Volume 14: The Harvard Classics

GPTKB entity

Statements (40)
Predicate Object
gptkbp:instance_of gptkb:book
gptkbp:contains gptkb:The_Confessions_of_St._Augustine
gptkb:The_Golden_Sayings_of_Epictetus
gptkb:The_Meditations_of_Marcus_Aurelius
gptkb:The_Imitation_of_Christ
gptkbp:cultural_impact significant influence on education
influential in American education
part of the Great Books movement
reference in literary studies
used in liberal arts curriculum
gptkbp:edited_by gptkb:Charles_William_Eliot
gptkbp:format gptkb:printer
gptkbp:genre gptkb:philosopher
gptkbp:historical_context Western philosophy
gptkbp:influenced_by gptkb:Stoicism
Christian philosophy
gptkbp:is_available_in digital format
gptkbp:is_available_on libraries
gptkbp:is_cited_in academic studies on philosophy
gptkbp:isbn 978-1-59308-000-0
gptkbp:language English
gptkbp:narrative_style introduction by Charles W. Eliot
gptkbp:notable_quote “ The mind is everything. What you think you become.”
“ The greatest use of a life is to spend it for something that will outlast it.”
“ To know what you can not be, is the beginning of knowing who you are.”
“ He who has a why to live can bear almost any how.”
“ The unexamined life is not worth living.”
gptkbp:notable_work gptkb:The_Confessions_of_St._Augustine
gptkb:The_Golden_Sayings_of_Epictetus
gptkb:The_Meditations_of_Marcus_Aurelius
gptkb:The_Imitation_of_Christ
gptkbp:page_count 400
gptkbp:part_of gptkb:The_Harvard_Classics
gptkbp:published_by 1909
gptkbp:publisher gptkb:P._F._Collier_&_Son
gptkbp:release_date 1909-01-01
gptkbp:series The Harvard Classics Series
gptkbp:translated_into multiple translators
gptkbp:bfsParent gptkb:Harvard_Classics_series
gptkbp:bfsLayer 5