visiting this site. For more information, visit Malwarebytes Support.
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