This is the fourth (and last) volume of Jonathan Barnes' collected essays on ancient philosophy. As its title suggests, the twenty-three papers which it contains cover a wide range of topics. The first paper discusses the size of the sun, and the last looks at Plato and Aristotle in Victorian Oxford. In between come pieces on--inter alia--the theory of just war and the definition of comedy, the nature of the soul according to Plato and Aristotle and Zeno and Tertullian, atheism of Protagoras, Timaeus the Sophist (and his Platonic Lexicon) and the early history of Aristotle's writings,…mehr
This is the fourth (and last) volume of Jonathan Barnes' collected essays on ancient philosophy. As its title suggests, the twenty-three papers which it contains cover a wide range of topics. The first paper discusses the size of the sun, and the last looks at Plato and Aristotle in Victorian Oxford. In between come pieces on--inter alia--the theory of just war and the definition of comedy, the nature of the soul according to Plato and Aristotle and Zeno and Tertullian, atheism of Protagoras, Timaeus the Sophist (and his Platonic Lexicon) and the early history of Aristotle's writings, Nietzsche on Diogenes Laertius, the first Christian novel ... One of the pieces is new. The others have all been retouched, and some of them revised. Half a dozen were written in French and have been translated into English. The volume is kitted out with a bibliography and with two rather good indexes. The papers are, in parts at least, well written, and some of them are mildly diverting: no-one with a nose for ancient philosophy will sniff at them.
Jonathan Barnes taught at Oxford for 25 years, being a Fellow first of Oriel and then of Balliol. He then spent eight years at the University of Geneva, before becoming Professor of Ancient Philosophy at the Sorbonne. He is a Fellow of the British Academy, and of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. His many publications include The Ontological Argument (Macmillan, 1972); Aristotle's Posterior Analytics (Clarendon Press, 2nd edition 1993); Aristotle (OUP, 1982); The Complete Works of Aristotle (Princeton UP, 1984); The Modes of Scepticism (with J. Annas; CUP, 1985); Early Greek Philosophy (Penguin, 1987); The Toils of Scepticism (CUP, 1990); The Cambridge Companion to Aristotle (CUP, 1995); Porphyry: Introduction (Clarendon Press, 2003); Truth, etc. (Clarendon Press, 2007); Method and Metaphysics (OUP, 2011); Logical Matters (OUP, 2012); and Proof, Knowledge, and Scepticism (OUP, 2014).
Inhaltsangabe
Preface 1: The size of the sun in antiquity 2: Teaching virtue 3: Aristotle and political liberty 4: Cicero and the just war 5: Is rhetoric an art? 6: An Aristotelian definition of comedy? 7: Plato's three-part soul 8: Aristotle's concept of mind 9: 'Zeno says that the soul is a body ...' 10: Anima Christiana 11: Sensibility and the Stoics 12: Protagoras the atheist? 13: Ancient Plato 14: The Platonic lexicon of Timaeus the Sophist 15: Antiochus of Ascalon 16: Roman Aristotle 17: The catalogue of Chrysippus' logical works 18: Cicero's de fato and a Greek source 19: Diogenes Laertius on Pyrrhonism 20: Nietzsche and Diogenes Laertius 21: Pseudo-Clement and philosophy 22: Menecles 23: Greek philosophy and the Victorians Bibliography Indexes Passages Topics
Preface 1: The size of the sun in antiquity 2: Teaching virtue 3: Aristotle and political liberty 4: Cicero and the just war 5: Is rhetoric an art? 6: An Aristotelian definition of comedy? 7: Plato's three-part soul 8: Aristotle's concept of mind 9: 'Zeno says that the soul is a body ...' 10: Anima Christiana 11: Sensibility and the Stoics 12: Protagoras the atheist? 13: Ancient Plato 14: The Platonic lexicon of Timaeus the Sophist 15: Antiochus of Ascalon 16: Roman Aristotle 17: The catalogue of Chrysippus' logical works 18: Cicero's de fato and a Greek source 19: Diogenes Laertius on Pyrrhonism 20: Nietzsche and Diogenes Laertius 21: Pseudo-Clement and philosophy 22: Menecles 23: Greek philosophy and the Victorians Bibliography Indexes Passages Topics
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