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Habent sua Jata colloquia. The present volume has its ongms in a
spring 1984 international workshop held, under the auspices of the
Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities, by The Institute for the
History and Philosophy of Science and Ideas of Tel-Aviv University
in cooperation with The Van Leer Jerusalem Foundation. It contains
twelve of the twenty papers presented at the workshop by the
twenty-six participants. As Proceedings of conferences go, it is a
good representative of the genre, sharing in the main
characteristics of its ilk. It may even be one of the rare
instances of a book of Proceed ings whose descriptive title applies
equally well to the workshop's topic and to the interrelations
between. the various papers it includes. Tension and Accommodation
are the key words. Thus, while John Glucker's paper, 'Images of
Plato in Late Antiqu ity, ' raises, by means of the Platonic
example, the problem of interpreta tion of ancient texts,
suggesting the assignment of proper weight to the creator of the
tradition and not only to his many later interpreters in assessing
the proper relationship between originator and commentators,
Abraham Wasserstein's 'Hunches that did not come off: Some Prob
lems in Greek Science' illustrates the long-lived Whiggish
tradition in the history of science and mathematics. As those
familiar with my work will undoubtedly note, Wasserstein's position
is far removed from my stance on ancient Greek mathematics."
Habent sua Jata colloquia. The present volume has its ongms in a
spring 1984 international workshop held, under the auspices of the
Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities, by The Institute for the
History and Philosophy of Science and Ideas of Tel-Aviv University
in cooperation with The Van Leer Jerusalem Foundation. It contains
twelve of the twenty papers presented at the workshop by the
twenty-six participants. As Proceedings of conferences go, it is a
good representative of the genre, sharing in the main
characteristics of its ilk. It may even be one of the rare
instances of a book of Proceed ings whose descriptive title applies
equally well to the workshop's topic and to the interrelations
between. the various papers it includes. Tension and Accommodation
are the key words. Thus, while John Glucker's paper, 'Images of
Plato in Late Antiqu ity, ' raises, by means of the Platonic
example, the problem of interpreta tion of ancient texts,
suggesting the assignment of proper weight to the creator of the
tradition and not only to his many later interpreters in assessing
the proper relationship between originator and commentators,
Abraham Wasserstein's 'Hunches that did not come off: Some Prob
lems in Greek Science' illustrates the long-lived Whiggish
tradition in the history of science and mathematics. As those
familiar with my work will undoubtedly note, Wasserstein's position
is far removed from my stance on ancient Greek mathematics."
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