11. The Athenian Gamble - Alcibiades and the Road to Sicily
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In 415 BC, Athens debated the most ambitious gamble in its history: a vast expedition to conquer Sicily. Standing against it was caution itself. Standing for it was the most dazzling, dangerous man of his generation Alcibiades. Aristocrat, celebrity, spendthrift, and political genius, he had inherited every advantage Athens could offer, and a hunger for glory that no fortune could satisfy.
This is the story of the speech he gave to win the city over one of the most seductive arguments ever made in a democratic assembly. We set Alcibiades against his rival Nicias, walk through the real reasons behind the expedition, and break down exactly how his rhetoric worked: how he turned his own extravagance into a credential, redefined caution as cowardice, and made a reckless adventure sound like Athenian tradition itself. Featuring the speech in full (Thucydides, Book 6), with analysis drawing on Donald Kagan, W. R. Connor, and Jacqueline de Romilly.
Why was this speech so hard to argue against and what does it teach us about how great powers talk themselves into disaster?
Music by Kevin McLoed, songs include: "Trio for Violin and Viola" and "Devastation and Revenge"
All Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License.