One of the readings, particularly from Aristotle, mentions balance; however, we can see that the bull is unbalanced, meaning that this bull, despite being victorious, will likely fall at some point. This is also seen as the legs of the fallen man is almost wrapped around the bull-man, meaning that due to the bull's lack of balance, he will likely fall. The fallen man, despite being down, however, is also balanced and realistic, meaning that eventually the fallen man or his brethren will eventually win against the bull. Depending on when this is made, the bull can refer to the Persians or some other tribe or even the Minoans, while the fallen man represents the Greek city-states as they are human and realistic compared to the bull.
Greek Bull
Conor Davenport
Created on September 17, 2025
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Transcript
One of the readings, particularly from Aristotle, mentions balance; however, we can see that the bull is unbalanced, meaning that this bull, despite being victorious, will likely fall at some point. This is also seen as the legs of the fallen man is almost wrapped around the bull-man, meaning that due to the bull's lack of balance, he will likely fall. The fallen man, despite being down, however, is also balanced and realistic, meaning that eventually the fallen man or his brethren will eventually win against the bull. Depending on when this is made, the bull can refer to the Persians or some other tribe or even the Minoans, while the fallen man represents the Greek city-states as they are human and realistic compared to the bull.