Eudemus We should certainly credit eudemus of rhodes for his achievements in this Some works by Eudemus are harder to identify with eudemus of rhodes and may http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Eudemus.html
Extractions: Version for printing We should certainly credit Eudemus of Rhodes for his achievements in this archive since Eudemus seems to have been the first major historian of mathematics. Simplicius informs us that a biography of Eudemus was written by Damas, who is unknown but for this reference, but sadly no trace of this biography has been found. As exciting aspect of the history of mathematics is that the discovery of this text (and other lost texts) in the future, although highly unlikely, always remains a possibility. Eudemus was born on Rhodes and we know that he had a brother called Boethus. Of his parents and early life we know nothing, but we do know that he studied with Aristotle Aristotle spent time in Athens, Assos and other places and it would certainly be good to understand when Eudemus studied with him. Unfortunately there is no record either of time or of place which would let us answer these questions with any degree of certainty. W Jaeger, however, in his discussion of Aristotle [4] (see also [5]) has argued strongly that Eudemus studied with Aristotle during his period in Assos.
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Apollonius While Apollonius was at Pergamum he met Eudemus of Pergamum (not to be confusedwith eudemus of rhodes who wrote the History of Geometry) and also Attalus, http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Apollonius.html
Extractions: Version for printing Apollonius of Perga was known as 'The Great Geometer'. Little is known of his life but his works have had a very great influence on the development of mathematics, in particular his famous book Conics introduced terms which are familiar to us today such as parabola ellipse and hyperbola Apollonius of Perga should not be confused with other Greek scholars called Apollonius, for it was a common name. In [1] details of others with the name of Apollonius are given: Apollonius of Rhodes, born about 295 BC, a Greek poet and grammarian, a pupil of Callimachus who was a teacher of Eratosthenes ; Apollonius of Tralles, 2 nd century BC, a Greek sculptor; Apollonius the Athenian, 1 st century BC, a sculptor; Apollonius of Tyana, 1 st century AD, a member of the society founded by Pythagoras; Apollonius Dyscolus, 2
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The Dying God Diogenes Laertes, Dionysius the Areopagite, Dion Cassius, eudemus of rhodes,Duris, Eunapius, Eusebius, Firmicus Maternus, Gregory Nazianzus, Herodotus, http://www.thedyinggod.com/duris.htm
Extractions: The following fragment from Xenophon preserves information provided by Duris of Samos, born about the middle of the fourth century BC, whose Histories covered a period of nearly a century, beginning wth 370 BC. In the seventh book of his Histories Duris has preserved the following account on this subject. Only at the festival celebrated by the Persians in honour of Mithra does the Persian king become drunken and dance after the Persian manner. On this day throughout Asia all abstain from the dance. For the Persians are taught both horsemanship and dancing; and they believe that the practice of these rhythmical movements strengthens and disciplines the body.
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The Dying God eudemus of rhodes was a philosopher and follower of Aristotle in the late eudemus of rhodes, according to Damascius. Dubitationes et Solutiones de http://www.thedyinggod.com/eudemus.htm
Extractions: Eudemus of Rhodes was a philosopher and follower of Aristotle in the late fourth century BC. Damascius was a Neoplatonist of the late fifth and early sixth century AD. The Magi and the whole Iranian race call by the name Space or Time that which forms an intelligible and integrated whole from which a Good God and an Evil Demon were separated out, or as some say, light and darkness before these.
CiteULike: Gbrey's Library eudemus of rhodes, Hippocrates of Chios and the Earliest form of a Greek MathematicalText Centaurus, Vol. 46, No. 4., 243. by Netz R http://www.citeulike.org/user/gbrey
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Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2003.11.10 István Bodnár, William W. Fortenbaugh, eudemus of rhodes. Rutgers UniversityStudies in Classical Humanities, XI. New Brunswick Transaction Publishers, http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2003/2003-11-10.html
Extractions: This volume (largely derived from a conference held at Budapest in 1997) is part of a project that aims to provide new editions and studies of the individuals included in Fritz Wehrli's Die Schule des Aristoteles (second edition, 1967-69). Earlier volumes on Demetrius of Phalerum and Dicaearchus of Messana have offered new collections of translated fragments and de facto commentaries in the form of papers. Now we have sixteen papers on Eudemus, "the truest of Aristotle's followers" (33); the fragments, particularly extensive in this philosopher's case, will presumably appear separately. Eudemus was "a worthy professor battling to instill the rudiments of Aristotelian philosophy into an undistinguished group of students" (36). Inevitably, some 350 pages of studies on such a recognisable academic predecessor do not make for exciting reading, but, when like these offerings they are the work of experienced scholars, they result in welcome reexaminations of the relevant evidence on biography, on bibliography, and on philosophy and science and its history in antiquity. Eudemus was not only a pioneer Aristotelian commentator (whose work on physics was still being quoted extensively and respectfully by Simplicius in the sixth century AD, and most of whose fragments come from Aristotelian commentators) but the author of a treatise on the philosophy of language (the subject of a commentary by Galen), and as a historian of philosophy and science an important source for knowledge of his predecessors.
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Rutgers University Studies In Classical Humanities After that will come a volume of essays on eudemus of rhodes (Vol. XI plannedfor 2002) and new editions of Lyco of Athens, Aristo of Ceos and Hieronymus of http://classics.rutgers.edu/rusch.html
Extractions: launching the project, Professor Fortenbaugh began thinking of a companion publication series which would be an outlet for work accomplished by members and friends of the Project. Officers of the University welcomed the idea and the series Rutgers University Studies in Classical Humanities = RUSCH became reality. Volume I on Arius Didymus, the court philosopher of Caesar Augustus, was published by Transaction Publishers in 1983. Transaction has continued to publish the series, which now numbers ten volumes. Five of the volumes have been devoted to Theophrastus (Vols. I, II, III, V and VIII),there is one volume on Peripatetic rhetoric (Vol. VI), and a Festschrift honoring Professor Ian Kidd, a friend and supporter of Project Theophrastus (Vol. VII). The more recent volumes mark a new direction in the series: Peripatetics contemporary with and later than Theophrastus (Vols. IX and X).
Rutgers University Studies In Classical Humanities 1997 University of Budapest, on eudemus of rhodes, organized by István Bodnár1999 University of Trier, on Theophrastus, organized by Georg Wöhrle http://classics.rutgers.edu/proj_theophrastus.html
Extractions: In 1979, Project Theophrastus was founded by Professor William Fortenbaugh . Its stated purpose was to collect, edit, translate and comment on the fragments of the philosopher Theophrastus, who was Aristotle's pupil and second head of the Peripatetic School. At the outset, the Project was generously supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities, private foundations and Rutgers University. It continues to receive support from the university and private foundations. In 1991, Brill in Leiden published the collected fragments of Theophrastus together with a full translation. A second printing with corrections followed the following year. The collection is in two volumes running approximately 1200 pages. In addition to Fortenbaugh, the primary editors of the volumes were Pamela Huby (Liverpool), Robert Sharples (London) and Dimitri Gutas (Yale). Significant contributions were also made by Andrew Barker (Warwick), John Keaney (Princeton), David Mirhady (Simon Fraser), David Sedley (Cambridge) and Michael Sollenberger (Mount St. Marys MD). To date, three commentaries on particular areas within the collection have been published: those on biology and on botany by Sharples were published in 1995 and 1998 respectively, and that on psychology by Huby appeared in 1999. These commentaries, like the text-translation volumes, are available from Brill. The work of Project Theophrastus has been expanded to include the colleagues, pupils and successors of Theophrastus. In particular members of the Project intend to redo Fritz Wehrli's Die Schule des Aristoteles/The School of Aristotle. Missing texts are being included, the apparatus of variant readings and parallel texts is being enlarged, and an English translation added. Two volumes are now available: one is devoted to Demetrius of Phalerum and a second concerns Dicaearchus of Messana. Both volumes have been published in the series