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  1. Orations Against Macartatus, Leochares, Stephanus I, Stephanus Ii, Euergus and Mnesibulus, Olympiodorus, Timothens, Polycles, Callippus, Nicostratus, Conon, ... and for the Naval Crown, the Funeral Orati by Demosthenes, 2010-02-23
  2. 300 Bc: 300 Bc Deaths, Eudemus of Rhodes, Callippus, Deidamia I of Epirus
  3. Orations Against Macartatus, Leochares, Stephanus I, Stephanus Ii, Euergus and Mnesibulus, Olympiodorus, Timothens, Polycles, Callippus, by Demosthenes, 2009-12-19
  4. Callippus
  5. The Republic (Optimized for Kindle) by Plato, 2008-03-12

41. L'Encyclopédie De L'Agora: La Vie De Dion - 2e Partie
ayant à ses côtés Mégaclès son frère et l Athénien callippus, tous deux
http://agora.qc.ca/reftext.nsf/Documents/Platon--La_vie_de_Dion_-_2e_partie_par_
Accueil Index Catégories Dossiers ... Imprimer associé au dossier Platon La vie de Dion - 2e partie Plutarque Présentation
Extrait

Dion parut à la vue des Syracusains: il marchait à la tête de ses troupes, couvert d'armes brillantes, ayant à ses côtés Mégaclès son frère et l'Athénien Callippus, tous deux couronnés de fleurs, et suivis de cent soldats étrangers qui lui servaient de gardes; les autres marchaient en ordre de bataille, sous la conduite de leurs capitaines. Les Syracusains, ravis de les voir, les reçurent comme une pompe sacrée, digne du regard des dieux, et qui leur ramenait, après quarante-huit ans, la liberté et la démocratie, exilées de leur ville. Texte
XXII. Enfin Denys, ayant fait vendre tous les biens de Dion, en retint l'argent; il fit quitter à Platon l'appartement qu'il lui avait donné dans ses jardins, et le renvoya au milieu de ses satellites, qui, irrités des conseils qu'il donnait à Denys de renoncer à la tyrannie et de casser sa garde, le haïssaient depuis longtemps et cherchaient à le tuer. Archytas, informé du péril où se trouvait Platon , envoya promptement à Denys, sur une galère à trente rames, des ambassadeurs chargés de lui redemander Platon et de le faire ressouvenir que ce philosophe n'était allé en Sicile que parce qu'Archytas s'était rendu caution auprès de lui qu'il y serait en sûreté. Denys, pour se justifier du reproche de haïr Platon , eut soin de le combler avant son départ de témoignages d'estime et d'amitié; et quand il fut sur le point de s'embarquer: « Platon, lui dit-il, je crois que, de retour à Athènes, vous direz bien du mal de nous avec vos philosophes. - A Dieu ne

42. Ethics Of Philip, Demosthenes, And Alexander By Sanderson Beck
A former student of Plato named callippus swore by the great goddesses Demeterand Persephone that he had no evil intentions against Dion, but during the
http://www.san.beck.org/EC22-Alexander.html
BECK index
Philip, Demosthenes, and Alexander
This chapter is part of the book ANCIENT WISDOM AND FOLLY, which has now been published. For information on ordering click here.
Dionysius II, Dion, and Timoleon in Sicily
Wars and Macedonian Expansion under Philip

Demosthenes and Aeschines
...
Alexander's Conquest of the Persian Empire
Dionysius II, Dion, and Timoleon in Sicily
Dionysius II succeeded his father Dionysius I as tyrant in Sicily in 367 BC by preventing Dion from arranging with his dying father that his half brothers Hipparinus and Nysaeus share power. Dionysius II invited Plato to come advise him and also recalled from exile the historian Philistus, who caused Dionysius to suspect the influence of Plato on Dion. When Plato lectured on the goodness of justice and the misery of unjust tyranny, Dionysius was displeased and finally admitted that if Plato was looking for a virtuous man, his labor was lost there. Jealous of the friendship between Plato and Dion, Dionysius II sent Dion into exile for writing a letter to Carthaginian commanders in Sicily even though he was their usual diplomatic contact; so Plato returned to Athens.

43. 123Student
Aristotle, like Eudoxus and callippus before him, believed that eachplanet followed the path laid out by a certain number of spheres.
http://www.123student.com/biographies/193.shtml
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Aristotle, like Eudoxus and Callippus before him, believed that each planet followed the path laid out by a certain number of spheres. Callippus had postulated 33 spheres in all, 4 each for Saturn and Jupiter, 5 each for Mars, Venus, Mercury, the sun and the moon. The problem with this model, however, was that, according to Aristotle, it did not explain how the motion of the outer spheres was to be prevented from interfering with the motion of the inner spheres. Aristotle therefore attempted a mechanical explanation, and postulated 22 counteracting spheres, which would set things in balance. It is generally held that Aristotle's addition of these counteracting spheres complicated rather than cleared up the problem of planetary motion. Aristotle's many-faceted theory of motion was a fundamental part of his world picture. The complexity of this theory is evidenced in the numerous interpretations offered by modern scholars. Here only the bare bones of it will be presented.

44. CyberSleuth Kids.com: A K-12 Homework Helper And Directory
Search Click Here, Home Searched callippus 0 located. No ResultsFound. Try a different search term. Click Here. Click Here div .
http://cybersleuth-kids.com/cgi-bin/search/hyperseek.cgi?Terms=Callippus&submit=

45. Greek And Copernican Astronomy
callippus of Cyzicus (c. 330BC)—34 spheres; models of Eudoxus and callippus werepurely mathematical constructions; said nothing about the actually mechanics
http://www.msu.edu/course/lbs/492/stillwell/greekastro.html
LBS 333 Topics in the History of the Physical Sciences Spring 1998
Lecture 3: Astronomical Systems: Plato to Copernicus
The Pythagorean theory: planet and fixed stars distinguished; all celestial bodies-revolve around the central fire; no precise account of the movements of heavenly bodies (number mysticism, not practical applications)
PLATONIC THEORY: Two kinds of movements:
(1) sphere of the fixed stars (shared by all the heavenly bodies) and
(2) the independent movements of the sun, moon, and planets along the ecliptic in an opposite sense to that of the movement of the fixed stars. Plato—a Pythagorean: astronomy is geometrical problems, not just pure observations; mathematical structure of the universe. Problem of the motions of the planets: wandering planets ; Eudoxus of Cnidus (409-356 BC) 27 concentric spheresfour for each planet and three for the moon and sun; only simple circular motions; model failed to account for the observed phenomena in at least four ways.
1) Figure 8 movements not like the observed variation of planetary retrogradations ;

46. Aa, Personal , Ahmet Kaya ,Þebnem Ferah , Göksel , Ebru Gündeþ
411*) Burnside, William (711*) Burton Jones, F (999*) Caccioppoli, Renato (1455*)Cajori, Florian (960*) Calderón, Alberto (879*) callippus (651) Campanus of
http://www.newturk.net/index111.html

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47. Did God Say The Earth The Center Of The Universe?
earth. Ptolemy based his system on earlier work from Aristotle, whileAristotle built on theories from Eudoxus and callippus. Later
http://home.teleport.com/~salad/4god/geo.htm
Did God Say the Earth is the Center of the Universe?
Return
Note: The above information was written by John P. Boatwright and is freely given. The information is simply my opinion based on how I perceive the content discussed. Anyone reading such should use their own judgement as to whether or not the information has any value to them. You may copy portions of the above opinions as long as a reference to this page is included and no text within said portion is altered. If copied to another medium other than the internet, include the entire text. The above content may change over time. Best wishes.

48. Addenda & Corrigenda To TLG Canon, 3rd Edition
Cod Hymn. callippus Comic. (0427 In 002, change breakdown to read Dup. 227,vv.57). callippus Hist. (2270) In 001, add cross-reference to read Cf.
http://www.tlg.uci.edu/A&C.html
The TLG Canon
Addenda and Corrigenda to the TLG Canon, 3 rd edition
NOTE: The following addenda and corrigenda are provided for quick reference. The format of this document does not allow for the Greek fonts used in the Thesaurus Linguae Graecae Canon of Greek Authors and Works , third edition, by Luci Berkowitz and Karl A. Squitier (New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1990). Those who wish to obtain a copy of these addenda and corrigenda, formatted to concur with TLG Canon, 3rd edition, should contact the Thesaurus Linguae Graecae Changes in Index of Citation Systems ABARIS Hist. (1883): Add square brackets to read [ABARIS] Hist. ADAMANTIUS Scr. Eccl. (2950): Change author epithet to Theol. Also, in 001, change work title to read De recta in deum fide (olim sub auctore Origene Adamantio). AESCHINES SOCRATICUS Phil. (0673): Delete works 002 and 003; substitute new entry for 002 as follows:
    Fragmenta , ed. L. Rossetti, Corpus dei papiri filosofici greci e latini , vol. 1.1: Autori noti . Florence: Olschki, 1989: 123-128, 135-136, 140-142.
    fr. 1: Alcibiades (

49. TLGE
2218, Calliphon et Democedes Med. et Phil. 0427, callippus Comic. 2270,callippus Hist. 0534, Callisthenes Hist. 1239, Domitius Callistratus Hist.
http://www.tlg.uci.edu/CDROME.html
CD-ROM E Authors
Abydenus Hist.
Acacius Theol.
Acesander Hist.
Achaeus Trag.
Achilles Tatius Astron.
Achilles Tatius Scr. Erot.
Gaius Acilius Hist. et Phil.
Georgius Acropolites Hist.
Acta Alexandrinorum
Acta Barnabae
Acta Et Martyrium Apollonii Acta Eupli Acta Joannis Acta Justini Et Septem Sodalium Acta Pauli Acta Petri Acta Phileae Acta Philippi Acta Scillitanorum Martyrum Acta Thomae Acta Xanthippae Et Polyxenae Acusilaus
Hist. Adamantius Judaeus Med. Adamantius Theol. Adespota Papyracea (SH) Adrianus Rhet. et Soph. Aegimius Claudius Aelianus Soph. Aelianus Tact. Aelius Dius Hist. Aeneas Phil. et Rhet. Aeneas Tact. Aeschines Orat. Aeschines Socraticus Phil. Aeschrion Lyr. Aeschylus Trag. Aeschylus Trag. Aesopus Scr. Fab. et Aesopica Aethiopis Aethlius Hist. Ae+tius Doxogr. Ae+tius Med. Agaclytus Hist. Agamestor Eleg. Agatharchides Geogr. [Agatharchides] Hist. Agathemerus Geogr. Agathias Scholasticus Epigr. et Hist. Agathocles Hist. [Agathodaemon] Alchem. Pseudo- Agathon Epigr. [Agathon] Hist. Agathon Trag. Agathyllus Eleg. Agesilaus Hist. Aglai+s Poet. Med. Agl(a)osthenes Hist. Agroetas Hist.

50. HighBeam Research: ELibrary Search: Results
cosmology II), King of Macedonia, and it seems probable that modelproposed by Eudoxus and callippus. callippus posited spheres
http://www.highbeam.com/library/search.asp?FN=AO&refid=ency_refd&search_dictiona

51. A Smaller History Of Greece - Chapter XVIII
His unpopularity continued to increase, till at length one of his bosom friendstheAthenian callippusseized the opportunity to mount to power by his murder
http://www.worldwideschool.org/library/books/hst/european/ASmallerHistoryofGreec
A Smaller History of Greece
by William Smith Terms Contents Chapter I Chapter II ... Chapter XXII Chapter XVIII
History of the Sicilian Greeks from the Destruction of the Athenian Armament to the Death of Timoleon.
he affairs of the Sicilian Greeks, an important branch of the Hellenic race, deserve a passing notice. A few years after the destruction of the Athenian armament, Dionysius made himself master of Syracuse, and openly seized upon the supreme power (B.C. 405). His reign as tyrant or despot was long and prosperous. After conquering the Carthaginians, who more than once invaded Sicily, he extended his dominion over a great part of the island, and over a considerable portion of Magna Graecia. He raised Syracuse to be one of the chief Grecian states, second in influence, if indeed second, to Sparta alone. Under his sway Syracuse was strengthened and embellished with new fortifications, docks, arsenals, and other public buildings, and became superior even to Athens in extent and population. Dionysius was a warm patron of literature, and was anxious to gain distinction by his literary compositions. In the midst of his political and military cares he devoted himself assiduously to poetry, and not only caused his poems to be publicly recited at the Olympic games, but repeatedly contended for the prize of tragedy at Athens. In accordance with the same spirit we find him seeking the society of men distinguished in literature and philosophy. Plato, who visited Sicily about the year 389 from a curiosity to see Mount AEtna, was introduced to Dionysius by Dion. The high moral tone of Plato's conversation did not however prove so attractive to Dionysius as it had done to Dion; and the philosopher was not only dismissed with aversion and dislike, but even, it seems through the machinations of Dionysius, seized, bound, and sold for a slave in the island of AEgina. He was, however, repurchased by Anniceris of Cyrene, and sent back to Athens.

52. Callippus

http://www-history.mcs.st-and.ac.uk/history/Mathematicians/Callippus.html
Callippus of Cyzicus
Born: about 370 BC in Cyzicus, Asia Minor (now Turkey)
Died: about 310 BC
Show birthplace location Previous (Chronologically) Next Biographies Index Previous (Alphabetically) Next Main index
The dates given for the birth and death of Callippus of Cyzicus are guesses but he is known to have been working with Aristotle in Athens starting in 330 BC. We know that Callippus was a student in the School of Eudoxus . We also know that he made his astronomical observations on the shores of the Hellespont, which can be deduced from the observations themselves. Simplicius writes in his commentary on De caelo by Aristotle (see for example [1]):- Callippus of Cyzicus, having studied with Polemarchus, Eudoxus ' pupil, following him to Athens dwelt with Aristotle , correcting and completing, with Aristotle 's help, the discoveries of Eudoxus Callippus made accurate determinations of the lengths of the seasons and constructed a 76 year cycle comprising 940 months to harmonise the solar and lunar years which was adopted in 330 BC and used by all later astronomers. This calendar of Callippus is examined in detail by van der Waerden in [6].

53. CANOE Money: Columnists - Don Sutton - Hype Of Olympic Proportions
My favourite involves callippus of Athens, who bribed his fellow competitorsin the pentathlon at the 12th Olympics in 532 BC. callippus
http://money.canoe.ca/Columnists/Sutton/2003/11/27/270297.html
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I'm trying to get into the Olympic spirit so I've been injecting myself with growth hormones, steroids and other miscellaneous substances ever since Vancouver-Whistler was awarded the 2010 Olympics. I know that officially (officially, mind you,) these enhancing drugs are banned in our newsroom. But my performance on the keyboard has been amplified to such a great extent that my editor takes a blind eye to the vials and needles in my desk drawer. My urine, thick and strong like canary yellow paint, remains untested. And yet for all my patriotic glee and the warmth and fuzziness I feel when I hear that the best of the world's athletes will be competing in my own country, I am having some misgivings about the spirit of the Olympics. The Olympic Charter says the games seek "to place everywhere sport at the service of the harmonious development of man, with a view to encouraging the establishment of a peaceful society concerned with the preservation of human dignity." Bad grammar but lofty ideals. No wonder South Korea felt the Olympics could reunite it peacefully with North Korea. I say we bring the Olympics to Baghdad, Kabul

54. A Free Essay On Aristotle
and prime the view try callippus which is to callippus the each is of as (Onthan the before to In the immutable of Christian now have a must in he one
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To the modern reader, Aristotle's views on astronomy, as presented in Metaphysics, Physics, De Caelo (On the Heavens) and Simplicius' Commentary, will most likely seem very bizarre, as they are based more on a priori philosophical speculation than empirical observation. Although Aristotle acknowledged the importance of "scientific" astronomy - the study of the positions, distances and motions of the stars - he nevertheless treated astronomy in the abstract, linking it to his overall philosophic
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55. Njudge.htm
contains the number of days the Sun spends in each zodiacal sign, and also sayson which day various authorities Euctemon, Eudoxus, callippus place the
http://hbar.phys.msu.su/gorm/almagest/njudge.htm
JUDGEMENT ON PTOLEMY
Journal for the history of astronomy, 12, p.59, 1981 Ancient Planetary Observations and the Validity of Ephemeris Time. Robert R. Newton (Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, 1976). Pp. xviii+749. $25. For over a decade Robert R. Newton has engaged in the laudable project of analyzing ancient and medieval astronomical observations in order to obtain improved determinations of the retardation of the Earth's rotation and of the Moon's secular acceleration. More recently he has become better known for his prosecution of Ptolemy, whom he considers to be the arch-criminal of science. The present work is concerned with both subjects. The object of this book is to determine whether the rate of the rotation of the Earth is subject to a long-period variation independent of the retardation produced by lunar tidal forces. The method used is to examine ancient and medieval observations of the Sun, Mercury, Venus, and Mars to see whether they show accelerations consistent with such a variation, and then to determine its rate. The results found are not positive, nor are they negative, nor are they even inconclusive; they are simply meaningless. Even accepting the author's statistical analyses of the observations and the accelerations, which are very questionable, the accelerations of Mercury and Venus are, when compared to the solar acceleration, far too low, the acceleration of Mars is too high, and the standard deviations of the estimates are so large as to make ail the numerical estimates, including those for the Sun, without value.

56. Thousands Of Free Essays & Papers On Aristotle
most with that Aristotle, with as outside that of is of of too, fixed to see aboutused modern lasted mover fixed in space and model callippus each minds there
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Aristotle- Thoughts and Philosophies
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thus would eventually have to form a sphere. He also used evidence based on observation. If the earth were not spherical, lunar eclipses would not show segments with a curved outline. Furthermore, when one travels northward or southward, one does not see the same stars at night, nor do they occupy the same positions in the sky. (De Caelo, Book II, chapter 14) That the celestial bodies must also be spherical in shape, can be determined by observation. In the case of the stars, Aristotle a
Wordcount = 965 More essays, termpapers, and reports about Aristotle here. Here is a brief preview of the essay, to view the whole thing click here This is the rest of the paper, but it is scrambled. To view the rest click here Another Free Aristotle Win more eBay auctions with these eBay sniper for bidding and winning, FREE:

57. Pausanias Attica
The thesmothetae (lawgivers) were painted by Protogenes3 the Caunian, and Olbiades4portrayed callippus, who led the Athenians to Thermopylae to stop the
http://www.earth-history.com/Greece/greece-pausanias-attica.htm
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Pausanias
c. 160 CE
Description of Greece
with an English Translation by W.H.S. Jones, Litt.D. in 4 Volumes. Volume 1.Attica and Cornith, Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd., 1918.
Book I: Attica
[1.1.1] On the Greek mainland facing the Cyclades Islands and the Aegean Sea the Sunium promontory stands out from the Attic land. When you have rounded the promontory you see a harbor and a temple to Athena of Sunium on the peak of the promontory. Farther on is Laurium, where once the Athenians had silver mines, and a small uninhabited island called the Island of Patroclus. For a fortification was built on it and a palisade constructed by Patroclus, who was admiral in command of the Egyptian men-of-war sent by Ptolemy, son of Ptolemy, son of Lagus, to help the Athenians, when Antigonus, son of Demetrius, was ravaging their country, which he had invaded with an army, and at the same time was blockading them by sea with a fleet.1 1,1,1,n1. c. 267-263 B.C.

58. Arapacana Press
callippus of Cyzicus slightly adjusted the Metonic month reckoning, by transformingjust one (1) full month of 30 days into one (1) hollow month of 29 days
http://www.arapacana.com/Glossary/C.htm
Arapacana Press
The Alphabetary Heraldic
Genealogical Glossary Glossemata Genealogicæ In Alphabetical Order —C— C : [anthropology] Ch; child. Cf. kin types. C : [LDS] christening, an LDS Event subject to the Ordinances. C : [Ogham Q-Celtic] caoi c : ca. : circa , about, around the year; century. C : The Confraternity Edition of the New Testament C.A. : Coast Artillery. c.a. : copy of administration. c.a.w. : copy of administration and will. C.B. : Companion of the Bath. C.Ch.R. : CCHR : Calendar of Charter Rolls C.Cl.R. : CCLR : Calendar of Close Rolls C.E. : Christian Era, anno Domini (ad). c.e. : Common Era, anno æræ communis ; the vulgar era, anno æræ vulgaris . The initials c.e. commonly appear as the international equivalent for ad or A.D., anno domini . Although our familiar year-dates are commonly used throughout the world, Jews, Muslims, Buddhists, communists, and other non-Christians are disinclined to use the Christian style. C.F.R. : CFR : Calendar of Fine Rolls C.I.P.M. : CIPM : Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem C.M.G. : Companion of the Order of St. Michael and St. George.

59. À§´ëÇѼöÇÐÀÚ ¸ñ·Ï
Aignan (near Thusis), Switzerland Died 14 Aug 1930 in Berkeley, California, USAcallippus, callippus Born about 370 BC in Cyzicus, Turkey Died about 310 BC
http://www.mathnet.or.kr/API/?MIval=people_seek_great&init=C

60. ATHENA: Literature, Books; Pierre Perroud
Translate this page 2 (in English, at PERSEUS) · Against Callicles (in English, at PERSEUS) · AgainstCallicles (in English, at THE-TECH.MIT) · Against callippus (in English
http://un2sg4.unige.ch/athena/html/author_d.html
Athena getting ready to write
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    Ein Kampf um Rom (auf Deutsch, in GUTENBERG-DE)
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    Experimental Enquiry into the Proportion of the Several Gases or Elastic Fluids, Constituting the Atmosphere (in English, at GIUNTA)
  • DAM, Kenneth and LIN, Herbert:
    Cryptography's Role in Securing the Information Society (in English, at NAP)
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    Within the Law (in English, at PG)
  • DANDREY, P., PARIAN, A., RAYNOUARD, A.:
    Jean de La Fontaine. L'Abeille et le Papillon. La Transformation des Fables
  • DANGEAU, Philippe de Courcillon:
  • D'ANNUNZIO, Gabriele:
    Alcyone (in italiano, a UNIMI/MANUZIO)
    Alcyone (in italiano, a LIBERLIBER)
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    Divina Commedia (in English, at CCEL)
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