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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. Indian Philosophy Before The Greeks
(There are honourable exceptions!) A particularly unfortunate consequence of this is that the study of ancient philosophy generally focuses exclusively on the
http://www.nalanda.demon.co.uk/preGreek.htm
INDIAN PHILOSOPHY before the GREEKS.
INTRODUCTION
If Indian philosophy is studied in British Universities, it is rarely the philosophy department that offers it. (There are honourable exceptions!) A particularly unfortunate consequence of this is that the study of Ancient Philosophy generally focuses exclusively on the history of Greek Philosophy and leaves aside the more ancient history of Indian and the equally ancient history of Chinese philosophy, let alone the more controverted issues surrounding the existence of philosophical thought in ancient Egypt. If early Indian philosophy is addressed in the academic discussion of Ancient Philosophy, it is usually in terms of the possibility that Indian thought may have influenced the development of Greek philosophy. Such an influence certainly could have existed: the Persian Empire included Indians in its Eastern Satrapies and Greeks in the cities on the coast of Asia Minor; the means of transmission clearly existed. Tantalising parallels exist, and in many cases the Indian texts are demonstrably earlier. The passage in the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad, for example

42. Internet Ancient History Sourcebook: Late Antiquity
Late ancient philosophy Roman Stoicism; Neoplatonism. Roman Mystery Religions Demeter and Eleusis; Late ancient philosophy Roman Stoicism 2ND Eclecticism, Cicero.
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/ancient/asbook10.html
Halsall Home Medieval Sourcebook Modern History Sourcebook
Other History Sourcebooks: African East Asian Indian Islamic ... Rome Late Antiquity Christian Origins See Main Page for a guide to all contents of all sections. Contents

43. 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 K.A. Algra (University of Utrecht) and C.J. Rowe (University of Durham)
Advisory Committee: J. Barnes (Geneva), J. Brunschwig (Paris), D.J. Furley (Princeton), J. Mansfeld (Utrecht), M. Mignucci (Padova), M. Schofield (Cambridge), R.W. Sharples (London).
ISSN 0031-8868 Paperback English This product is also available online
This product consists of the following titles: Phronesis
Volume 49 (2004)
Phronesis
Volume 48 (2003)
...
Volume 47 (2002)

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 backissues or -volumes older than 2 years, please contact > Swets-Blackwell at e-mail address: backsets@swets.nl.

44. Ancient Philosophy Conference Program: Preliminary
Sat 1 a The Ancient Quarrel of Philosophy and Poetry. I (Room 521). 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 - Cambridge University Press
New titles email. For news of new titles in Classical Studies. Search. ancient philosophy. The philosophy section includes WKC Guthrie s
http://publishing.cambridge.org/hss/classical/philosophy/
Home Classical Studies Ancient Philosophy
Ancient Philosophy
...
Sample chapters

New titles email For news of new titles in Classical Studies
Search
Ancient Philosophy
The philosophy section includes W. K. C. Guthrie's History of Greek Philosophy in 6 volumes, the best-selling The Pre-Socratic Philosophers by G. S. Kirk, J. Raven and M. Schofield, and A. A. Long's and D. N. Sedley's The Hellenistic Philosophers in 2 volumes.
Highlight titles
The Cambridge History of Greek and Roman Political Thought
Edited by Christopher Rowe, Malcolm Schofield, With Simon Harrison, Melissa Lane An accessible and authoritative guide to Greek and Roman thinking about government and community. ‘It would be hard to think how this superb collection of essays about Greek and Roman political thought could be improved. … There could be no better introduction than this collection of well-written, scholarly and absorbing essays.’ Literary Review
The Cambridge Companion to Early Greek Philosophy

Edited by A. A. Long A Companion to Greek philosophy, invaluable for new readers, and for specialists. Paperback ( Hardback
The Cambridge History of Hellenistic Philosophy

Edited by Keimpe Algra, Jonathan Barnes, Jaap Mansfeld, Malcolm Schofield

46. Ancient Philosophy Courses
Northern Association for ancient philosophy. The Northern Association for ancient philosophy aims to promote understanding of all
http://www.dur.ac.uk/g.r.boys-stones/NAAP.htm
George Boys-Stones Durham Classics
Northern Association for Ancient Philosophy The Northern Association for Ancient Philosophy aims to promote understanding of all aspects of Classical philosophy. The Annual Meeting provides a forum for interdisciplinary lectures and discussion among classicists and philosophers. We welcome colleagues from the North and elsewhere, and wish to encourage postgraduate students to participate. Programme from the 2001 meeting in Durham Programme from the 2002 Meeting in Liverpool Programme from the 2003 Meeting in Leeds

47. Program In Ancient Philosophy
Concentration in ancient philosophy. They should mention their interest in ancient philosophy when filling out the Graduate School application.
http://www.arts.cornell.edu/classics/Grad-Class-phil.html
Concentration in Ancient Philosophy
The study of ancient philosophy at Cornell is administered jointly by the Fields of Classics and Philosophy, and members of the two Fields cooperate in teaching and supervising graduate students. The program aims at training productive scholars and effective teachers of ancient philosophy who will also be well-rounded classicists or philosophers. Students apply for admission to and are accepted by the Field of Classics or the Field of Philosophy, depending on their major interests and previous qualifications. They should mention their interest in ancient philosophy when filling out the Graduate School application. The concentration is designed differently for students in the two Fields, but it strongly encourages those in one Field to strengthen their prepa-ration by relevant work in the other. Each student's course of study is decided in consultation with a Special Committee of at least three faculty members. Advanced undergraduate level knowledge of both Greek and Latin is required for admission to the Concentration as a student in Classics. Students must satisfy the general degree requirements of the graduate program in Classics, but will take Ancient Philosophy as their major area of study, and Greek Literature and Latin Literature as their minor areas. For the major area, students will complete the Reading List in Ancient Philosophy

48. Program In Ancient Philosophy
Program in ancient philosophy. Normally, students must know enough Greek, Latin, French and German for scholarly work in ancient philosophy.
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.

49. Review Of Kingsley's
A Review of Peter Kingsley s ancient philosophy, Mystery and Magic. Peter Kingsley, ancient philosophy, Mystery and Magic Empedocles and Pythagorean Tradition.
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.

50. Workshop In Ancient Philosophy
The Department of Philosophy at Florida State University invites you to attend the 24th Annual Workshop in ancient philosophy. Sessions
http://www.fsu.edu/~philo/about/events/anc_phil.html
The Department of Philosophy at Florida State University invites you to attend the 24th Annual Workshop in Ancient Philosophy. Sessions will be held on the campus of the Florida State University beginning at 9:00 AM on Friday April 6, 2001, and continuing through Sunday morning, April 8. ( See Schedule of Papers
The Workshops in Ancient Philosophy, originally founded by Professor Alexander P.D. Mourelatos of the University of Texas at Austin, are intended for presentation and discussion of work in progress.
Hotels within walking distance of the Workshop locations:
DoubleTree Hotel, 101 South Adams Street (850-224-5000): rates from $99
Holiday Inn Select, 316 West Tennessee Street (850-222-9555): rates from $99
University Motel, 691 West Tennessee Street (850-224-8161): rates from $53.10
For additional information concerning the Workshop or for assistance with accommodations, please contact:
Margaret Dancy
Department of Philosophy Florida State University Tallahassee, FL 32306-1500

51. Page Of Ancient Philosophy And Literature
Ancient philosophical and literary texts, some links to ancient sites, libraries, maps; pictures of ancient philosophers.
http://www5.50megs.com/mkv/classpage.html

52. Ancient Philosophy Resources At Questia - The Online Library Of
ancient philosophy Resources at Questia The Online Library of Books and Journals. ancient philosophy. Questia. Primary Content. ancient philosophy.
http://www.questia.com/popularSearches/ancient_philosophy.jsp

53. Boston Area Colloquium In Ancient Philosophy
Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium in ancient philosophy. Editors, The Boston Area Colloquium in ancient philosophy has existed since 1978.
http://fmwww.bc.edu/PL/bacap/bacap.html
Attic bowl (c. 480 B.C.) with a scene painted by Douris, representing youths learning to play the lyre and to recite poetry. BACP Lecture Schedule Fall and Spring 2003-4 Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium in Ancient Philosophy
Department of Philosophy, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467, USA fax: 617-552-3874 e-mail:
john.cleary@bc.edu gary.gurtler@bc.edu manoussj@bc.edu
John J. Cleary John Manoussakis Gary Gurtler, S. J. Editorial Assistant Editors The Boston Area Colloquium in Ancient Philosophy has existed since 1978. It was founded by Prof. Robert Hahn at Brandeis University under the name of "The Greater Boston Colloquium for Ancient Philosophy." Initially it functioned as a loose coalition of three or four universities in the Boston area, which each sponsored a lecture or two in the series. Scholars who happened to be visiting the area from other parts of the U.S. or abroad delivered impromptu lectures on topics of interest to local philosophers and classicists. In 1984 the Colloquium underwent a 'sea-change' with an award from the National Endowment for the Humanities of substantial funding over a three year period for the so-called 'Greater Boston Project'. The proposal was written by John Cleary and funded by the Division of Education at the NEH for the purpose of promoting undergraduate education in classics and ancient philosophy through lectures, seminars and class visits by leading international scholars in the field. Since the primary purpose of the project was the promotion of education rather than scholarship, the NEH did not provide any money for scholarly publications. But the academic vice-president at Boston College generously provided funding for the publication of Proceedings, which have been published annually since 1985.

54. :: Ez2Find :: Ancient
Translate Open New Window Journal published by the University of Texas covering ancient philosophy and science up to the end of the classical period.
http://ez2find.com/cgi-bin/directory/meta/search.pl/Society/Philosophy/History_o
Guide : Ancient Global Metasearch
Any Language English Afrikaans Arabic Bahasa Melayu Belarusian Bulgarian Catala Chinese Simplified Chinese Traditional Cymraeg Czech Dansk Deutsch Eesti Espanol Euskara Faroese Francais Frysk Galego Greek Hebrew Hrvatski Indonesia Islenska Italiano Japanese Korean Latvian Lietuviu Lingua Latina Magyar Netherlands Norsk Polska Portugues Romana Russian Shqip Slovensko Slovensky Srpski Suomi Svenska Thai Turkce Ukrainian Vietnamese Mode
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Adult Filter Add to Favorites Other Search Web News Newsgroups Images
Guides Ancient
ez2Find Home Directory Society Philosophy ... History of Philosophy : Ancient Cynicism Cyrenaic School Eleaticism Epicureanism ... The Academy Related Categories Arts: Classical Studies Society: Religion and Spirituality: Christianity: Church History: Early Christian Writings
Web Sites

55. What Is Ancient Philosophy?
Hadot, Pierre, What is ancient philosophy?, translated by Michael Chase, Harvard University Press, 2002, 362pp, $29.95 (hbk), ISBN 0674007336. Reviewed by
http://ndpr.icaap.org/content/archives/2003/6/zeyl-hadot.html
Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2003.06.09
Hadot, Pierre, What is Ancient Philosophy? , translated by Michael Chase, Harvard University Press, 2002, 362pp, $29.95 (hbk), ISBN 0674007336. Reviewed by: Donald Zeyl
University of Rhode Island way of life sophia philosophia sophia and hence that of philosophia be ) in the Symposium idea Plato and the Academy Phaedo (64a) and the (practice of?) transcendence over all that is mundane described in the Theaetetus Aristotle and His School so eloquently embraced in Nicomachean Ethics The Hellenistic Schools Schools in the Imperial Period Phaedo Timaeus Parmenides or Philebus Enneads, The concluding chapter of the second part of the book (chapter 9: Philosophy and Philosophical Discourse Philosophy as a Way of Life: Spiritual Exercises from Socrates to Foucault demonstrandum. knowledge tour de force , a welcome and much needed corrective to the prevailing view of ancient philosophy in our day.
ISSN: 1538 - 1617

56. Ancient Philosophy
ancient philosophy. ancient philosophy Western. PreSocratic Philosophers The Philosophy. ancient philosophy Eastern. Vedic Philosophy.
http://www.fact-index.com/a/an/ancient_philosophy.html
Main Page See live article Alphabetical index
Ancient philosophy
Ancient Philosophy Western.
Pre-Socratic Philosophers:
The history of Philosophy in the west begins with the Greeks, and particularly with a group of philosophers commonly called the pre-Socratics. This is not to say that there were not other pre-philosophical rumblings in Egyptian, Semitic, and Babylonian cultures. Certainly there were great thinkers and writers in each of these cultures, and there is evidence that some of the earliest Greek philosophers may have had contact with at least some of the products of Egyptian and Babylonian thought. However, the early Greek thinkers add at least one element which differentiates their thought from all those who came before them. For the first time in history, we discover in their writings something more than dogmatic assertions about the way the world is ordered we find reasoned arguments for various beliefs about the world. As it turns out nearly all of the various cosmologies proposed by the early Greek philosophers are profoundly and demonstrably false, but this does not diminish their importance. For, even if later philosophers summarily rejected the answers they provided, they could not escape their questions.
  • Where does everything come from?

57. Page Of Ancient Philosophy And Literature
Philosophical and literary texts that one can read online with Acrobat Reader 4.x. In order to be able to download or print them one must ask the webmaster for a password. Also, some links to ancient sites, libraries, maps; pictures of ancient philosophers.
http://mkv.www5.50megs.com/classpage.html

58. The Ninth Annual Colloquium In Ancient Philosophy
Checks should be sent to Arizona Colloquium in ancient philosophy Department of Philosophy University of Arizona PO Box 210027 Tucson, AZ 857210027.
http://info-center.ccit.arizona.edu/~phil/events/ancientphilo.htm
S C H E D U L E O F E V E N T S (updated 1/20/04)
printer-friendly version
Friday, February 20th : Opening remarks by Mark McPherran, Julia Annas, and Chris Maloney
Session I Chair: Enrique Hulsz (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México)
: Sara Rappe (University of Michigan), 'The Practice of the Elenchus' comments by Thomas Blackson (Arizona State University) : Mark McPherran (University of Maine at Farmington), 'Socratic Epagôgê and Socratic Induction' comments by Hal Thorsrud (New Mexico State University) : Hugh Benson (University of Oklahoma), 'Socratic Learning' comments by Joel Alan Martinez (University of Arizona) Lunch Law School Atrium, 12:45-1:45
Session II Chair: Gale Justin (California State University at Sacramento)
: Raphael Woolf (Harvard University), 'Why Does Misology Matter?' comments by Roslyn Weiss (Lehigh University) : Sandra Peterson (University of Minnesota) 'Socratic and Platonic Method in the Digression of the Theaetetus' comments by Paul Woodruff (University of Texas) Break 4:30-5:00
Session III Chair: Aimee Koeplin (University of Washington)
: Scott LaBarge (Santa Clara University) 'Method and Epistemology at Odds in the Socratic Dialogues' comments by Michael White (Arizona State University)

59. Ashgate Publishing
ASHGATE ancient philosophy SERIES Series Editors Professor Bob Sharples and Mary Louise Gil. The Ashgate ancient philosophy Series
http://www.ashgate.com/subject_area/philosophy/ancient_philosophy_series.htm
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ASHGATE ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY SERIES
Series Editors: Professor Bob Sharples and Mary Louise Gil The Ashgate Ancient Philosophy Series Publishing individual books within this unique structure, this series provides a platform for exciting new work which aims to integrate approaches from both philosophical and classical perspectives, giving a specific focus on theme and period while setting the analysis within the wider contexts both of the period and of the theme. This series will prove of particular value individual academics, postgraduates, graduates, and upper-level students and other scholarly readers world-wide. BOOKS PUBLISHED IN THIS SERIES
(click above for information on published and forthcoming books in this series)
SUBMITTING A BOOK PROPOSAL FOR THE SERIES

The Publisher and the Series Editors welcome new book proposals for this series. Please click the heading above for details on how to submit a book proposal, and send this to the Ashgate editor

60. Ashgate Publishing
ASHGATE KEELING SERIES IN ancient philosophy Series Editors RW Sharples, GJP O Daly and R. Heinaman. The Keeling Series in Ancient
http://www.ashgate.com/subject_area/philosophy/keeling_series.htm
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ASHGATE KEELING SERIES IN ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY
Series Editors: R.W. Sharples G.J.P. O'Daly and R. Heinaman The Keeling Series in Ancient Philosophy presents edited collections of leading international research which illustrate and explore ways in which ancient and modern philosophy interact. Drawing on original papers presented at the S.V.Keeling Memorial Lectures and Colloquia at University College London, this series incorporates contributions from the Anglo-American philosophical tradition and from continental Europe, and brings together scholars internationally recognised for their work on ancient philosophy as well as those whose primary work in areas of contemporary philosophy speaks of the importance of ancient philosophy in modern philosophical research and study. Each book in the series will appeal to upper-level and graduate students and academic researchers worldwide - both those who are interested in ancient philosophy and those who are working in the relevant areas of contemporary philosophy.

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