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logographos (lo-go-GRA-fos): in ancient Athens, someone who composed forensic speeches professionally blogographos: a reader of or participant in blogographos.com
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(You do not need to be a registered blogger to use the comments feature of blogographos.)
blogographos is a public blog to which anyone interested in Greek and Roman antiquity may post. This means interested laymen as well as professional classicists and students. This blog is not intended as a challenge to the resources for classicists currently available--chief among them the Classical Greek and Latin Discussion Group, hosted at the University of Kentucky, and David Meadows's rogueclassicism--but rather as a complement.
How do I post to blogographos? Register at blogographos using the form in the sidebar. Once your registration is complete, open the blogthis window to begin a post.
But what to post? Here are some possibilities: interesting links, reviews of classics-related media, book announcements, questions, amusing anecdotes of a classical nature, suggestions about improving the blog, and so on. Try to keep things intelligent and properly spelt.
Comportment. Spam and other inappropriate material--as determined solely by the Autokrator--will be deleted from blogographos forthwith.
Apr 26, 2007
Wikipedia: Truth vs Equality?
There's a notable essay by Larry Sanger, co-founder of Wikipedia, "WHO SAYS WE KNOW: On the New Politics of Knowledge" at Edge