Results 81 to 90 of about 17,703 (206)
Palaeo-Philosophy: Archaic Ideas about Space and Time [PDF]
This paper argues that efforts to understand historically remote patterns of thought are driven away from their original meaning if the investigation focuses on reconstruction of concepts, instead of cognitive complexes. My paper draws on research by Jan
MacDonald, Paul S.
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Hesiod and the Valley of the Muses
[site under construction]
Paul W. Wallace
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Pandora and the Good Eris in Hesiod
The "good eris" in Works and Days is so presented as to parallel Pandora, who is seen as bringing about evils but who yet was the stimulus to labor that is an ethical imperative.
Jonathan P. Zarecki
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Number in Plato’s Philebus [PDF]
The paper concerns the concept of number (arithmos), important for dialectical method of later Plato. It becomes clear that the arithmos in Plato’s dialectics should be understood as a concrete operation, a sort of tekhne, such as counting, enumeration ...
Shetnikov, Andrey
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Kvinnens overflødighet hos Platon
The Superfluity of Women in Plato. In her article «Plato’s problematic women» Kristin Sampson argues that Plato has two different views on women in the Republic and the Timaeus respectively.
Fredrik Nilsen
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Aristotle - Ἀριστοτέλης (ARISTOTÉLĒS, 384/3- 322/1 BCE) The revelation of tuberculosis in his zoological works. [PDF]
Cilione M +5 more
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John Tzetzes and the blemish examiners : a Byzantine teacher on schedography, everyday language and writerly disposition [PDF]
The paper focuses on John Tzetzes (ca. 1110-after 1166), a well-known teacher and scholar of the Komnenian era, with the aim of examining two issues.
Agapitos, Panagiotis
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The Fragility of Things: Self-Organizing Processes, Neoliberal Fantasies, and Democratic Activism by William E. Connolly [PDF]
Review of William E. Connolly\u27s The Fragility of Things: Self-Organizing Processes, Neoliberal Fantasies, and Democratic ...
McCormack, Brian
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Hesiod’s Attitude toward Labor
Hesiod, as a comfortable bard, could recommend for others hard agricultural labor, which Greeks generally despised; the fable of the hawk and nightingale illustrates the futility of resisting necessity.
C. Bradford Welles
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Luciano, Esiodo e i temi fondanti della cultura letteraria greca, tra parodia e ambivalenza
In Lucian's corpus the references to Hesiod are frequent and often codified by a long rhetorical and literary tradition. Some passages and aspects are particularly meaningful, because they reveal the complex parodic game set up by Lucian, and the strong ...
Paola Dolcetti
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