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Books > Philosophy > Western philosophy > Ancient Western philosophy to c 500
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Symposium
(Paperback)
Plato; Translated by Benjamin Jowett
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R377
Discovery Miles 3 770
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This volume examines the historical end of the Platonic tradition
in relation to creation theories of the natural world through
Neoplatonist philosopher Proclus (412-485) elaboration of an
investigation of Plato's theory of metaphysical archetypal Forms.
Paul and the Greco-Roman Philosophical Tradition provides a fresh
examination of the relationship of Greco-Roman philosophy to
Pauline Christianity. It offers an in-depth look at different
approaches employed by scholars who draw upon philosophical
settings in the ancient world to inform their understanding of
Paul. The volume houses an international team of scholars from a
range of diverse traditions and backgrounds, which opens up a
platform for multiple voices from various corridors. Consequently,
some of the chapters seek to establish new potential resonances
with Paul and the Greco-Roman philosophical tradition, but others
question such connections. While a number of them propose radically
new relationships between Paul and GrecoRoman philosophy, a few
seek to tweak or modulate current discussions. There are arguments
in the volume which are more technical and exegetical, and others
that remain more synthetic and theological. This diversity,
however, is accentuated by a goal shared by each author - to
further our understanding of Paul's relationship to and
appropriation of Greco-Roman philosophical traditions in his
literary and missionary efforts.
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Symposium
(Hardcover)
Plato; Translated by Benjamin Jowett
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R665
Discovery Miles 6 650
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This book offers the first comprehensive evaluation of ethics in
the ancient Greek novel, demonstrating how their representation of
the cardinal virtue sophrosune positions these texts in their
literary, philosophical and cultural contexts. Sophrosune
encompasses the dispositions and psychological states of
temperance, self-control, chastity, sanity and moderation. The
Greek novels are the first examples of lengthy prose fiction in the
Greek world, composed between the first century BCE and the fourth
century CE. Each novel is concerned with a pair of beautiful,
aristocratic lovers who undergo trials and tribulations, before a
successful resolution is reached. Bird focuses on the extant
examples of the genre (Chariton’s Callirhoe, Xenophon of
Ephesus’ Ephesiaca, Longus’ Daphnis and Chloe, Achilles
Tatius’ Leucippe and Clitophon and Heliodorus’ Aethiopica),
which all have the virtue of sophrosune at their heart. As each
pair of lovers strives to retain their chastity in the face of
adversity, and under extreme pressure from eros, it is essential to
understand how this virtue is represented in the characters within
each novel. Invited modes of reading also involve sophrosune, and
the author provides an important exploration of how sophrosune in
the reader is both encouraged and undermined by these works of
fiction.
Olympiodorus (AD c. 500-570), possibly the last non-Christian
teacher of philosophy in Alexandria, delivered 28 lectures as an
introduction to Plato. This volume translates lectures 10-28,
following from the first nine lectures and a biography of the
philosopher published in translation in a companion volume,
Olympiodorus: Life of Plato and On Plato First Alcibiades 1-9
(Bloomsbury, 2014). For us, these lectures can serve as an
accessible introduction to late Neoplatonism. Olympiodorus locates
the First Alcibiades at the start of the curriculum on Plato,
because it is about self-knowledge. His pupils are beginners, able
to approach the hierarchy of philosophical virtues, like the
aristocratic playboy Alcibiades. Alcibiades needs to know himself,
at least as an individual with particular actions, before he can
reach the virtues of mere civic interaction. As Olympiodorus
addresses mainly Christian students, he tells them that the
different words they use are often symbols of truths shared between
their faiths.
The awe with which Plato regarded the character of 'the great'
Parmenides has extended to the dialogue which he calls by his name.
None of the writings of Plato have been more copiously illustrated,
both in ancient and modern times, and in none of them have the
interpreters been more at variance with one another. Nor is this
surprising. For the Parmenides is more fragmentary and isolated
than any other dialogue, and the design of the writer is not
expressly stated. The date is uncertain; the relation to the other
writings of Plato is also uncertain; the connexion between the two
parts is at first sight extremely obscure; and in the latter of the
two we are left in doubt as to whether Plato is speaking his own
sentiments by the lips of Parmenides, and overthrowing him out of
his own mouth, or whether he is propounding consequences which
would have been admitted by Zeno and Parmenides themselves. The
contradictions which follow from the hypotheses of the one and many
have been regarded by some as transcendental mysteries; by others
as a mere illustration, taken at random, of a new method. They seem
to have been inspired by a sort of dialectical frenzy, such as may
be supposed to have prevailed in the Megarian School (compare
Cratylus, etc.). The criticism on his own doctrine of Ideas has
also been considered, not as a real criticism, but as an exuberance
of the metaphysical imagination which enabled Plato to go beyond
himself.
Stephen Scully both offers a reading of Hesiod's Theogony and
traces the reception and shadows of this authoritative Greek
creation story in Greek and Roman texts up to Milton's own creation
myth, which sought to "soar above th' Aonian Mount [i.e., the
Theogony] ... and justify the ways of God to men." Scully also
considers the poem in light of Near Eastern creation stories,
including the Enuma elish and Genesis, as well as the most striking
of modern "scientific myths," Freud's Civilization and its
Discontents. Scully reads Hesiod's poem as a hymn to Zeus and a
city-state creation myth, arguing that Olympus is portrayed as an
idealized polity and - with but one exception - a place of communal
harmony. This reading informs his study of the Theogony's reception
in later writings about polity, discord, and justice. The rich and
various story of reception pays particular attention to the long
Homeric Hymns, Solon, the Presocratics, Pindar, Aeschylus,
Aristophanes, and Plato in the Archaic and Classical periods; to
the Alexandrian scholars, Callimachus, Euhemerus, and the Stoics in
the Hellenistic period; to Ovid, Apollodorus, Lucan, a few Church
fathers, and the Neoplatonists in the Roman period. Tracing the
poem's reception in the Byzantine, medieval, and early Renaissance,
including Petrarch and Erasmus, the book ends with a lengthy
exploration of Milton's imitations of the poem in Paradise Lost.
Scully also compares what he considers Hesiod's artful interplay of
narrative, genealogical lists, and keen use of personified
abstractions in the Theogony to Homeric narrative techniques and
treatment of epic verse.
Humankind has a profound and complex relationship with the sea, a
relationship that is extensively reflected in biology, psychology,
religion, literature and poetry. The sea cradles and soothes us, we
visit it often for solace and inspiration, it is familiar, being
the place where life ultimately began. Yet the sea is also dark and
mysterious and often spells catastrophe and death. The sea is a set
of contradictions: kind, cruel, indifferent. She is a blind will
that will 'have her way'. In exploring this most capricious of
phenomena, David Farrell Krell engages the work of an array of
thinkers and writers including, but not limited to, Homer, Thales,
Anaximander, Heraclitus, Plato, Aristotle, Hoelderlin, Melville,
Woolf, Whitman, Nietzsche, Heidegger, Schelling, Ferenczi, Rank and
Freud. The Sea explores the significance in Western civilization of
the catastrophic and generative power of the sea and what
humankind's complex relationship with it reveals about the human
condition, human consciousness, temporality, striving, anxiety,
happiness and mortality.
This volume analyses in depth the reception of early Greek
philosophy in the Epicurean tradition and provides for the first
time in scholarship a comprehensive edition, with translation and
commentary, of all the Herculanean testimonia to the Presocratics.
Among the most significant scientific outcomes, it provides
elements for the attribution of an earlier date to the attested
tradition of Xenophanes' scepticism; a complete reconstruction of
the Epicurean reception of Democritus; a new reconstruction of the
testimonia to Nausiphanes' concept of physiologia, Anaxagoras'
physics and theology, and Empedocles' epistemology; new texts for
better comparing the doxographical sections of Philodemus' On Piety
with those of Cicero's On the Nature of the Gods, which update
Hermann Diels' treatment of this subject in his Doxographi Graeci.
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