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         Philosophy Ancient:     more books (100)
  1. Stoics, Epicureans and Sceptics: An Introduction to Hellenistic Philosophy by R.W. Sharples, 1996-10-11
  2. The Systems of the Hellenistic Age: History of Ancient Philosophy (SUNY Series in Philosophy) by Giovanni Reale, 1985-06

141. Cyberschool - Browse
Browse Cyberschool subject index philosophy, ancient. Subject Cyberschool - ancient History - philosophy, ancient, 1 - 2 of 2 results.
http://cyberschool.library.uq.edu.au/browse.phtml?field=subject&term=Philosophy,

142. CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Nominalism, Realism, Conceptualism
These terms are used to designate the theories that have been proposed as solutions of one of the most important questions in philosophy, often referred to as the problem of universals, which, while it was a favourite subject for discussion in ancient times, and especially in the Middle Ages, is still prominent in modern and contemporary philosophy.
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/11090c.htm
Home Encyclopedia Summa Fathers ... N > Nominalism, Realism, Conceptualism A B C D ... Z
Nominalism, Realism, Conceptualism
These terms are used to designate the theories that have been proposed as solutions of one of the most important questions in philosophy, often referred to as the problem of universals , which, while it was a favourite subject for discussion in ancient times, and especially in the Middle Ages , is still prominent in modern and contemporary philosophy. We propose to discuss in this article: I. The Nature of the Problem and the Suggested Solutions;
II. The Principal Historic Forms of Nominalism, Realism, and Conceptualism;
III. The Claims of Moderate Realism. I. THE PROBLEM AND THE SUGGESTED SOLUTIONS The problem of universals is the problem of the correspondence of our intellectual concepts to things existing outside our intellect. Whereas external objects are determinate, individual, formally exclusive of all multiplicity, our concepts or mental representations offer us the realities independent of all particular determination; they are abstract and universal. The question, therefore, is to discover to what extent the concepts of the mind correspond to the things they represent; how the flower we conceive represents the flower existing in nature; in a word, whether our ideas are faithful and have an objective reality. Four solutions of the problem have been offered. It is necessary to describe them carefully, as writers do not always use the terms in the same sense.

143. Rhetoric And Philosophy In Ancient Greeece - Bibliography
Communication Studies. Rhetoric and philosophy in ancient Greece A Selective Interdisciplinary Bibliography. Oxford Studies in ancient philosophy 12, 227250.
http://www.uiowa.edu/~commstud/faculty/Depew/depewbib.html
Rhetoric and Philosophy in Ancient Greece
A Selective Interdisciplinary Bibliography
Compiled by Students in 36R: 303
Rhetoric and Philosophy
Spring l997
David Depew, Instructor
  • Orality and Literacy in Ancient Greece Origins and Nature of the Polis Poetry, Prose, History, and Identities of Speakers in Mimetic and Indexical Frames Rise of Democracy; Persistence of Athenian Democracy throughout Fourth Century; Orality and Democracy; Rhetoric as a Constitutive Condition of Athenian Democracy. ... The Role of Rhetoric and Poetics in Aristotle's Political Theory
  • 1. Orality and Literacy in Ancient Greece
    • Bakker, E.J. (1993). Activation and preservation: The interdependence of text and performance in an oral tradition. Oral Tradition Calame, C. (l995). The Craft of Poetic Speech in Ancient Greece. Detienne, M (ed.) Les Savoirs de l'Ecriture. Foley, J. M. (ed.). (1985). Oral-Formulaic Theory and Research: An Introduction and Annotated Bibliography Goody, J. (l968).

    144. Consent Form
    philosophy and ancient religion, including information about divine sexuality.
    http://www.sexualecstasy.org
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  • 145. LII - Results For "philosophy, Ancient"
    http//platodialogues.org/ Subjects Plato, 427-347 BC Philosophers philosophy, ancient People Created by ew - last updated Aug 26, 2002 - comment on
    http://www.lii.org/search?searchtype=subject;query=Philosophy, Ancient;subsearch

    146. Sacred Space Yoga Sanctuary
    Offers Trika/Kundalini Yoga and ancient tantric practice. Includes history and explanation of each Yoga philosophy offered.
    http://sacredspaceyogasanctuary.com/
    Go Inside Go Inside

    147. Classics Library
    Collection covers Greek and Latin literature, philology, mythology, paleography, textual criticism, and epigraphy, as well as ancient history, law, religion, philosophy, science, archaeology and art.
    http://www.library.yale.edu/htmldocs/classics.html
    Classics Library
    344 College Street Phelps Hall, 5th floor
    NOTE: The Classics Library will close for renovations on 15 May 2000. It will reopen at the beginning of the next academic year. The Classics Department and the office of the library will relocate to 451 College Street until completion of the work. In 1892 the Greek and Latin Clubs of Yale University formed a Classics Library, which has been located in Phelps Hall since 1896. The collection covers Greek and Latin literature, philology, mythology, paleography, textual criticism, and epigraphy, as well as ancient history, law, religion, philosophy, science, archaeology and art. There is also a reference collection containing dictionaries, encyclopedias, manuals, and bibliographies for Greek and Latin studies. An Ibycus computer workstation is located in the library, enabling the patrons to do multilingual word and text processing using the Latin, Greek, Hebrew and Coptic alphabets. There is no copying equipment in the Library, but patrons may obtain permission to take materials to the Classics Department Office to copy them. All materials are otherwise non-circulating. Hours: Monday-Thursday, 8:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m., 7:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m. Friday, 8:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Sunday, 7:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m.

    148. Http://www.arts.cornell.edu/classics/Index.html
    Classics is the study of ancient Greece and Rome, of their languages, literature, history, philosophy, religion, science, art, and archaeology.
    http://www.arts.cornell.edu/classics/Index.html
    About Classics at Cornell Undergraduate Program Undergraduate Honors Program ... Cornell University Arts and Sciences
    E-mail: classics@cornell.edu

    149. Institute Of Classical Studies
    A national and international research Institute in the languages, literature, history, art, archaeology and philosophy of the ancient Greek and Roman worlds.
    http://www.sas.ac.uk/icls/
    University of London School of Advanced Study Institute of Classical Studies
    Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies
    Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies The Institute for information on meetings, publications, and awards, and for details of MA courses in London. The Hellenic Society
    The Roman Society
    The Library
    The Classical Association
    ...
    SAS Computer Pages
    please click on any underlined text for the next page of information or link

    150. BUBL LINK / 5:15 Internet Resources: Ancient Philosophy
    Greek and Roman history, art and archaeology, classical mythology, language, and ancient philosophy are among the topics covered.
    http://bubl.ac.uk/link/a/ancientphilosophy.htm
    BUBL LINK / 5:15 Catalogue of Internet Resources Home Search Subject Menus A-Z ... About
    Ancient philosophy
    A-Z Index Titles Descriptions
  • 4th Tetralogy: Exploring Plato's Middle Dialogues
  • Ancient Models of Thought
  • Classics at Oxford
  • Classics Collections ...
  • Project Archelogos Page last updated: 17 March 2003 Comments: bubl@bubl.ac.uk
    4th Tetralogy: Exploring Plato's Middle Dialogues
    A virtual learning environment, based on the theory that 28 of Plato's dialogues can be divided into seven tetralogies which were carefully designed and arranged by Plato with a pedagogical agenda in mind; that of advancing the new disciple of philosophy from an intellectual adolescent to the mature and fully-formed philosopher-politician of the Republic.
    Author: Anthony F Beavers, Christopher Planeaux and Bernard Suzanne
    Subjects: ancient philosophy, political philosophy
    DeweyClass:
    ResourceType:
    books, guide
    Location: usa
    Last checked:
    Ancient Models of Thought
    Examines ancient philosophies of Africa, the Near East and prehistory. Resources are in the form of full text Web articles and books and explore themes such as Sangoma divination and therapy, African witchcraft, and Archaeoastronomy. Also provides access to information which assesses African Studies within the realms of intercultural philosophy, globalisation, anthropology, and poetry.
    Author: Wim van Binsbergen
    Subjects: african studies, ancient philosophy, cosmology
  • 151. Carvaka
    Article from the Swaveda Forum for Hindu Studies, detailing the basic doctrines of this ancient school of materialistic thought.
    http://www.swaveda.com/Philosophy/Carvaka.htm
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    Indian Philosophical Systems Introduction Carvaka Mimamsa Nyaya Vaisesika Sankhya ... Vedanta Carvaka As a reaction against the whole of the Mimamsa teaching and claim, the Carvaka philosophy attacked almost every doctrine of the Mimamsakas - their epistemology, metaphysics, and way of life. It constituted a strong check on the excesses of speculation and practice of the followers of the Mimamsa. EPISTEMOLOGY Of the three important sources of knowledge accepted in common by all the orthodox schools (perception, inference, and verbal testimony), the Carvakas accepted only perception as the valid source of knowledge and rejected both inference and verbal testimony. Whatever we know through perception is true and real. The Carvakas at first seem not to have been aware of the difficulties in accepting perception as a valid source of knowledge, which were pointed out later by the Buddhist and Vedanta dialecticians. The later Carvakas showed that they knew of the difficulties, but they did not discuss the implications of this question and maintained on the whole a realistic position. It is interesting to note that, in their examination of inference, the Carvakas anticipated the European sceptics. They said that inference was not a valid source of knowledge, because the major premise of an inference cannot be proved. For example:

    152. Collaborative Programme In Ancient And Medieval Philosophy
    Information on the Collaborative Programme in ancient and Medieval philosophy at the University of Toronto, including Programme resources, admission
    http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~cpamp/
    University of Toronto. Site design and maintenance by A.N. Speca
    Last substantial revision on 1 August 2000.

    153. Blintz! Ancient Philosophy
    , ancient philosophy. Previews by Thumbshots, WCP ancient philosophy Open in new window Archive of contributed papers in ancient philosophy.
    http://www.blintz.com/directory/Ancient_Philosophy/
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    154. Winged Sandals: History: Philosophy
    Later Greek philosophy. Much of later Greek philosophy tended to be focused on how to live one s life. The today. Quotes from Philosophers.
    http://www.abc.net.au/arts/wingedsandals/history1.htm
    @import url(/arts/wingedsandals/css/styles.css);
    Sophists (which means "wise men"). They taught people how to argue for anything, regardless of whether or not their cause was worthy. Other philosophers turned to mysticism and the gods for answers – Pythagoras was one of these. He also believed that the study of mathematics could reveal a lot about nature, especially the relationships between numbers; for example, the relationship between the lengths of the sides of a triangle. Socrates, Plato and Aristotle The three most important Greek philosophers are Socrates, Plato and Aristotle. Socrates , whom we only know about from later sources (especially Plato) and not from his own writings, claimed to know nothing himself. He would specialise in finding people who claimed to have knowledge – for example, politicians, poets and craftsmen – and ask them many questions. Invariably, he ended up finding contradictions in what they believed and showing them that they did not know as much as they thought. He claimed that he was wiser than everybody else because he knew that he knew nothing, whereas they knew nothing but thought that they really knew things. In the end, he made many enemies in Athens and was sentenced to death for impiety and "corrupting the youth". Socrates' most important pupil was Plato , who startes his own philosophical school. Among Plato's most famous beliefs is his "theory of forms" – the belief that for every type of object and quality there is a perfect example in the immaterial world, called a "form". Things in this world have the qualities they do because they partake in these forms.

    155. Philosophy And Theology
    philosophy and Theology. Primary Texts. Professional Associations. American Philosophical Association (APA) Canadian Philosophical Association
    http://www.georgetown.edu/labyrinth/subjects/philosophy/phil.html
    This page is no longer being maintained. Please visit labyrinth.georgetown.edu
    Philosophy and Theology
    Primary Texts
    Aristotle
    Aristotle's Works at The Tech Archive (MIT) Aristotle, Metaphysics (Trans. W. D. Ross) Aristotle De interpretatione (Trans. E. M. Edghill) Aristotle, On the Soul (Trans. J. A. Smith) and an html edition (prepared by James O'Donnell) Aristotle, Physics (Trans. R. P. Hardie and R. K. Gaye) Aristotle, Poetics (Trans. S. H. Butcher) Aristotle, Rhetoric (Trans. W. Rhys Roberts)
    Augustine
    Latin text of the Confessions (HTML edition by Chris Mitchell) Directory of the Confessions for access by individual book, or the Entire text as one long file. (E. B. Pusey, trans.) Key word search of the Pusey trans. Augustine, De dialectica . (Text and trans., James Marchand; HTML ed., James O'Donnell.) Enchiridion (Albert Outler, trans.) De musica (Latin ed.)
    Boethius
    Boethius, De consolatione philosophiae (Latin and English, at UVA Etext Center) Boethius, De consolatione philosophiae (Latin and English with commentary and other resources, ed. James O'Donnell, at U Penn.) De institutione musica (Latin ed.)

    156. Ancient Economies I
    ancient ECONOMIES I. Resume of Morris Silver. The page was last revised on May 17, 2004. TOPIC IDid the ancient Mediterranean World Know Nonroyal Merchants?
    http://members.tripod.com/~sondmor/index-html
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    ANCIENT ECONOMIES I This page edited by a professional economist, Morris Silver, is devoted to the consideration of unsettled or disputed aspects of ancient economies, including the entire Mediterranean world. It builds on my books Economic Structures of Antiquity (ESoA) (1995) Greenwood Press, Westport, Connecticut, and Taking Ancient Mythology Economically (TAME) (1992), E.J. Brill, Leiden. The page also incorporates my own more recent research as well as contributions submitted for the page by interested scholars. Resume of Morris Silver The page was last revised on May 17, 2004. TOPIC I :Did the Ancient Mediterranean World Know Nonroyal Merchants? (Revised March 27, 2000)
    (Includes as an Appendix Judith Weingarten's translation of J.-P. Olivier, " Des extraits de contrats de vente d'esclaves dans les tablettes de Knossos
    TOPIC II
    :Business Agent as Image: Example and Broader Implications
    TOPIC III
    :Evidence for Pre-Lydian Coin and Currency (Revised May 17, 2004 )

    157. Ancient Philosophy - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
    PDF Government 1060 Fall 2003 THE HISTORY OF POLITICAL philosophy
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_philosophy
    Ancient philosophy
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
    Server will be down for maintenance on 2004-06-11 from about 18:00 to 18:30 UTC. This article is a part of the
    History of Philosophy series. Pre-Socratic philosophy Ancient philosophy Medieval philosophy 17th century philosophy 18th century philosophy Philosophy after 1800 ... Eastern philosophy
    This page lists some links to ancient philosophy . In Europe, the spread of Christianity through the Roman world marked the end of Hellenistic philosophy and ushered in the beginnings of Mediaeval Philosophy Table of contents 1 Pre-Socratic philosophers 2 Classical Greece 3 Later Hellenistic Philosophers 4 Schools of thought in the Hellenistic period ...
    Pre-Socratic philosophers
    The pre-Socratic Greek philosophers rejected traditional mythological explanations for the phenomena they saw around them in favor of more rational explanations. They asked the following questions:
    • Where does everything come from? What is it really made out of? How do we explain the plurality things found in nature? And why are we able to describe them with a singular mathematics?

    158. Greek Philosophers
    Barbara Jancar, Assistant Professor of Government at Skidmore College, reveals the life and heritage of one of ancient Greece s greatest philosophers Aristotle
    http://www.hol.gr/greece/philoso.htm
    The philosophy of Aristotle
    Barbara Jancar, Assistant Professor of Government at Skidmore College, reveals the life and heritage of one of ancient Greece's greatest philosophers: Aristotle. 1.The Ionian School and the first philosophers: Thales, Anaximander, Heraclitus, Pythagoras, Parmenides, Empedocles, Anaxagoras, Socrates. 2. Philosophy is a way of life: Socrates, Plato, Aristotle. 3. Aristotle's works and method, Part I. 4. Aristotle's works and method, Part II. 5.The Phyics, Books I and II.
    The Complete Works of Aristotle
    Posterior Analytics History of Animals The Athenian Constitution Categories ... On Youth and Old Age, On Life and Death, On Breathing
    Epictetus, the Stoic Philosopher
    Epictetus studied Stoic Philosophy while a slave in Rome. After he won his freedom, he became a teacher. Like other Stoics, he resembled the Cristians in his love of good and hatred of evil. He left no written works, but some of his lectures, including the Discourses were written down by his pupil Flavius Arrianus.

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