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         Antiphon The Sophist:     more detail
  1. Antiphon the Sophist: The Fragments (Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries) by Antiphon, 2010-01-14
  2. ANTIPHON(c. 480411 BCE): An entry from Gale's <i>Encyclopedia of Philosophy</i> by Michael Gagarin, 2006
  3. Die Anfänge der abendländischen Philosophie by Pherekydes von Syros, Thales, et all 1991
  4. The Older Sophists
  5. Antiphon the Athenian: Oratory, Law, and Justice in the Age of the Sophists by Michael Gagarin, 2009-08-01
  6. Sophists: Protagoras, Gorgias, Hippias, Prodicus, Thrasymachus, Diagoras of Melos, Antiphon, Callicles, Theodorus of Byzantium
  7. The Older Sophists: a Complete Translation By Several Hands of the Fragments in Die Fragmente Der Vorsokratiker Edited By Diels-Kranz with a New Edition of Antiphon and of Euthydemus by Rosamond Kent (Edited by) Sprague, 1990

61. La Base De Données Expérimentale Mertens-Pack3
Antiphonthe Sophist with a Commentary (New York, 1987); Id., antiphon the sophist.
http://promethee.philo.ulg.ac.be/cedopal/getPack.asp?_auteur=147

62. Antiphon01
sophist ). antiphon ( der sophist ) aus Athen (ca. 450- 400 v.Chr.) beschäftigt sich in seinem Werk e?a
http://www.gottwein.de/Grie/VSAntiph01.htm
Antiphon ("der Sophist")
Antiphon ("der Sophist") aus Athen (ca. 450 - 400 v.Chr.) beschäftigt sich in seinem Werk Ἀλήθεια (Wahrheit) mit Fragen der Erkenntnislehre (Quadratur des Kreises) und vertritt besonders scharf die Nomos-Physis-Antithese. Schon in der Antike war seine mögliche Identität mit dem "Redner" Antiphon aus Rhamnus (480 - 411 v.Chr.) unklar. 87 B 44A 87 B 44B Aufgaben
VS 87 B 44
A OXYRH. PAP. XI n. 1364.
  • Wieso ist Antiphons Handlungsmaxime μετὰ μὲν μαρτύρων τοὺς νόμους μεγάλους ἄγειν, μονούμενος δὲ μαρτύρων τὰ τῆς φύσεως eine logische Konsequenz seines Rechtsdenkens?
VS 87 B 44B
Aufgaben
  • Vergleichen Sie das 2. Antiphon-Fragment mit folgendem Paulustext (NT Galat.3,23-28) unter folgenden Aspekten:

63. Oedipus, University Of Saskatchewan
viewed as individual self interest. This hostility appears in an evenmore extreme form in the writings of the sophist antiphon
http://duke.usask.ca/~porterj/CourseNotes/Oed.html
To Home Page
To Course Notes Menu
Sophocles' Oedipus by John Porter, University of Saskatchewan
Notice:
Suggested Background Reading
The best general introduction to the play is C. Segal's Oedipus Tyrannus: Tragic Heroism and the Limits of Knowledge (New York, 1993). For a general outline of the play and its structure, see the Structure and Meters of Sophocles' Oedipus the King page. See, as well, the Notes and Study Questions for Oedipus the King by Lewis Stiles.
  • Sophocles' Oedipus
    The Mythological Background to Sophocles' Oedipus
    See, as well, Andrew Wilson's Oedipus page. The World of Athens 4.22. Scholars disagree on whether the child was left out to die, as is the norm in myth, or to be picked up by someone else, as was common in the Middle Ages [a curious ritual of adoption]. If the latter, the child would have been reared as a slave.) The shepherd instead gave the child to a shepherd from neighboring Corinth, where the baby was raised as the son of Polybus and Merope, king and queen of Corinth. (Compare Herodotus' story of the birth of Cyrus.
  • 64. Why Antiphon?
    We know of the sophist, Gorgias, largely because of his interaction with Socratesin But in the case of antiphon, we have one significant fragment of a papyrus
    http://scots.covenant.edu/faculty/davis/Sophists/page4.html
    The work of Antiphon of Athens (480-411 B.C.) is particularly important for several reasons. It is the only Sophistical work that we have that is by the author. All of our knowledge of the Sophists and their writing comes from secondary sourcesthey are all quoted in some other work. We know of the Sophist, Gorgias, largely because of his interaction with Socrates in the Platonic dialogues. The same is true of Protagoras, who is also quoted by Aristotle, Eusebius, Plutarch, and others. But in the case of Antiphon, we have one significant fragment of a papyrus of his own writings (Oxyrhynthus Papyrus XI no. 1364). In it, he argues ethics, based on relative moral theory, emphasizing rhetoricthe main thread among Sophist philosophers. These are major reoccurring themes among the Sophists and so this work is a good example of the type of philosophizing a Sophist would do.
    Why Antiphon?
    Victory comes through speech.
    - Antiphon
    The Oxford Companion to Philosophy Sophists . Pg. 840; edited by Ted Honderich
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    65. Lexikon - Antiphon Aus Athen Definition Erklärung Bedeutung
    Translate this page Definition, Bedeutung, Erklärung im Lexikon. antiphon aus Athen (der sophist)(480 ? 411 v. Chr.) war ein griechischer Philosoph, sophist und Traumdeuter.
    http://www.net-lexikon.de/Antiphon-aus-Athen.html
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    Antiphon aus Athen
    Definition, Bedeutung, Erkl¤rung im Lexikon
    Antiphon aus Athen der Sophist ) (480 – 411 v. Chr.) war ein griechischer Philosoph, Sophist und Traumdeuter. Siehe auch: Portal Philosophie Liste der Philosophen
    Zitate
    • "Die von vornehmen V¤ter abstammen, achten und verehren wir, die dagegen nicht aus vornehmen Hause sind, achten und verehren wir nicht. Hierbei verhalten wir uns zueinander wie Barbaren, denn von Natur sind wir alle in allen Beziehungen gleich geschaffen, Barbaren wie Hellenen." "Doch wie einen Zug im Brettspiel das Leben zu wiederholen das gibt es nicht."
    Literatur
    • Hermann Diels: Die Fragmente der Vorsokratiker M. Gagarin: Antiphon the Athenian
    Weblinks
    B¼cher bei Amazon.de zum Stichwort: Antiphon aus Athen Info:
    Dieser Artikel aus Wikipedia wird durch die GNU FDL lizenziert.
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    66. AAC Database - Full View Of Document
    System No, 1583372. Author, antiphon, sophist. Title, The fragments / antiphon, thesophist ; edited with introd., translation and commentary by Gerard J. Pendrick.
    http://valeph.tau.ac.il/ALEPH/ENG/TAU/AAC/AAC/FIND-ACC/3220385
    Sourasky Central Library
    Full View of Document
    The catalog has moved to a new system, which is accessible at:
    This version of the catalog is no longer updated.
    To mail a Bibliographic record to your E-mail account.
    System No Author Antiphon, Sophist Unif-Tl [Selections. 2002] Title The fragments / Antiphon, the Sophist ; edited with introd., translation and commentary by Gerard J. Pendrick Location
    Imprint
    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, c2002
    Year
    Pages
    xi, 470 p.
    Subject Antiphon, Sophist Criticism, textual; Sophists (Greek philosophy);
    Series Cambridge classical texts and commentaries ; 039
    Contents On truth
    Contents On concord
    Contents Politicus
    Language GRE Language ENG Title-a Antiphon, the Sophist: The fragments Ad.Author Pendrick, Gerard J. New 2002-11-November
    Library use only - Click the icon to prepare the document for download to the

    67. Antiphon
    The problem seems to revolve round whether there was one sophist philosopher namedAntiphon who lived around this time or whether there are two, or as some
    http://www.kat.gr/kat/history/Greek/Pt/Antiphon.htm
    Antiphon of Rhamnus in Attica
    c. 480-411 B.C. One of the earliest professional speech-writers in Greece. Antiphon was an orator and statesman who took up rhetoric as a profession. He was a Sophist and a contemporary of Socrates . These definite assertions are, however, disputed by some historians. The problem seems to revolve round whether there was one Sophist philosopher named Antiphon who lived around this time or whether there are two, or as some experts claim, three distinct Antiphons. A number of speeches which were written by Antiphon have been preserved. Three of these speeches were real speeches made by Antiphon as the prosecutor in murder trials. Twelve speeches are specimen speeches written by Antiphon for use in teaching students the skills of prosecuting and defending clients in cases. The speeches come as three collections of four; two prosecution speeches and two defence speeches for each of three different cases. Antiphon published a number of works on philosophy which have been lost except for a small number of fragments which have been discovered together with some quotations from the works in the writings of other authors. These works include On Truth, On Concord, The Statesman

    68. Sophist
    working in the late 5th century, include Gorgias of Leontini, Prodicus, Hippias,antiphon, and Thrasymachus; Critias is often considered a sophist, although he
    http://www.kat.gr/kat/history/Greek/Id/Sophist.htm
    Sophist
    In philosophy, a member of a group of itinerant professional teachers, lecturers, and writers prominent in Greece in the latter half of the 5th century BC and continuing, although declining, into the 4th. A later movement, known as the Second Sophistic school, existed in the 2nd century AD, but it consisted of Greek prose writers characterized more by nostalgia than by originality or profundity of thought. The name Sophist derives from the Greek sophistes itself derived from sophos, Solon (late 6th and early 5th century BC), Pythagoras Socrates , and Plato The first and most eminent representative of the so-called Sophistic school was Protagoras c. c. 410 BC). Other notable Sophists, all working in the late 5th century, include Gorgias of Leontini , Prodicus, Hippias, Antiphon, and Thrasymachus; Critias is often considered a Sophist, although he was an amateur whose main career lay in politics. The Sophists worked independently of each other, primarily on ethical, political, and social questions. They drew their audiences partly from people with a general intellectual curiosity, but also from those seeking practical training in the arts of persuasion as preparation for political and legal careers. This led certain Sophists to specialize in logic and rhetoric and to ask questions, both theoretical and practical, about the nature of language; a common sport developed in the form of so-called dialectic, a kind of intellectual jousting subject to elaborate rules of procedure. Other Sophists lectured or wrote on subjects ranging from mathematics to wrestling.

    69. THE ATHENIAN PHILOSOPHERS
    except antiphon of Athens) and they used to give a lecture on or several examplesof eloquence. According to Socrates (= Plato), the sophist revealed only the
    http://www.csudh.edu/phenom_studies/greekphil/greek09.htm
    THE ATHENIAN PHILOSOPHERS
    The history of Greek philosophy started from Ionia in the Asia Minor, which was the closest to and was most easily influenced by Persia (the cultural inheritance of the Mesopotamia). Due to Persian military expansions, the Ionian intellectuals and "technocrats" had to take the refuge to the rest of Magna Graeca The Sophists Through this geo-political transition of culture to Athens, the central question of the problems of philosophy was no longer sought in Heaven and Earth, in nature and its principles (Anaxagoras was still preoccupied with this philosophy of nature in Athens). They were now concerned about the Human beings Themselves. In order that such a radical shift of questions in philosophy was possible, some cultural, psychological and philosophical preparations had to be done in ahead.
    1) The problem of human-being oneself and of the society as well as the politics became more serious questions tot the consciousness of the people rather than those of the heaven and nature. Why? Because what had been previously taken for granted as self-evident was no longer acceptable as true, but on the contrary, everything which was taken for granted in humanity and society had become questionable.
    2) After the Persian War (490-480 B.C.) Athens became the leader of

    70. Quadrature Of A Convex Polygon
    antiphon, a sophist around 500 BC. Bryson (mid4th cent. BC.). Hippocrates of Chios,The area problem. Back to other interesting ancient Greece facts and stories.
    http://www.mlahanas.de/Greeks/PolygonQuadrature.htm

    Quadrature of a Convex Polygon
    Eves thinks that the Greeks knew a method for reducing a convex polygon of any number of sides to a triangle of equal area. In the figure below we consider a polygon ABCFGHJ. We take a side CF extended to meet a line GK from an adjacent vertex, running parallel to the diagonal FH in the polygon. We cut a corner by connecting H with K, while maintaining the same area. So we see a complex figure equated to a simpler one. The polygon with 7 vectices ABCFGHJ has the same area as the polygon with 6 vertices ABCKHJ. To see this we construct a parallel to FH at G. Extend CF that meets this parallel at K. FHK and FGH have the same height and base FH. A similar process can be continued with the polygon ABCKHJ again until we obtain a triangle. First Step: Construct a rectangle with an area equal to the triangle assumed to be ABC. For this bisect the height AD at E. Now the rectangle HJIG with width IJ = BC and height JH = ED has the same area as the triangle ABC. Now extend IJ marking a point K with KJ=JH. Draw a circle using L as midpoint of IK and radius LI = LK. Extend JH and take intersection point M on circle. Use JM as side and construct square JMPN. This has the same area as HJIG and thus the same area as the triangle ABC.

    71. Lexi-tv
    Translate this page Natur und menschliches Handeln antiphon der sophist unterschied die Naturordnung(Physis) und das menschliche Gesetz (Nomos). Während
    http://www.lexi-tv.de/lexikon/brockhaus.asp?ZuInhaltID=1575

    72. Vignettes Of Ancient Mathematics
    Aristotle. antiphon, a sophist of the 5th cent. BCE Bryson (mid4thcent. BCE). Interesting curves, as discussed by philosophers. Some
    http://www.calstatela.edu/faculty/hmendel/Ancient Mathematics/VignettesAncientMa
    General Contents
    Philosophical Texts
    Mathematical Authors Special Topics Textual Notes
    The purpose of this site is to illustrate various mathematical techniques and strategies, mostly in ancient Greek mathematics, but other related examples will be included. This will not be a history of Greek mathematics but will contain examples designed to bring out a few interesting features. For the perspective of evidence, the techniques included will be of four sorts:
    • Texts with explanatory diagrams. The diagrams will be 'modern' in the sense that they will walk the reader through the proof. Paraphrases or summaries with explanatory diagrams. Here the argument does occur in our sources, but a simpler paraphrase was used to facilitate understanding. For example, the mathematician may have needed the elaborate original text to explain matters easily understood by a series of well constructed diagrams. Simple illustrations of techniques: these illustrations are simpler than the examples which occur in ancient texts and so are useful for learning the techniques. Reconstructions of arguments which are lost, but which seem plausible. Some of these are standard in the modern literature; others express the personal tastes of the author.

    73. Legal Reform And Judicial Reform
    stronger. Hegel. The purpose of the courts is not justice or truth,but a verdict. antiphon, the sophist (c. 480411 BC) on Justice.
    http://www.geocities.com/Pentagon/6315/law/
    LEGAL AND
    JUDICIAL REFORM
    HOMEPAGE
    Justice is the interest of the stronger. Hegel
    The purpose of the courts is not justice or truth, but a verdict
    Antiphon, the Sophist (c. 480-411 BC) on Justice.
    "Justice is just a matter of not breaking the laws (nomoi) in your city. You'll make the most of justice for yourself if you respect the laws in the presence of witnesses, but just do what comes naturally (by nature or physis) when alone, with no witnesses present. Because the laws are extra additions, but nature is necessary; the laws come from convention, not from natural growth, whereas the requirements of nature come from natural growth, not from convention. If those who made the conventions do not notice a person breaking the law, then he is free from disgrace and penalty, but not if they do notice him. But if, contrary to possibility, you violate any of the things innate by nature, the evil is no less if no one notices you and no greater if all observe. For you do not suffer harm as a result of opinion, but as a result of truth. "Now, if some advantage came from the laws for those who submitted to these conditions and some disadvantage to those who do not submit but resist, obedience to the laws would not be unhelpful. But as things are, it is obvious that the justice that stems from law is not sufficient to rescue those who submit. In the first place, it permits the one who suffers to suffer and the wrongdoer to do wrong, and justice was not at the time of the wrongdoing able to prevent either the sufferer from suffering or the wrongdoer from doing wrong. And when the case is brought to trial, there is no special advantage for the one who has suffered over the wrongdoer. For he must persuade the jury that he suffered and that he is able to exact the penalty. And it is open to the wrongdoer to deny it...."

    74. Wikino - Antiphon Aus Athen - Lexikon
    Translate this page antiphon aus Athen Wikino - Enzyklopädie. antiphon aus Athen (der sophist) (480– 411 v. Chr.) war ein griechischer Philosoph, sophist und Traumdeuter.
    http://www.wikino.net/Antiphon_aus_Athen.html
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    Antiphon aus Athen
    Wikino - Enzyklopädie
    Antiphon aus Athen der Sophist ) (480 – 411 v. Chr.) war ein griechischer Philosoph, Sophist und Traumdeuter. Siehe auch: Portal Philosophie Liste der Philosophen
    Zitate
    • "Die von vornehmen Väter abstammen, achten und verehren wir, die dagegen nicht aus vornehmen Hause sind, achten und verehren wir nicht. Hierbei verhalten wir uns zueinander wie Barbaren, denn von Natur sind wir alle in allen Beziehungen gleich geschaffen, Barbaren wie Hellenen." "Doch wie einen Zug im Brettspiel das Leben zu wiederholen das gibt es nicht."
    Literatur
    • Hermann Diels: Die Fragmente der Vorsokratiker M. Gagarin: Antiphon the Athenian
    Weblinks
    Dieser Artikel aus Wikipedia wird durch die GNU FDL lizenziert. Lexikon - Antiphon aus Athen - Definition - Antiphon aus Athen - Bedeutung - Antiphon aus Athen - Information

    75. Sophists
    A third important sophist was antiphon c. 480411 BC. Fragment 3opposes nomos (human law or custom) to phusis (nature). Claims
    http://www.uky.edu/~jjord0/Sophist.htm
    Return to Philo 260 Home Page
    2. The Sophists
    • "Sophist" is from sophos , skilled or having special expertise, hence "wise" (cf. sophia , wisdom). Many people were "sophists" in particular areas" e.g., carpenters, charioteers, poets. What distinguished the Sophists was that they were not practitioners of a trade, but itinerant tutors who claimed to teach all that was necessary for success in public life. In practice they mainly taught rhetoric and related fields such as grammar, history, and literary criticism.
    • The Sophists were at first widely admired. Eventually they came into disrepute because of their high fees and the radical nature of what many of them taught. People were particularly suspicious of their claim to be able to teach a student how "to make the weaker argument stronger" (Protagoras [4]). Coupled with the Sophists’ exaggerated rhetorical displays, this claim created the impression that the Sophists were more concerned with rhetorical effectiveness than with truth. Hence the meanings of "sophist" and "sophistry" today.
    • The first great Sophist was Protagoras , c. 490-420 BC. He was from Abdera but settled in Athens. He was more modest than some of the later Sophists, and is treated respectfully by Plato in the

    76. Some Grammarians, Rhetoricians And Sophists From The Suda
    Notes 1 RE antiphon (14); NP antiphon (4); OCD3 antiphon (1). Opinion is dividedover whether he is to be identified with the sophist A2744 antiphon.
    http://www.leeds.ac.uk/classics/heath/sudabits.html
    Malcolm Heath
    Some grammarians, rhetoricians and sophists from the Suda
    Introduction
    This is a selection of entries from the Byzantine encyclopaedia known as the Suda , in English translation. These entries are mainly concerned with grammarians, rhetoricians and sophists; but some other, more or less related, items are also included. It should be noted that the contents of this site represent work-in-progress. The translations presented here are drafts, and the annotation is uneven and incomplete. The material will be revised for inclusion in the larger on-line Suda project. Malcolm Heath
    The On-Line Suda Project
    • About the Suda On Line
    • Suda On-Line Volunteer List
    • Suda e-mail list:
      Grammarians, rhetoricians and sophists from the Suda
      Abas . Sophist. He left historical monographs and an Art of Rhetoric Notes [[1]] The rhetorical work is cited RG 7.203.10 Walz. The identification of the historical works with those of

    77. Encyclopedia4U - List Of People By Name: An - Encyclopedia Article
    Attic orator; antiphon, Athenian sophist; antiphon, Greek tragic poet;Antisthenes (c. 445360 BC), Greek philosopher; Antisthenes of
    http://www.encyclopedia4u.com/l/list-of-people-by-name-an.html
    ENCYCLOPEDIA U com Lists of articles by category ...
    Encyclopedia Home Page
    SEARCH :
    List of people by name: An
    List of people by name A B C D E ... Am An Ao Ap Aq Ar ...

    78. Antiphon Aus Athen - Definition Bedeutung Info - Mehr Wissen über Die Welt Mens
    Translate this page Was bedeutet antiphon aus Athen? antiphon aus Athen (der sophist) (480 –411 v. Chr.) war ein griechischer Philosoph, sophist und Traumdeuter.
    http://www.definition-info.de/Antiphon_aus_Athen.html
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    Antiphon aus Athen
    Definition
    Bedeutung
    Info
    Antiphon aus Athen der Sophist 411 v. Chr. ) war ein griechischer Philosoph, Sophist und Traumdeuter. Siehe auch: Portal Philosophie Liste der Philosophen
    Zitate
    • "Die von vornehmen Väter abstammen, achten und verehren wir, die dagegen nicht aus vornehmen Hause sind, achten und verehren wir nicht. Hierbei verhalten wir uns zueinander wie Barbaren, denn von Natur sind wir alle in allen Beziehungen gleich geschaffen, Barbaren wie Hellenen." "Doch wie einen Zug im Brettspiel das Leben zu wiederholen das gibt es nicht."
    Literatur
    • Hermann Diels: Die Fragmente der Vorsokratiker M. Gagarin: Antiphon the Athenian
    Weblinks
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    79. Lecture Outline For Clas 270
    admired Pericles. Possibly studied with antiphon, the sophist. Servedas general in the war, outmaneuvered by Spartan general. Exiled
    http://www.inform.umd.edu/EdRes/Colleges/ARHU/Depts/Classics/Faculty/EStehle/98C
    Lecture Outline for Clas 270 , Nov. 16, 1998 The Peloponnesian War
  • Athens after the Persian invasion. Acquired an "empire." Grew more "capitalist," acquiring money through trade. Relied on sea power, connected with democracy. Spurred by leadership of Pericles Sparta after the Persian invasion. Returned to its old ways: militaristic and landlocked. Was the leader of an alliance of Peloponnesian states. Rejected progress: coined money, art and literature, foreign travel. Corinth. Allied with Sparta but more like Athens (commercial city). Did not have Athens' sea power or energy. Map. Athens extends reach to the west. The disputes that trigger the war. Thucydides' summary of situation (1.118; Lattimore p. 56).
  • Thucydides
  • Life. Born ca. 460-455. Born into anti-Periclean family, but admired Pericles. Possibly studied with Antiphon, the sophist. Served as general in the war, outmaneuvered by Spartan general. Exiled in 424 and probably spent time at Corinth, Sparta. Died ca. 400. Opening of "The Peloponnesian War"; comparison with Herodotus. "This was the greatest war": competition with Homer, Herodotus.
  • 80. Forschung Am Seminar Für Klassische Philologie Der Freien Universität Berlin
    Translate this page PHILOSOPHIE, Anaximenes antiphon der sophist Aristoteles, De memoria Aristoteles,De somno Aristoteles Graecus Aristoteleshandschriften (Vat.1302
    http://www.fu-berlin.de/klassphi/forsch.htm
    Projekte und Publikationsthemen
    von Dozenten des
    Stand: 17. Oktober 2000 GRIECHISCHE PHILOLOGIE LATEINISCHE PHILOLOGIE
    GRIECHISCHE PHILOLOGIE A. Projektbeschreibungen (Auswahl)
    B. Publikationsthemen (Auswahl)
    BEGRIFFS-
    GESCHICHTE noos
    sigan/siopan

    stoicheion (Element)

    thymos
    BIOGRAPHIE griechische Biographie Plutarch, Charakterentwicklung DRAMA Drama und Polis Drama / Rezeption in Rom (siehe auch unten "Gesellschaft") (siehe auch unten "Satyrspiel") EPOS Antilochos Epische Konventionen Ilias Z Iliaskommentar (Rezension) ... Penelopes List (siehe auch oben "Projektbeschreibungen") GESCHICHTS- SCHREIBUNG Herodot, Prooemium GESELL- SCHAFT Dichtung und Gesellschaft im 4. Jh. INTER- KULTUR- GESCHICHTE Agon und Literatur Die Bibliothek zu Alexandria (siehe auch "Technik") LYRIK Pindar Sappho MATHEMATIK Griechische Geometrie Platons "Hochzeitszahl" MEDIZIN Hippokrates, De prisca medicina PHILOSOPHIE Anaximenes Antiphon der Sophist Aristoteles, De memoria Aristoteles, De somno ... Forschungsbericht PSYCHOLOGIE Die Seelenlehre des Gnostikers Herakleon thymos RELIGION Christliche Tugenden bei Porphyrios Corpus Hermeticum Gnosis Herakleon, Seelenlehre

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