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Parallel Lives

Plutarch's biographical masterwork pairing Greek and Roman statesmen to illuminate <em>character</em> under pressure — the method whose moral framework maps onto AI-era builders.
Plutarch's Parallel Lives (c. 100–115 CE) arranges biographies in complementary pairs—Theseus with Romulus, Alexander with Caesar, Demosthenes with Cicero—to reveal not historical facts but the contours of virtue and vice. Each pair concludes with a synkrisis, a formal comparison that draws moral instruction from the juxtaposition. The work is not hagiography; Plutarch admires and critiques in the same breath, showing how the same force—ambition, courage, perception—can save or destroy depending on the restraint that governs it. The Lives shaped Western biography, influenced Shakespeare's Roman plays, and provided Montaigne and Emerson with a framework for thinking about character. In the AI age, Plutarch's method gains new urgency: it offers a discipline for examining not whether people can build with powerful tools but whether their character is equal to the amplification.

In The You On AI Field Guide

Plutarch wrote the Lives as moral instruction for the young. The work's purpose, stated most clearly in the preface to the Life of Pericles, is to distinguish between admiring a beautiful artifact and studying the character

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