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Born in the Eastern Roman Empire in the 4th century CE, Hypatia of Alexandria was a widely respected female public intellectual, which was a rarity in ancient Roman society. As a teacher and philosopher, she led Alexandria’s Platonic school, embracing Neoplatonism – a belief system that saw the harmonies of mathematics as a window into the divine. And, as an advisor to powerful local leaders, she was a moderate secular voice amid Roman Christianisation. However, as illustrated in this TED-Ed animation, it was this role that would ultimately lead to her gruesome murder at the hands of religious zealots. A concise chronicle of Hypatia’s life and times, the short also makes for an intriguing window into the political, religious and philosophical forces that shaped Alexandria during this tumultuous era.
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Animals and humans
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57 minutes
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Archaeology
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Family life
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Virtues and vices
Why Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Adam Smith were divided on the virtues of vanity
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Ecology and environmental sciences
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Beauty and aesthetics
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History
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Family life
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Fairness and equality
Visit the small Texas community that lives in the shadow of SpaceX launches
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