The book called The Consolation of Philosophy was throughout the Middle Ages, and down to the beginnings of the modern epoch in the sixteenth century, the scholars familiar companion. Few books have exercised a wider influence in their time. It has been translated into every European tongue, and into English nearly a dozen times, from King Alfreds paraphrase to the translations of Lord Preston, Causton, Ridpath, and Duncan, in the eighteenth century.
Die Rationalitat des Mythischen (Quellen und Studien zur Philosophie, #55)
by Dirk Cursgen
Die vorliegende Arbeit untersucht die Bedeutung des Mythos fur die Philosophie Platons und das nachplatonische, antike Denken. Dabei konzentriert sie sich auf den Schlussmythos der Politeia und den Kommentar des Neuplatonikers Proklos zu diesem Text. Auf dieser Grundlage sind ihr allgemeine Aussagen zu Funktion und Stellung des Mythos in der Philosophie moeglich. Anders als in vergleichbaren Publikationen wird der platonische Mythos weder historisch noch als Dialogelement isoliert. So kann sei...
Socrates wrote nothing; Plato's accounts of Socrates helped to establish western politics, ethics, and metaphysics. Both have played crucial and dramatically changing roles in western culture. In the last two centuries, the triumph of democracy has led many to side with the Athenians against a Socrates whom they were right to kill. Meanwhile, the Cold War gave us polar images of Plato as both a dangerous totalitarian and an escapist intellectual. This book is framed by accounts of modern respons...
This four-volume set recognizes that philosophy in the ancient Greek world began as a universal science, inextricably linked with religion, literature and the special sciences. These themes and their protagonists are incorporated into the historical descriptions and arguments. It traces the history from its very beginnings, through Plato and Aristotle up until the 3rd century BC with the transference of scientific progress away from philosophy to its subordinate branches.
Brill's Companion to the Reception of Socrates (Brill's Companions to Classical Reception, #18)
Brill's Companion to the Reception of Socrates, edited by Christopher Moore, provides almost unbroken coverage, across three-dozen studies, of 2450 years of philosophical and literary engagement with Socrates - the singular Athenian intellectual, paradigm of moral discipline, and inspiration for millennia of philosophical, rhetorical, and dramatic composition. Following an Introduction reflecting on the essentially "receptive" nature of Socrates' influence (by contrast to Plato's), chapters addr...
A Remonstrance Against Lord Viscount Bolingbroke's Philosophical Religion
by G Anderson
Répertoire de la Littérature Ancienne Et Moderne, Vol. 2
by Jean-Francois De La Harpe
Aristotle's Anthropology
This is the first collection of essays devoted specifically to the nature and significance of Aristotle's anthropological philosophy, covering the full range of his ethical, metaphysical and biological works. The book is organised into four parts, two of which deal with the metaphysics and biology of human nature and two of which discuss the anthropological foundations and implications of Aristotle's ethico-political works. The essay topics range from human nature and morality to friendship and...
Die unter Philons Werken stehende Schrift uber die Unzerstoerbarkeit des Weltalls
by Jacob Bernays
UEber Einheitliche, Zusammengesetzte Und Gesammt-Sachen Nach Roemischen Rechte (Classic Reprint)
by Goppert Goppert
UEber Landwirtschaft (Sammlung Tusculum)
by Lucius Iunius Moderatus Columella
This collection of essays offers an overview of the range and breadth of Platonic philosophy in the early modern period. It examines philosophers of Platonic tradition, such as Cusanus, Ficino, and Cudworth. The book also addresses the impact of Platonism on major philosophers of the period, especially Descartes, Leibniz, Locke, Shaftesbury and Berkeley.
Plotin (Untersuchungen Zur Antiken Literatur Und Geschichte, #8)
by Dietrich Roloff
Neue Jahrbucher Fur Das Klassische Altertum Geschichte Und Deutsche Literatur, 1904, Vol. 7 (Classic Reprint)
by Johannes Ilberg
In Ennead II.1 (40) Plotinus is primarily concerned to argue for the everlastingness of the universe, the heavens, and the heavenly bodies as individual substances. Here he must grapple both with the philosophical issue of personal identity through time and with the rich tradition of cosmology which pitted the Platonists against the Aristotelians and Stoics. What results is a historically informed cosmological sketch explaining the constitution of the heavens as well as sublunar and celestial...