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         Diogenes:     more books (100)
  1. Deploying Microsoft Forefront Unified Access Gateway 2010 by Yuri Diogenes, Thomas W. Shinder Dr, 2010-11-15
  2. Deploying Microsoft Forefront Threat Management Gateway 2010 by Yuri Diogenes, Thomas W. Shinder Dr, 2010-11-15
  3. Genesis and Other Plays (includes the plays Genesis, Diogenes the Dog, Frankenstein, Horse Farce, Haunted, Boneyard, Animal Salvation, The Dark, and Madrigals) by Don Nigro, 1992
  4. Lives of Eminent Philosophers (English and Greek Edition) by Diogenes Laertius, 1958
  5. Diogenis Laertii De Clarorum Philosophorum (1862) (Latin Edition) by Diogenes Laertius, Anton Westermann, et all 2010-09-10
  6. The Path of Perfect Love by Diogenes Allen, 1992-03
  7. X-Men: Worlds Apart by Christopher Yost, 2009-12-09
  8. Nachruf auf Ludwig Marcuse: Auto-Nekrolog (Diogenes Taschenbuch ; 21/7) (German Edition) by Ludwig Marcuse, 1975
  9. Frisch, frosch, frolich, frei (Diogenes Taschenbuch) (German Edition) by Tomi Ungerer, 1985
  10. Ein Engel Kommt Nach Babylon (Diogenes Taschenbuch) (German Edition) by F. Durrenmatt, 1998-12-31
  11. Diogenes.
  12. DIOGENES by George Pavlu, 2003
  13. Das Wilhelm Busch Bilder- und Lesebuch (Diogenes Taschenbuch) (German Edition)
  14. Diogenes discovers us (Essay index reprint series) by John Terence McGovern, 1967

41. A Day With Diogenes
A Day With diogenes by Terry Ballard. Announcer In world literature,we are going to take a look at diogenes the. Cynic. diogenes was
http://faculty.quinnipiac.edu/libraries/tballard/diogenes.htm
A Day With Diogenes by Terry Ballard
Announcer: In this first part of our video series of humorists in world literature, we are going to take a look at Diogenes the Cynic. Diogenes was a citizen of Athens during the time of Plato, although his approach to philosophy was a world away. Even though Diogenes left no surviving works, he was an influential figure in literature. In this presentation, you should pay attention to the ways in which Diogenes used humor to underscore the serious message of his cynic philosophy. Now, thanks to the magic of television, we will take you back 2300 years for an interview with Diogenes. Announcer: Good afternoon, Diogenes. In keeping with your reputation as a non-conformist, I see that you keep your bathtub outside of your house. Diogenes: The bathtub is my house. Announcer: I see. Well there must be some advantage to that. Diogenes: Certainly. No window can give a view like this, and if the neighborhood goes bad, I can just walk off with the house. Announcer: Have you always lived in a tub?

42. Diogenes By John William Waterhouse (British, 1849 - 1917)
diogenes Painting Date 1882 Medium Oil on canvas Size 208 x 135 cm LocationArt Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. diogenes
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John William Waterhouse (British, 1849-1917)
Diogenes
Painting Date:
Medium: Oil on canvas
Size: 208 x 135 cm
Location: Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia
Diogenes of Sinope, d. c.320 BC, was a Greek philosopher, perhaps the most noted of the Cynics. He pursued the Cynic ideal of self-sufficiency, a life that was natural and not dependent upon the nonessential luxuries of civilization. A student of Antisthenes, he is credited with the development of the chreia (moral epigram), with a scandalous attack of convention entitled Republic (which influenced Zeno of Citium), and with tragedies illustrative of the human predicament. Because Diogenes believed that virtue was better revealed in action than in theory, he made his life a protest against what he thought of as a corrupt society. He is said to have lived in a large tub, rather than house, and to have gone about Athens with a lantern in the daytime, claiming to be looking for an honest manbut never finding one. In later art, Diogenes is often depicted in a torn cloak, with a dog, carrying a lantern. browse random add to art album send e-card purchase print A print of this picture is unavailable.

43. Diogenes Senioren Vat
Het virtuele vat van de senioren van het Albertus dispuut diogenes. Leden, lied, nieuws en activiteiten.
http://www.diogeneren.nl
Home dat de wijsheid woont in 't vat Leden Foto's D en Diogeneer Cave! Welkom in het virtuele vat van de senioren van het illustere dispuut Diogenes, opgericht te Groningen op 19 oktober 1956. Het doel van deze site is het in stand houden en bevorderen van de kontakten tussen senioren van Diogenes onderling, en tussen de senioren en het dispuut in Groningen. Geef een wijziging door Nieuws en activiteiten Diogenes lied Vereniging Senioren AiMi ... Website Albertus Stuur een e-mail website by J. van Dongen last update:

44. Diogenes Laertius - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
diogenes Laertius. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. In addition to the Lives,diogenes was the author of a work in verse on famous men, in various metres.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diogenes_Laertius
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Diogenes Laertius
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. , the biographer of the Greek philosophers , is supposed by some to have received his surname from the town of Laerte in Cilicia Of the circumstances of his life we know nothing. He must have lived after Sextus Empiricus (c. AD ), whom he mentions, and before Stephanus of Byzantium (c. AD ), who quotes him. It is probable that he flourished during the reign of Alexander Severus (AD 222-235) and his successors. His own opinions are equally uncertain. By some he was regarded as a Christian ; but it seems more probable that he was an Epicurean . The work by which he is known, Lives of Eminent Philosophers (In latin De vitis, dogmatibus et apophthegmatibus clarorum virorum ), professes to give an account of the lives and sayings of the Greek philosophers. Although it is at best an uncritical and unphilosophical compilation, its value, as giving us an insight into the private life of the Greek sages, justly led Montaigne He treats his subject in two divisions which he describes as the Ionian and the Italian schools; the division is quite unscientific. The biographies of the former begin with

45. Daumier: Histoire Ancienne
Translate this page Honoré Daumier Alexander und diogenes. 14. 8. 1842. Detail(Dieser Link öffnet ein zusätzliches Fenster).
http://www.kzu.ch/fach/as/gallerie/myth/daumier/daumier21.htm
Alexander und Diogenes Detail
Vorhergehendes Bild Thumbnails

46. Diogenes' Lantern
Enter into the EYE of Wisdom diogenes Lantern The Eternal Search for Wisdomand Enlightened Beings. Thanks for stopping by, diogenes MacLugh.
http://members.tripod.com/~Diogenes_MacLugh/
Enter into the EYE of Wisdom
Diogenes' Lantern
The Eternal Search for Wisdom and Enlightened Beings
Diogenes
was first known in ancient Greece as a man who dedicated his life to the search for intelligent sentient beings with knowledge and practice of the Arts of Wisdom. After centuries of travel and thousands of replaced sandals, the most magickal instrument of the Internet has been discovered. Now the entire planet can be traversed in a matter of seconds at the touch of one's fingers. Hail to Bill Gates , the PROMETHEUS of the Aquarian Age.
Is Microsoft really a secret cover for the Illuminati? The light of Wisdom can be found in all cultures and in many diverse philosophies. Throughout the many Ages of Humankind they have been known as the Magi, Druids, Viziars, Shamans, Gurus, Medicine Men, Wiccans, Living Buddhas, Prophets, Saints, Lamas, Brahmans, Rabbis, Priests and countless other terms. None is greater or wiser by nature than any other. Each religion has its own intrinsic system of teachings and worship, and is a reflection of the spiritual nature of its host culture. In the many incarnations which we have experienced, the most wise have traveled throughout the many cultures of the world, seeking experience within the temples and religions that are found within them. This is the premise of this page and the purpose of its searching. But, in your travels, be aware of the

47. Diogenes
diogenes. There are two men from ancient Greece who bear the name of diogenes.The ANTISTHENES. Its bestknown member was diogenes OF SINOPE.
http://members.tripod.com/~Diogenes_MacLugh/diogenes.html
Diogenes
There are two men from ancient Greece who bear the name of Diogenes. The most renowned of these is Diogenes of Sinope, the philosopher who walked throughout Athens carrying a lantern in daylight, searching for an honest man. The other is Diogenes Laertius, who lived in the 3rd Century CE and was an historian of various teachers of philosophy, including the teachings and customs of the Druids. The following are articles written about each of these men with whom I share not only a name, but common interests as well.
Diogenes of Sinope
by Robert S. Brumbaugh
Diogenes of Sinope, d. c.320 BC, was a Greek philosopher, perhaps the most noted of the CYNICS. He pursued the Cynic ideal of self-sufficiency, a life that was natural and not dependent upon the nonessential luxuries of civilization. A student of ANTISTHENES, he is credited with the development of the chreia (moral epigram), with a scandalous attack of convention entitled Republic (which influenced ZENO OF CITIUM), and with tragedies illustrative of the human predicament.
Because Diogenes believed that virtue was better revealed in action than in theory, he made his life a protest against what he thought of as a corrupt society. He is said to have lived in a large tub, rather than house, and to have gone about Athens with a lantern in the daytime, claiming to be looking for an honest manbut never finding one. In later art, Diogenes is often depicted in a torn cloak, with a dog, carrying a lantern.

48. Diogenes Laertius, Lives Of The Philosophers, Translated By C.D. Yonge
Online text of C.D. Yonge's translation.
http://classicpersuasion.org/pw/diogenes/
Lives index
Book I. Introduction Thales Solon Chilon ... Pherecydes
Book II. Anaximander Anaximenes Anaxagoras Archelaus ... Menedemus
Book III. Plato
Book IV. Speusippus Xenocrates Polemo Crates ... Clitomachus
Book V. Aristotle Theophrastus Strato Lycon ... Heraclides
Book VI. Antisthenes Diogenes Monimus Onesicritus ... Menedemus
Book VII. Zeno Ariston Herillus Dionysius ... Chrysippus
Book VIII. Pythagoras Empedocles Epicharmus Archytus ... Eudoxus
Book IX. Heraclitus Xenophanes Parmenides Melissus ... Timon
Book X. Epicurus Top Lives index

49. Diotima
Translation of diogenes Laertius Book VI, 9698 and notes by Celia Luschnig. Published at the Diotima Homepage.
http://www.stoa.org/diotima/anthology/hipparchia.shtml
The Life of Hipparchia
Diogenes Laertius Book VI. 96-98
Hipparchia, the sister of Metrocles, was also captivated by philosophical discourse. Sister and brother were natives of Maroneia. She fell in love with Crates, his words and his way of life, and took no interest in any of the men who wanted to marry her, not their wealth, not their family connections, not their good looks. Crates was everything to her. It went so far that she threatened her parents with suicide if she could not be married to him. Her parents begged him to make her see reason, and Crates did everything he could. Finally when he was unable to convince her, he rose from his seat and threw off his clothes right in front of her. "Here," he announced, "is your husband-to-be, and this is all he owns: base your decision on this!" He wanted her to know that she would not be his partner unless she shared his way of life. The girl made her choice and taking up the same style of dress as his she made the rounds with her husband, consorted with him in public, and went out to dinner with him. Once she had gone to Lysimachus' house for a symposium, and while there she confounded Theodorus, nicknamed the Atheist, by positing the following argument:

50. UMN-CCGB Diogenes ORF-finder On-line
diogenes ORFfinding on-line. Select a target. Arabidopsis thalianaCaenorhabditis elegans Drosophila melanogaster Glycine max, Homo
http://www.cbc.umn.edu/diogenes/diogenes.html
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51. Timon [Internet Encyclopedia Of Philosophy]
Short article on this Skeptic from the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Draws on Eusebius and diogenes Laertius.
http://www.utm.edu/research/iep/t/timon.htm
Timon (fl. 279 BCE.)
Timon was a disciple of Pyrrho and philosopher of the sect of the Skeptics, who flourished in the reign of Ptolemy Philadelphus, about 279 BCE. and onwards. silli , a word of somewhat doubtful etymology, but which undoubtedly describes metrical compositions of a character at once ludicrous and sarcastic. The invention of this species of poetry is ascribed to Xenophones of Colophon. The Silli of Timon were in three books, in the first of which he spoke in his own person, and the other two are in the form of a dialogue between the author and Xenophanes of Colophon, in which Timon proposed question,s to which Xenophanes replied at length. The subject was a sarcastic account of the tenets of all philosophers, living and dead and unbounded field for skepticism and satire. They were in hexameter verse, and from the way in which they are mentioned by the ancient writers, as well as from the few fragments of them which have come down to us, it is evident that they were admirable productions. (Diog. Laert. ix. 12, 109-155; Euseb. Praep. Ev.

52. Welcome To FCAA
Fractional Calculus & Applied Analisys An International Journal for Theory and Applications
http://www.diogenes.bg/fcaa/

53. SC DIOGENES HAMBURG E.V.
Berichtet ¼ber Turniere und Mannschaftsk¤mpfe. Bietet aktuelle Berichte und einen Terminkalender sowie einen eigenen Bereich f¼r die Jugendabteilung.
http://www.scdiogenes.de/
Herzlich willkommen zu den Internetaktivitäten des Schachvereins SC DIOGENES Hamburg!
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54. Welcome To Diogenes Co.
Bulgarian Dictionaries Bookshop A small number of selected dictionaries than canbe ordered from diogenes Co. Bookshop. Copyright 1998 diogenes Co.
http://www.diogenes.bg/
An International Mathematical Journal Language Processing @ Work
Natural Language Research and Processing Laboratory Poetry selection
Over one hundred poems published as images, so, no Cyrillic fonts are needed.
Common place for linguists and NLP people. Information about institutions, tools, corpora, etc. Snowflake
Figure Skating Competition Organizer Bulgarian Dictionaries Bookshop
A small number of selected dictionaries than can be ordered from Diogenes Co.

55. Rueckblicke - Diogenes Quartett - Besondere Kammermusik
Vorgestellt werden die Musiker und der Pianist Andreas Kirpal sowie die Konzertreihe R¼ckblicke.
http://www.rueckblicke.net

56. CyniK DiogeneS - Oficjalna Strona Zespo³u Z Opoczna.
stat4u.
http://www.cynikdiogenes.opoczno.net/

opnet.pl

opnet.pl

57. Www.diogenesgroup.com

http://www.diogenesgroup.com/

58. Biographies: Philosophers: Diogenes (BC, C412-323).
diogenes The Cynic (BC, c412-323). An interesting story is the one where theyoung Alexander the Great (356-323 BC) met diogenes, then a very old man.
http://www.blupete.com/Literature/Biographies/Philosophy/Diogenes.htm

[Back To A List Of Philosophers]
Diogenes "The Cynic"
(BC, c412-323) Diogenes was chief among the school known as the cynics , though possibly not representative of it [Diogenes "carried the principles of the sect to an extreme of asceticism." ( OED .)]. It was said of Diogenes that throughout his life he "searched with a lantern in the daylight for an honest man." And though Diogenes apparently did not find an honest man, he had, in the process, "exposed the vanity and selfishness of man." ( Chambers The sect, known as the cynics, was founded by Antisthenes (444-370 BC), a pupil of Socrates ; it was "marked by an ostentatious contempt for ease, wealth, and the enjoyments of life." Diogenes was a pupil of Antisthenes. Diogenes, on coming to Athens from his native lands, Sinope, came as "a rake and spendthrift." After following under the spell of Antisthenes, Diogenes "became at once an austere ascetic, his clothing of the coarsest, his food the plainest, and his bed the bare ground. At length he found himself a permanent residence in a tub." (The meaning of cynicism today is to be found in the OED . "A person disposed to rail or find fault; now usually: One who shows a disposition to disbelieve in the sincerity or goodness of human motives and actions, and is wont to express this by sneers and sarcasms; a sneering fault-finder." The image of a cynic that has come to us is that of a dog.)

59. ZetaKon
Engineering of control systems for factory operations. Provide continuing support for Fisher Rosemount's diogenes control systems.
http://www.ZetaKon.com/
Z ETA K ON Control Systems, Inc.
WELCOME Welcome to the ZetaKon homepage!
WHAT’S Z ETA K ON
ZetaKon was founded in 1988. ZetaKon specializes in providing Software configuration and support for Customers using the Rosemount System III distributed control system and the currently obsolete Rosemount DIOGENES control system. ZetaKon has been chosen by Fisher Rosemount to provide continuing support for their discontinued DIOGENES control system. We support the DIOGENES control system with complete systems engineering, configuration and software support as well as limited on-site maintenance support. ZetaKon can work with you, within the limited resources of available obsolete parts, to provides replacement parts. We provide upgrade paths for DIOGENES users to migrate into new state of the art control systems. For example we have recently translated an existing DIOGENES CO2 plant installation to a Moore Apacs+ System with a WonderWare MMI. We are currently implementing a WonderWare MMI running under Windows 2000 to replace DIOGENES Video Display Stations (VDS).

60. King_Biscuit_Man's...Diogenes And Alexander
Alexander and diogenes. The time Alexander the Great came to Athens,he heard about diogenes. One day he went to pay a visit to him.
http://users.otenet.gr/~ziggy/alex1.html
Alexander and Diogenes The time Alexander the Great came to Athens, he heard about Diogenes.
One day he went to pay a visit to him.
"It was morning,just time of dusk: I heard voices and marching horses,I came out my (pithos- large tub) tub and saw Alexander and his horsemen. I lay down in front of my tub, feeling the warm sun.
Alexander and the horse men stopped, and he came to me. He greeted me and I did the same, then stared at me for a long time with out saying anything.I looked at him as well, he was young, very young, allmost a child.
Then he asked: it is true that you live in that tub? or it is just one of those pranks filosophers do in order for the people to talk and admire them?I will ansewr with a question, Alexander! it is true you want to conquer Persia, and so unit all Greeks under your leadership? or do you do all this just for the sake of getting the admiration of people?
He liked my answer! he smiled and ttouched my tub said: one tub full of wisdom. I liked this words and I feld flattered, but quickly replied: I prefer one drop of luck, that a tub full of wisdom, great King! Sometimes wisdom drives you to a bitter taste of vanith, and all your warks will stop in death! and one drop of luck can open streets you never could imagine and give you happines you never knew! Alexander anderstood every word and knew the meaning of luck in life better than anyone, then he came closer to me and said: I would like to do something very importand for you Diogenes. I know you chose this kind solitaire life, but I think that sometimes in your life you want something better.Ask me, what you want and it will be a pleasure for me to give it to you.

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