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Foro GA3-240202501-AA2-EV03. Sharing Life Experiences
¿How can you be environmentally friendly at work?
It is important to save electrical energy at work and also in the house. In Colombia, in recent years, they reported that the country wasted 10% of all the energy it produces, which corresponds to approximately 3.96 billion pesos.
At work I can be ecological by turning off the lights that are not necessary and taking full advantage of daylight. Turn off and disconnect computers when the working day ends also saves energy and minimizes costs for the payment of public services
¿ What kind of incentives could a green company offer to its employees?
An incentive can be the integration of the worker and his family with the work environment, create a kindergarten for children of the workmen and they can take their child during the work day.
¿In what other ways could businesses involve their employees in environmental issues?
Companies can make awareness campaigns aimed at workers about the importance of the care of the environment
GA4-240202501 Mind Map
Homero
Homero
is the name given to the author of the main Greek epic poems the Iliad and the
Odyssey since the Hellenistic period it has been questioned that the author of
both works is the same person; the Iliad and the Odyssey are the pillar on
which it rests.
It
is considered that most of Homero
biographies that circulated in antiquity did not provide any secure data.
However, it is usually accepted that the poet's place of origin must
have been the Ionian colonial area of Asia Minor, based on the linguistic features
of his works and the strong tradition that made him come from the area.
Researcher Joachim Latacz he maintains that Homer belonged to or was in permanent contact with the environment of
the nobility. Debate also persists as to whether Homer was a real person or the
name given to one or more oral poets who sang traditional epic works.
In
addition to the Iliad and the Odyssey, other poems were attributed to Homer,
such as the comic minor epic Batrachomyomachia (The War of the Frogs and Mice),
the corpus of Homeric hymns, and several other lost or fragmentary works such
as Margites. Some ancient authors attributed the complete epic Cycle to him,
which includes more poems about the Trojan War as well as epics that narrated
the life of Oedipus and wars between the Argives and Thebans.
Modern
historians, however, generally agree that the Batrachomyomachy, the Margites,
the Homeric hymns, and the cyclical poems postdate the Iliad and Odyssey.
Most
of the tradition held that Homero had been the first poet of Ancient Greece.
Herodotus, who quotes several passages from the Iliad and the Odyssey, says
that Homer lived four hundred years before him, which would place the poet
around the 9th century BC. On the other hand, Hellanicus of Lesbos said that
Homer had been a contemporary of the Trojan War, and Eratosthenes argued that
he must have lived a century later. Other ancient authors considered Homer to
be a contemporary of Lycurgus or Archilochus.
Most
historians place the figure of Homero in the eighth century BC, although there
is controversy about the date on which his poems were written down. The finding
of an inscription related to a passage from the Iliad on a vessel from Ischia
known as the Cup of Nestor, dated around 720 BC , has been interpreted by some
researchers, including Joachim Latacz, as a clear indication that at that time
Homer's work had already been recorded in writing. However, other authors, such
as Alfred Heubeck and Carlo Odo Pavese, deny that such a conclusion can be
drawn from this inscription. Some pottery fragments from the 7th century BC.
that represent a cyclops blinded by Odysseus are usually interpreted as
directly influenced by the Odyssey. There are other works of archaic poetry
that have been interpreted as being influenced by Homer, such as a poem by
Alcaeus of Mytilene that alludes to Achilles' anger and a poem by Stesicorus in
which Helen addresses Telemachus to announce that Athena has arranged for her
return.
Bibliographic References
GARCÍA CATALDO, HÉCTOR EDUARDO. (2012). HOMERO EN VIVO ENTONCES Y
AHORA. Byzantion nea hellás, (31), 13-28. https://dx.doi.org/10.4067/S0718-84712012000100001
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