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         Ancient Philosophy:     more books (100)
  1. Ancient Philosophy, Mystery, and Magic: Empedocles and Pythagorean Tradition by Peter Kingsley, 1997-02-13
  2. The African Origin of Greek Philosophy:: An Exercise in Afrocentrism by Innocent C. Onyewuenyi, 2005-09-19
  3. Inventing the Universe: Plato's Timaeus, the Big Bang, and the Problem of Scientific Knowledge (Ancient Greek Philosophy) by Luc Brisson, F. Walter Meyerstein, 1995-07
  4. Greek Philosophy: Thales to Aristotle (Readings in the History of Philosophy)
  5. Presocratics: Natural Philosophers before Socrates (Ancient Philosophies) by James Warren, 2007-08-07
  6. A Companion to Ancient Philosophy (Blackwell Companions to Philosophy)
  7. Oldest Books in the World: An Account of the Religion, Wisdom, Philosophy, Ethics, Psychology, Manners, Proverbs, Sayings, Refinement, etc., of the Ancient Egyptians by Isaac Meyer, 1995-01-15
  8. Children of Immortal Bliss: A New Perspective on Our True Identity Based on the Ancient Vedanta Philosophy of India by Paul Hourihan, 2008-02-01
  9. Ancient Philosophy: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions) by Julia Annas, 2000-11-09
  10. Maieusis: Essays in Ancient Philosophy in Honour of Myles Burnyeat
  11. Religion in the Ancient Greek City by Louise Bruit Zaidman, Pauline Schmitt Pantel, 1993-01-29
  12. Neoplatonism and Indian Philosophy (Studies in Neoplatonism-Ancient and Modern, 9)
  13. Early China/Ancient Greece: Thinking Through Comparisons (Suny Series in Chinese Philosophy and Culture)
  14. Notes on Greek philosophy: From Thales to Aristotle (Studies on Ancient Greek and Islamic Philosophy) by Anthony Preus, 1997-12

41. Teaching Ancient Philosophy - Site Index
Teaching ancient philosophy Ancient Philosophical Texts, a selection at this site. Plato s Apology Plato s Crito Plato s Protagoras Plato s Meno
http://www.john.sellars.btinternet.co.uk/tap/site_index.html
Site Index
General
Pedagogical Issues in Teaching Ancient Philosophy
Courses in Ancient Philosophy
Resources for Teachers of Ancient Philosophy

42. Episteme And Techne
Discussion of the distinction between knowledge and craft, or art in ancient philosophy; by Richard Parry.
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/episteme-techne/
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is the Greek word most often translated as knowledge, while and . As we move chronologically from Xenophon to Plotinus, we go from an author who does not distinguish between the two terms, to an author who has little use for because it is so far from reality. It is in Aristotle that we find the basis for something like the modern opposition between as pure theory and as practice. Yet even Aristotle refers to or craft as itself also that is informed by knowledge of forms. In the Republic this knowledge is the indispensable basis for the philosophers' craft of ruling in the city. Picking up another theme in Plato's dialogues, the Stoics develop the idea that virtue is a kind of or craft of life, one that is based on an understanding of the universe. The relation, then, between

43. Internet Ancient History Sourcebook: Greece
See WEB History of ancient philosophy At U Washington and Ancient Greek Philosophy At Rice Complete online courses with lecture notes on the major
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/ancient/asbook07.html
Halsall Home Medieval Sourcebook Modern History Sourcebook
Other History Sourcebooks: African East Asian Indian Islamic ... Israel Greece Hellenistic Wld Rome Late Antiquity Christian Origins See Main Page for a guide to all contents of all sections. Contents

44. Ancient Philosophy Conference Program: Preliminary
The 21st annual meetings of Society for Ancient Greek Philosophy (SAGP); Sat 4 d Reading, Writing, and Naming In and About ancient philosophy (Room 508
http://www.fordham.edu/philosophy/calendar/ancientconf.htm
Philosophy Department Fordham's Philosophy Department
FORDHAM UNIVERSITY PRESENTS
Ancient and Medieval Philosophy, 2003 Date: Friday, October 31- November 2, 2003
Place: Fordham University, Lincoln Center
33 W 60th St. New York, NY 10023
Including the annual meetings of scholarly societies in the history of ancient and medieval philosophy The 21 st annual meetings of Society for Ancient Greek Philosophy (SAGP Society for the Study of Islamic Philosophy and Science (SSIPS International Society for Neoplatonic Studies (ISNS); the 4 th annual meeting of Association of Chinese Philosophers in America (ACPA), Council for Philosophical Studies of Neoplatonism (CPSN), and others Registration : Lobby, Fordham Lincoln Center, Friday 4-8:00 and Saturday 9-12:00 Dinner and Plenary Session th Floor Lounge, Friday 5:30-9:00 Sessions th floor classrooms, Saturday and Sunday, beginning at 9:00 Conference Information Desk; Book and Journal Exhibits rd floor Lounge Refreshments th floor; the Lowenstein Cafe on the Plaza level See page 11 (below) for additional information about Conference arrangements.

45. Ancient Philosophy
General. Ancient Greek Philosophy via Galaxy.com; ancient philosophy via Philosophy Research Base. Specific. PreSocratics (subject to IP Verification)
http://web.uflib.ufl.edu/cm/classics/Ancient Philosophy.htm

46. Ancient Philosophy
General. Ancient Greek Philosophy via Galaxy.com; ancient philosophy via Philosophy Research Base. Specific. PreSocratics. Classical
http://web.uflib.ufl.edu/cm/philosophycoll/Ancient Philosophy.htm

47. Phronesis
Quarterly international journal for the study of ancient Greek and Roman thought (ancient philosophy, psychology, metaphysics, epistemology and the philosophy of science and medicine) from its origins down to the end of the sixth century A.D. Edited by K.A. Algra and C.J. Rowe, and published by Brill Academic Publishers. Published in English, though articles in other languages accepted.
http://www.brill.nl/product_id7431.htm
Phronesis A Journal for Ancient Philosophy Edited by Verity Harte (King's College London) and Christopher Gill (University of Exeter) For Editorial Board Information click on + to see Advisory Committee: K.A. Algra (Utrecht), J. Barnes (Geneva), J. Brunschwig (Paris), D.J. Furley (Princeton), J. Mansfeld (Utrecht), M. Mignucci (Padova), M. Schofield (Cambridge), R.W. Sharples (London), C.J. Rowe (Durham). ISSN 0031-8868 Softcover This product is also available online
This product consists of the following titles: Phronesis
Volume 50 (2005)
Phronesis
Volume 49 (2004)
...
Volume 48 (2003)

Phronesis online
Founded in 1955, Phronesis has become the most authoritative scholarly journal for the study of ancient Greek and Roman thought (ancient philosophy, psychology, metaphysics, epistemology and the philosophy of science and medicine) from its origins down to the end of the sixth century A.D.
Phronesis offers the reader specialist articles and book notes from top scholars in Europe and North America. The language of publication is in practice English, although papers in Latin, French, German and Italian are also published.
For back volumes or issues older than 2 years, please contact

48. Graduate Program In Classics, Philosophy And Ancient Science
Dr. Cullyer specializes in ancient philosophy, particularly Aristotle and She specializes in ancient philosophy, and is working on topics in moral
http://www.pitt.edu/~classics/cpas.html
The departments of Classics, Philosophy, and History and Philosophy of Science at the University of Pittsburgh cooperate in offering a program leading to the Ph.D. degree in classics, philosophy, or history and philosophy of science, with a special concentration in ancient philosophy and/or science. Although primary association is with one of the three departments, students in the program work closely with one another and with the cooperating faculty, which is drawn from all three departments. Through seminars, colloquia, and conferences sponsored by the program, and through writing a dissertation supervised by an interdepartmental committee, students receive rigorous training that prepares them for teaching positions in college or university departments of classics, philosophy, history, or history and philosophy of science.
For further information about this program contact: Helen C. Cullyer, cullyerh@pitt.edu , Department of Classics. Important Information for Applicants : Students do not apply directly to the CPAS program. Instead students should apply to one of the cooperating departments (Classics, HPS, Philosophy), and indicate their interest in the program on their application. Please note that students applying to Classics should have a B.A. in Classics, or equivalent.
CPAS Faculty
Recent Courses Events and Talks Department of Classics ... University of Pittsburgh contact Graduate Program in Classics, Philosophy, and Ancient Science

49. Department Of Philosophy
Journal published by the University of Texas covering ancient philosophy and science up to the end of the classical period. Site features editorial credits,
http://www.utexas.edu/cola/depts/philosophy/apeiron/
Nicholas Asher, Chair :: WAG 316 :: 1 University Station, C3500 :: Austin, TX 78712 :: 512.471.4857 Home Events Staff Contact Us ... Sitemap = Offsite Link
  • About Areas Faculty News ... Resources Upcoming Events
    Professor Sainsbury
    Paradoxes
    September 19, 2005
    12:15 PM
    WAG 316
    Professors Higgins and Martinich
    Who's Funnier? Hobbes or Schopenhauer
    September 26, 2005
    12:15 PM
    WAG 316 Calendar >>
About
Warning : main(content/apeiron/index.html): failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /export/httpd/data/cola/depts/philosophy/index.php on line Warning /export/httpd/data/cola/depts/philosophy/index.php on line Last Updated: 18-Sep-2005 Department of Philosophy in The College of Liberal Arts at UT Austin Privacy Accessibility Information Comments

50. Philosophy 211 - Fall 2004
Philosophy 211 ancient philosophy. (also Classics 231) Syllabus ancient philosophy Reading Citations Stylistic Points Lecture One
http://www.arts.cornell.edu/phil/classes/Fall2004/fa04-211.htm
Philosophy 211 - Ancient Philosophy (also Classics 231) Amber Carpenter
Meno Reading Euthyphro Lecture Notes Meno Lecture Notes Euthyphro Reading ... Lecture One This course examines the origin and development of Western philosophy in Ancient Greece and Rome. We will study some of the central ideas of the Pre-Socratics, Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, and the Hellenistic philosophers (Epicureans, Stoics, and Skeptics). Questions to be considered include: What are the nature and limits of knowledge? Is knowledge even possible? How reliable is perception? What are the basic entities in the universe: atoms, Platonic Forms or Aristotelian substances? Is moral knowledge possible? What is the nature of happiness and what sort of life will make people happy? Do human beings have free will? Ought we to fear death? Among the fundamental works we will read are Plato's Republic. This course has no prerequisites. It is open to freshmen.

51. Program In Ancient Philosophy
The Program in ancient philosophy is administered jointly by the Departments of Philosophy and Classics, and members of the two departments cooperate in
http://www.arts.cornell.edu/phil/grad_study/ancient_prog.html
Program in Ancient Philosophy
The Program in Ancient Philosophy is administered jointly by the Departments of Philosophy and Classics, and members of the two departments cooperate in teaching and supervision. The program aims at training productive scholars and effective teachers of ancient philosophy who will also be competent and well-rounded classicists or philosophers. Students apply for admission to, and are accepted by, the Department of Philosophy or Classics, depending on their major interests and previous qualifications. The program is designed differently for students in the two departments, but encourages those enrolled in one department to strengthen their preparation by relevant work in the other. Each student's program of study is decided in consultation with his or her Special Committee. All students must demonstrate adequate basic knowledge of PreSocratic philosophy, Plato, Aristotle, and ancient philosophy after Aristotle. Normally, students must know enough Greek, Latin, French and German for scholarly work in ancient philosophy. Details of requirements are available on request; requirements are different for philosophers and classicists.

52. The Blackwell Guide To Ancient Philosophy - Book Information
Provides a comprehensive guide to ancient philosophy from the preSocratics to late antiquity. Written by a cast of distinguished philosophers.
http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/book.asp?ref=0631222154

53. A Companion To Ancient Philosophy - Book Information
A Companion to ancient philosophy provides a comprehensive and current overview of the history of ancient Greek and Roman philosophy from its origins until
http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/book.asp?ref=063121061X

54. The UCB Department Of Philosophy Graduate Division
The Graduate Program in ancient philosophy. PROGRAMS. Graduate Undergraduate. RELATED PAGES. Philosophy Ph.D. Ancient Phil.
http://philosophy.berkeley.edu/html/programs/gradancient.html
Home People Programs Courses ... Events
The Graduate Program in Ancient Philosophy PROGRAMS Graduate Undergraduate RELATED PAGES Philosophy Ph.D Ancient Phil. HPS Logic Placement Admissions ... Fellowships OTHER LINKS Classics Department This program is offered jointly by the Departments of Classics and Philosophy. It is administered by an interdepartmental committee whose members are Alan Code, Depts. of Classics and Philosophy, Anthony Long, Dept. of Classics, and John Ferrari, Dept. of Classics. The program is designed to produce scholars with a broad range of expertise in both philosophy and classics, with the intention of bridging the gap between the two subjects. It provides the training and specialist knowledge required for undertaking research in ancient philosophy, and at the same time equips students for scholarly work and teaching in either classics or philosophy. Those who complete the program will be fully qualified to work as a member of one of these disciplines, while having developed a broad competence in the other. Students apply for admission to one of the participating departments in accordance with their qualifications and interests. They are treated accordingly as graduate students fully in either the Department of Classics or the Department of Philosophy.

55. History Of Ancient Philosophy
Phil 3151. History of ancient philosophy Episteme links, probably the bestorganized collection of philosophy links and resources on the web.
http://cda.mrs.umn.edu/~okeefets/ancient01.html
Phil 3151. History of Ancient Philosophy
Tim O'Keefe, instructor Announcements 12/12. Your final exam is due 12/20. 12/11. Remember that your rewrites are due 12/13. 12/11. The last (wow!) assignment has been posted. Course Materials Relevant web sites Tim O'Keefe, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, University of Minnesota, Morris. Return to the index of course materials.
Return to Tim O'Keefe's homepage.
Page URL: http://cda.morris.umn.edu/~okeefets/ancient.01html

56. The Tenth Annual Arizona Colloquium In Ancient Philosophy
in ancient philosophy. February 1820, 2005 University of Arizona Tucson, Arizona. Images adapted from PJ FitzPatrick s “The Legacy of Socrates”,
http://web.arizona.edu/~phil/events/ancientphilo.htm

57. Oxford University Press: U.S. General Catalog
The ancient philosophy behind the Military Mind. Nancy Sherman. 0195152166, hardback, Jul 2005 $26.00 An eyeopening look at the military mind and the
http://www.oup.com/us/catalog/general/subject/?view=usa

58. Oxford University Press: Oxford Studies In Ancient Philosophy
Showing 110 of 35 items in Oxford Studies in ancient philosophy. « previous 1 2 3 4 next » Featured All Titles New Recent Coming Soon
http://www.oup.com/us/catalog/general/series/OxfordStudiesinAncientPhilosophy/?v

59. Review Of Kingsley's
It is ancient philosophy, Mystery and Magic Empedocles and Pythagorean Tradition. Kingsley presents a wealth of evidence for a dense network of
http://www.cs.utk.edu/~mclennan/BA/Kingsley-rev.html
Ancient Philosophy, Mystery and Magic
A Review of Peter Kingsley's Ancient Philosophy, Mystery and Magic
Empedocles and Pythagorean Tradition (c) 1997, John Opsopaus
Peter Kingsley, Ancient Philosophy, Mystery and Magic: Empedocles and Pythagorean Tradition. (Oxford University Press, 1995; papberback ISBN 0-19-815081-4; $24.95). Peter Kingsley has written an important book that should be high on the reading list of anyone interested in the roots of magic, alchemy and the mysteries in Western civilization. It is Ancient Philosophy, Mystery and Magic: Empedocles and Pythagorean Tradition. In the best tradition of scholarly writing, Kingsley documents all his sources, so interested readers can follow them up and form their own opinions. Reading his extensive footnotes is an education in itself; following them will keep you busy for months. (The reader will discover that reading Kingsley's journal papers, published bother earlier and later than the book, is especially rewarding.) Yet, for all his attention to detail, Kingsley is not pedantic. His text is very readable, and its snappy, almost breathless pace conveys the excitement of the exploration of a newly opened tomb, or of a mystery being solved (which is precisely what it is). Many of the connections demonstrated by Kingsley have been intuitively apparent to many of us working in the esoteric traditions, but he documents them and also reveals other, less obvious connections. His book will also familiarize a wider readership to important, but neglected earlier studies that would otherwise remain buried in an immense scholarly literature, which is often hostile to esotericism of any kind.

60. Ancient Philosophy, Related To The Possibility Of Extraterrestrial Life
Prominent among other ancient philosophers who speculated about the possibility (or impossibility) of other worlds and life, or who made discoveries
http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/A/ancientphil.html
Return to The Worlds of David Darling
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entire Web this site
ancient philosophy, related to the possibility of extraterrestrial life
The idea that there might be other inhabited worlds dates back thousands of years and has roots in both Eastern and Western thought. Doubtless it first took the form of beliefs in gods, goddesses, and other spiritual beings which inhabited realms beyond the Earth. On a more intellectual level, Buddhism taught pluralism , as did some of the schools of Greek philosophy. Of the latter, atomism, as developed and propagated notably by Leucippus Democritus Epicurus , and Lucretius , is the most significant because the concept of multiple worlds and life is implicit in its cosmological scenario. Prominent among other ancient philosophers who speculated about the possibility (or impossibility) of other worlds and life, or who made discoveries relevant to these subjects, were Thales of Miletus Anaximander of Miletus Anaximenes of Lampsacus Xenophanes ... Ptolemy , and Lucian of Samosata . See medieval philosophy, related to the possibility of extraterrestrial life

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