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         Posidonius Of Rhodes:     more detail
  1. Roman-Era Rhodian Philosophers: Andronicus of Rhodes, Posidonius, Panaetius, Hecato of Rhodes
  2. 1st-Century Bc Philosophers: Lucretius, Andronicus of Rhodes, Posidonius, Nigidius Figulus, Philodemus, Antiochus of Ascalon, Catius, Jing Fang
  3. Ancient Rhodian Philosophers: Roman-Era Rhodian Philosophers, Andronicus of Rhodes, Posidonius, Panaetius, Eudemus of Rhodes, Hecato of Rhodes
  4. POSIDONIUS(13551? BCE): An entry from Gale's <i>Encyclopedia of Philosophy</i> by Ludwig Edelstein, 2006
  5. POSIDONIUS [ADDENDUM]: An entry from Gale's <i>Encyclopedia of Philosophy</i> by Stephen White, 2006
  6. 1st-Century Bc Greek People: Andronicus of Rhodes, Diodorus Siculus, Posidonius, Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Aenesidemus
  7. Ancient Rhodian Scientists: Hipparchus, Posidonius, Geminus, Dinocrates, Attalus of Rhodes

61. Cicéron
en 78-77, à rhodes, il suit ceux du stoïcien posidonius (Poseidonios dans
http://fleche.org/lutece/progterm/ciceron/ciceron0.html
  • les orateurs du temps
  • b - MARCUS TULLIUS CICERO Commentariolum petitionis Pro Sex. Roscio Amerino 2 - de la questure au consulat (75-63): Verines Pro Cluentio pro Murena Cum Senatui gratia egit, Cum Populo gratias egit De Oratore Pro Milone Brutus (De Finibus, Tusculanae Disputationes, De Senectute, en 45, De Officiis Philippiques le Prince

    62. 272 Words
    of the 1st Century BC posidonius lived for most of his career (c. 135 BC 50BC) on the island of rhodes, where he studied and taught. posidonius was an
    http://www.anchist.mq.edu.au/272/272Glossary.htm
    aer: the arche , or ultimate stuff of reality, according to Anaximenes , was aer , a kind of light mist or vapour, infinite in extent, which formed the different materials of the visible world by processes of condensation or evaporation. aether: the light, bright form of matter which formed the sky or heavens, according to many Greek thinkers. Lighter and finer than ordinary air, it "naturally" gravitated towards the heavenly regions. Akrasia : literally, "lack of strength", "weakness". Normally used for moral weakness, i.e. for cases when a person believes they know what is right, but do not act on that belief. Anaxagoras: originally from Clazomenae on the Ionian coast of what is now Turkey, north of Ephesus, Anaxagoras moved to Athens in the mid-fifth century, where he became a close friend of the Athenian statesman Pericles, and did most of his philosophical work. In the late 430s he was tried for impiety, and though acquitted, left Athens for Lampsacus, where he died soon after. Anaximander (610-545 B.C.?): the second of the three so-called "Milesian" philosophers, remembered by later tradition as the earliest Greek philosophers. The evidence describes him as a pupil of Thales, which may be true, but his ideas are much more sophisticated and abstract.

    63. CLASSICS 2362B
    Middle Stoa Panaetius of rhodes, posidonius) and for convenience philosophersof the Late Stoa (Seneca, Epictetus, Marcus Aurelius) will be referred to as
    http://www.dal.ca/~claswww/2361-3400-Chronology.htm
    Chronology Greece Hellenic a. Archaic Period: 700-500 b.c. (Solon 594). Ionians cross over from Ionia to Italy. Italians : Pythagoras flourished in reign of Polycrates (532) died c. 497. b. Classical bloom: end of Persian Wars (479) to beginning of Peloponnesian Wars (431-404) Parmenides (65 yrs. old) and Zeno (40 yrs. old) met with Socrates (20 yrs. old) in Athens in 450; Empedocles (495-35); Anaxagoras (500-c.428) a close friend of Pericles; Melissus in 411, as commander of Samian force, defeated Athenian fleet of Pericles; Protagoras b. c. 485, fl. 445. “Man is the measure of all things...” - beginning of Sophistic movement. c. Peloponnesian Wars to death of Alexander the Great (323) Gorgias (483-376); Prodicus, a contemporary of Socrates; Hippias (c. 485-415); Socrates (469-399); Minor Socratic Schools: Megarians, Cynics, Cyrenaics. Plato (c. 429-347); Aristotle (384-322); Speusippus (347-336); Xenocrates (339-314). Hellenistic from the death of Alexander (323 b.c.) to the death of Cleopatra in Egypt (30 b.c.) for reference to the history of philosophy the term will not be used in a strictly chronological sense.

    64. JUSTIN : Histoire Universelle : Introduction
    Translate this page La comparaison de ces livres avec les fragments de posidonius de rhodes, qui nousont été conservés par Athénée, a fait voir que cet historien a été le
    http://remacle.org/bloodwolf/historiens/justin/intro.htm
    RETOUR À L’ENTRÉE DU SITE ALLER A LA TABLE DES MATIERES DE JUSTIN HISTOIRE UNIVERSELLE DE JUSTIN INTRODUCTION Pour la plupart des détails relatifs à la vie et à l'ouvrage de notre auteur, nous renvoyons aux deux morceaux qui suivent cette introduction : l'on y retrouvera, approuvés ou combattus, les jugements de Vossius, de Fabricius, de Rollin, de l'abbé Paul, de Mably, de La Harpe, de Sainte-Croix, du président Hénault, quoique leurs noms n'y soient pas rappelés et attachés aux opinions qu'ils ont soutenues. Justin a été très diversement jugé. La lecture de son livre est sans fruit, selon plus d'un critique, et l'abréviateur Hénault va même jusqu'à traiter son devancier de ver rongeur de l'histoire, qui n'en a laissé que les lambeaux . D'autres, au contraire, ont su gré à notre historien de promener son lecteur de siècle en siècle, de nation en nation, et de tracer seulement une esquisse rapide des révolutions et des moeurs : ils trouvent à la fois, dans son ébauche, de la variété, du naturel et de l'éclat. Ces contradictions s'expliquent, comme la plupart des dissentiments sur les productions de l'esprit, par la différence des points de vue, et par la préoccupation qui cache tour-à-tour à des esprits prévenus ou les défauts ou les mérites d'un même ouvrage.
    Il faut reconnaître avec les sévères appréciateurs de Justin, que, fidèle à son plan de choisir seulement les traits les plus connus, et

    65. Survivors 61/75, Greek Mythology Link.
    . Survivors of the Ancient World, Album. . 61/75. 2011 Poseidonios. Mid 1C BC.rhodes. posidonius, 13550 BC. . . Greek Mythology Link, Home Page. Since 1997.
    http://homepage.mac.com/cparada/GML/000Free/000Survivors/source/61.html
    By Carlos Parada, author of Genealogical Guide to Greek Mythology Survivors of the Ancient World, Album 2011: Poseidonios. Mid 1C BC. Rhodes. Posidonius, 135-50 BC Greek Mythology Link, Home Page Since 1997 Topics Biographies GROUPS Dictionary ... Search the GML GML CD ROM This page belongs to the Greek Mythology Link , created and maintained by Carlos Parada. Except stated otherwise, all material in this site is Contact via Email

    66. Greek Philosophy: Hellenistic Philosophy
    a university city, especially for the study of philosophy; rhodes specialized in friendof the great general Scipio Aemilianus, and by posidonius, who was a
    http://www.wsu.edu:8080/~dee/GREECE/HELLPHIL.HTM
    History
    ) grew in importance. There was little or no independent political life, but there was in general freedom of thought and religion. The centers of life were no longer assemblies and councils, but gymnasia (schools) and shrines of the mystery cults.
    Justinian in 529 A.D.
    Epicureanism
    ataraxia , or peace of mind. For Epicurus the aim of life was pleasure; the highest pleasure was absence of pain; pleasure of the mind was preferable to that of the body. The soul dies with the body, so we must not fear death or afterlife; the gods exist but do not concern themselves with humanity or natural phenomena (all of which can be explained scientifically); we should avoid public life and emotional commitments in order to escape the pains likely to be caused by them. The physical world was explained by the atomic theory adapted from Democritus.
    Stoicism
    Stoicism . After the death of Zeno of Citium, the Stoic school was headed by Cleanthes and Chrysippus, and its teachings were carried to Rome in 155 by Diogenes of Babylon. There its tenets were made popular by Panaetius, friend of the great general Scipio Aemilianus, and by Posidonius, who was a friend of Pompey (see your textbook if you don't recognize these names); Cicero drew heavily on the works of both.
    Roman Reader Epictetus, The Enchiridion

    67. A History Of Science Volume I - Part II
    above the southern horizon at rhodes as compared with the height of the same starwhen observed at Alexandria. This measurement of posidonius, together with
    http://www.worldwideschool.org/library/books/sci/history/AHistoryofScienceVolume
    A History of Science Volume I
    by Henry Smith Williams Terms Contents BOOK I Chapter I ... Chapter XI Part II
    Strabo the Geographer
    he earliest of these workers in point of time is Strabo. This most famous of ancient geographers was born in Amasia, Pontus, about 63 B.C., and lived to the year 24 A.D., living, therefore, in the age of Caesar and Augustus, during which the final transformation in the political position of the kingdom of Egypt was effected. The name of Strabo in a modified form has become popularized through a curious circumstance. The geographer, it appears, was afflicted with a peculiar squint of the eyes, hence the name strabismus, which the modern oculist applies to that particular infirmity. " 'Lifted up on the vast wave he quickly beheld afar.' Sailors as they approach their destination behold the shore continually raising itself to their view, and objects which had at first seemed low begin to lift themselves. Our gnomons, also, are, among other things, evidence of the revolution of the heavenly bodies, and common-sense at once shows us that if the depth of the earth were infinite such a revolution could not take place."[1] 1 (p. 258). The Geography of Strabo, translated by H. C. Hamilton and W. Falconer, 3 vols., London, 1857, Vol. I, pp. 19, 20.

    68. Eratho
    About a century later, posidonius copied this feat, using the star Canopus ashis light source and the cities of rhodes and Alexandria as his baseline.
    http://www.pbs.org/wnet/hawking/cosmostar/html/cstars_eratho.html
    ERATOSTHENES T he man who first measured the world, the Greek astronomer Eratosthenes (c. 276-196 B.C.), lived in Alexandria during the 3rd century B.C. He noticed that on the first day of summer in Syene (now Aswan), Egypt, the Sun appeared directly overhead at noon. At the same time in Alexandria, however, the Sun appeared slightly south (about 7 degrees) of the zenith. Knowing the distance between Syene and Alexandria and assuming that the Sun’s rays were parallel when they struck the curved Earth, he calculated the size of our planet using simple geometry. His result, about 25,000 miles for the circumference, proved remarkably accurate. Eratosthenes wasn’t the only Greek who tried to measure the Earth. About a century later, Posidonius copied this feat, using the star Canopus as his light source and the cities of Rhodes and Alexandria as his baseline. Although his technique was sound, he had the wrong value for the distance between Rhodes and Alexandria, so his circumference came out too small. Ptolemy recorded this smaller figure in his geography treatise, where it was seized upon by Renaissance explorers looking for a quicker way to the Indies. Had Ptolemy used Eratosthenes’ larger figure instead, Columbus might never have sailed west.
    Home
    Cosmological Stars PBS Online Thirteen Online ...
    Flat-Earth Universe

    69. ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY: The Greco-Roman Moralists
    from his career to spend time in Athens studying again with the Epicureans and thePlatonists, and continued his studies in rhodes with posidonius, the Stoic
    http://radicalacademy.com/adiphilethical2.htm
    Adventures in Philosophy ANCIENT PHILOSOPHY Select a Category... Ancient Philosophy Medieval Philosophy Modern Philosophy Recent Philosophy American Philosophy Islamic Philosophy Jewish Philosophy Political Philosophy Academy Resources Glossary of Philosophical Terms Philosophy Search Engine Timeline of Philosophy A Timeline of American Philosophy ... Books about Religion in The Radical Academy Bookstore Shop Amazon Stores in the Radical Academy Bookstore
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    Select: Cicero Lucian of Samosata Seneca Musonius Rufus ... Marcus Aurelius The Greco-Roman Moralists Cicero (106-43 B.C.) Marcus Tullius Cicero ( picture ) is one of the best known figures of Roman antiquity because of the public character of his career. Famed for his oratory and an important political leader in ancient Rome, his life coincided with the decline and fall of the Roman Republic, and he was an important actor in many of the significant political events of his time. His writings are a valuable source of information about those events. Besides being a brilliant orator, he was also a lawyer, politician, and philosopher. Although not entirely admirable in his own character (he was very vain for one thing), he shows us the real-life struggle between high ideals and human frailty.

    70. Books Written In Greek, Modern (1453- )
    rhodes, PJ (Peter John) Norman Okla. University of Oklahoma Press, 1986. xx,266 p. ; 23 cm. PA4399.P2 v. 1 posidonius. Edited by L. Edelstein and IG Kidd.
    http://www.waikato.ac.nz/library/resources/lang/lang_gre.html
    Books written in Greek, Modern (1453- )
    F GOU
    The mystery of the golden lily [by] Alki Goulimis. Illustrated by David Smee; translated from the Greek by Peter Megann.
    Goulime, Alke.
    Leicester, Brockhampton Press, 1971.
    152 p. illus. 23 cm.
    The fragments of Empedocles. Translated into English verse by William Ellery Leonard.
    Empedocles.
    LaSalle, Ill., Open Court Pub. Co. [1973, c1908]
    viii, 92 p. illus. 21 cm.
    Plato's Apology of Socrates : an interpretation, with a new translation / Thomas G. West.
    West, Thomas G., 1945- Ithaca, N.Y. : Cornell University Press, 1979. 243 p. ; 23 cm. Plato and Parmenides : Parmenides' Way of Truth and Plato's Parmenides / translated, with an introd. and a running commentary, by Francis Macdonald Cornford. Plato. xvii, 251p. ; 22 cm. Protagoras / Plato ; translated with notes by C. C. W. Taylor. Plato. Oxford : Clarendon Press, 1976. vi, 230 p. ; 21 cm. Omnia opera Gvlielmi Bvdaei. Budáe, Guillaume, 1468-1540. Farnborough, Hants. : Gregg, 1966. 4 v. : facsim ; 28 cm. Les Mystères d'Égypte / Jamblique. Texte établi et traduit par établi et traduit par Édouard Des Places.

    71. PLS
    261265; posidonius and Plato s Timaeus Off to rhodes and Back toPlato? , Classical Quarterly 47 (1997) 455-476;. Roman and Stoic
    http://www.nd.edu/~pls/faculty/Reydams-Schils.html
    Home Page Information Alumni Information Community Extension Program ... E-mail The Program of Liberal Studies Gretchen Reydams-Schils
    Associate Professor "Every era has to start this task afresh: learning to read and reread 'old truths.' We pass our lives in 'reading,'... but we no longer know how to read, that is to stop, to free ourselves from our concerns, to return to ourselves, to leave aside our quest for subtlety and originality, to meditate calmly, to ruminate, to let the texts speak to us. It is a spiritual exercise, one of the most difficult: 'People,' said Goethe, 'do not realize how much time and effort it takes to learn to read. It took me eighty years, and I am not even certain whether I have succeeded.'" From Pierre Hadot Spiritual Exercises , my translation; the Goethe quote is from his Conversations with Eckermann
    January 25, 1830.

    72. Marcus Tullius Cicero, Who Gave Natural Law To The Modern World
    He studied philosophy with the Athenian Antiochus, who reflected Stoicinfluence, and at rhodes with the learned Stoic posidonius.
    http://www.fee.org/vnews.php?nid=3679

    73. Bryn Mawr Classical Review 95.09.02
    text has a reference to the important Peripatetic Andronicus of rhodes in angle Iwould note that the phrase is also used frequently by posidonius, and it is
    http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/1995/95.09.02.html
    Bryn Mawr Classical Review 95.09.02
    Vincent Barras, Terpsichore Birchler, Anne-France Morand (trans.),
    Reviewed by Robert B. Todd, University of British Columbia (bobtodd@unixg.ubc.ca). The works translated here are (in their official Latin titles) the De propriorum animi cuiuslibet affectuum dignotione et curatione An. Aff. ), the De animi cuiuslibet peccatorum dignotione et medela An. Pecc. ) (both translated from De Boer's edition at CMG V.4.1.1), and the Quod animi mores corporis temperamenta sequantur QAM Galenus: Scripta Minora , II [Leipzig, 1891; repr. 1967]). They are put into clear and vigorous French in a series aimed at a non-specialist readership. An. Aff. and An. Pecc. have long been available in an English translation by P. Harkins, Galen: On the Passions and Errors of the Soul (Columbus, 1963), while QAM still regrettably awaits its first English version. The first two works deal with therapy for the "passions and errors of the soul", and contain some lively and engaging material, not only in descriptions of specific cases needing therapy (notably the vivid anecdote at Ann. Aff.

    74. Scaltsas
    2537. 1996 posidonius on the Growing Argument , in rhodes, Twenty FourCenturies, published by the Academy of Athens (Athens), pp. 113-122.
    http://archelogos.com/xml/authors/Scaltsas.htm
    Curriculum Vitae of Theodore Scaltsas
    Authoring the Analysis Aristotle's On Generation and Corruption for Project Archelogos CONTACT INFORMATION Professor Theodore Scaltsas,
    Philosophy Department,
    University of Edinburgh,
    David Hume Tower,
    George Square,
    Edinburgh, EH8 9JX
    Scotland UK Tel: 0131 650 3649
    Fax: 0131 650 6539
    Email: Scaltsas@ed.ac.uk PUBLICATIONS Books Authored: Argument Analysis of Aristotle’s On Generation and Corruption , published by Project Archelogos, at: http://www.archelogos.com/ , 53k words. Substances and Universals in Aristotle’s Metaphysics , Cornell University Press; Ithaca and London; pp. 258; ISBN: 0-8014-3003-8. The Golden Age of Virtue: Aristotle’s Ethics , Alexandria Press, Athens; pp. 163; ISBN 960-221-073-7. (Academy of Athens Philosophical Award, 1988, and Seeger Research Fellowship at Princeton University, 1989.)
    Books Edited: (1) Forthcoming 2002: The Philosophy of Epictetus , published by the Pierides Foundation and the Municipality of Larnaca, Cyprus. (Co-edited with Andrew Mason; Contributors: K. Algra, J. Annas, J. Cooper, P. Crivelli, M. Erler, M. Frede, K. Ierodiakonou, A. Long, M. Dragona Monachou, M. Schofield, R. Sorabji.) Zeno of Citium , published by the Pierides Foundation and the Municipality of Larnaca, Cyprus. (Co-edited with Andrew Mason; Contributors: Algra, Brunschwig, Erler, Forschner, Hahm, Ierodiakonou, Kidd, Long, Mansfeld, Monachou, Rowe, Schofield, Sedley, Sorabji, Tieleman.)

    75. Theodore Scaltsas
    305. posidonius on the growing argument , in rhodes, Twenty FourCenturies, (Athens The Academy of Athens, 1996) 113122. The
    http://www.arts.ed.ac.uk/philosophy/staff_html/scaltsas.html
    THEODORE SCALTSAS
    THEODORE SCALTSAS (B.S. (Duke), M.A. (Brandeis), D.Phil. (Oxford)) joined the department in 1984, having previously he held a lectureship at New College, Oxford, 1980-84. In 1995 he was promoted to Reader, and in 1999 to a personal chair as Professor of Ancient Philosophy. He is the creator and director of Project Archelogos . He has held Research Fellowships at Harvard and Princeton Universities, and his publications are on ancient philosophy and contemporary metaphysics. His most recent book-length publication is An Argument Analysis of Aristotle's On Generation and Corruption
    E-mail: scaltsas@ed.ac.uk Phone: +44 (0)131-650-3649 Home page: http://archelogos.com/xml/authors/Scaltsas.htm
    RESEARCH INTERESTS Ancient Philosophy and Contemporary Metaphysics, especially Parts and Wholes.
    TEACHING Plato and Aristotle, Contemporary Metaphysics
    PUBLICATIONS AUTHORED BOOKS
    • Argument Analysis of Aristotle's On Generation and Corruption (1998), published by Project Archelogos Substances and Universals in Aristotle's Metaphysics , (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1994)
    • The Golden Age of Virtue: Aristotle's Ethics (Athens: Alexandria Press, 1993)

    76. DPhA P
    posidonius D HERMOPOLIS, (FLAVIUS -). 298, POSOCHARES(POSOCHARES), 307, PRAXIPHANE DE MITYLENE, OU DE rhodes. 308, PRISCIANUS,
    http://upr_76.vjf.cnrs.fr/Instruments_travail/Dict_philosophes/DPhA_P.html
    Lettre P
    No Nom du philosophe -]PATROS -]PELLES -]PHIS P. P. P. P. P. P. P. P. P. PACATUS (LATINIUS DREPANIUS-) PACCIUS PACONIUS PACUVIUS (M. -) DRAM. LAT. PAEONIUS PAETUS PAETUS DISC. D'ALEX. D'ABON. PAIONEIOS PALAEPHATUS PERI APISTON PALLADAS D'ALEXANDRIE POETE PALLADIUS PAMMENES DISC. D'HETOIMOCLES PAMPHILE D'AMPHIPOLIS DE SICYONE OU DE NICOPOLIS PAMPHILE D'EPIDAURE HYPOMNEMATA PAMPHILE DE CESAREE PAMPHILE DE MAGNESIE DISC. DE CARNEADE PAMPHILE DE SAMOS MAITRE D'EPICURE PAMPHYLOS LE SAGE PAMPREPIUS DE PANOPOLIS POETE DISC. DE PROCLUS PANACEUS PANARETOS DISC. D'ARCESILAS PANARION (OU PATRION) PANCRATES D'ALEXANDRIE POETE (CONFUSIONS?) PANCRATIDES CORR. DE MUSON. RUFUS PANCREON DISC. DE THEOPHRASTE PANETIUS DE RHODES LE JEUNE?! PANETIUS DE RHODES L'ANCIEN?! PANNYCHUS PANTACLEIA PANTAINOS (T. FLAVIUS -) ET SON PERE? PANTENE CHRETIEN PANTHOIDES PANYASSIS D'HALICARNASSE LE JEUNE PAPHIUS PAPINIUS DE SMYRNE PAPIRIUS PAPPUS D'ALEXANDRIE MATHEM. PARABAITES DE CYRENE OU PARAIBATOS PARAMONOS DE TARSE DISC. DE PANETIUS PARMENIDE D'ELEE PARMENIDES (AVIDIUS -) DE THESPIES PARMENISCUS PARMENISCUS D'ALEXANDRIE GRAMM. COMM. D'ARATUS

    77. Roman Timeline
    Roman Timeline (ANY WAR IN THIS TIMELINE IN ITALY IS OFTEN WITH A SINGLE CITY, RATHER THAN A TRIBE. BC Supposed date of the completion of the wonder of the world, the Colossus of rhodes. 281 BC
    http://www.novaroma.org/camenaeum/RomanTimeline.txt

    78. Taming The Winds
    Theophrastus was used as the definitive source by Epicurus and Posidoniusof rhodes, as well as the later meteorologists of Syria and Arabia .
    http://www.angelfire.com/al3/anemokoitai/lit.html
    var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "angelfire.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded"
    literature
    mythology who controls the winds? the presocratics meteorology ... locution
    ...let me tell you about winds. There is a whirlwind from Southern Morocco, the Aajej, against which the fellahin defend themselves with knives. And there is the Ghibli from Tunis which rolls and rolls and rolls and produces a rather strange nervous condition... and then there's the Harmatton, a red wind which mariners call the sea of blood. Red sand from this wind has flown as far as the south coast of England apparently producing showers so dense they were mistaken for blood... Herodotus...writes about a wind, the Simoom, which a nation thought was so evil they declared war on it and marched out against it in full battle dress. - Almásy's speech in Anthony Minghella's screenplay of The English Patient (1) mythological;
    (2) cosmological;
    (3) philosophical;
    (4) agricultural;
    (5) navigational;
    (6) medical;
    (7) locutions. Due to the extremely large corpus of material, a selection has been made to show the most important points available, and, as before, we shall pass through each of the categories to enable us to see the wider picture. Appendix 3 shows a list of all references in the ancient literature to Wind-gods and to meteorological winds. The cause of the weather was taken very seriously in ancient times, being a force of nature that was beyond human control save for attempts to influence its path and ferocity by magic, prayers and offerings. Men of a philosophical bent, beginning with the Presocratics, attempted to explain the weather in all its variables by the constant flux of the elements that they believed constituted the universe, in particular, air, water, fire and aether. Aristotle was the first of the second generation to suggest any serious causes for the inception of the weather, and his works

    79. World Civ I Terms
    Pneuma. Providence. Brotherhood of all humankind. Panaetius and posidonius ofRhodes. Epictetus (c. 50 135). Marcus Aurelius (121-180). One World of Epictetus.
    http://www.utc.edu/Faculty/Bill-Wright/trms103.html
    World Civilizations I
    Terms
  • The Traditional World:
  • Early Cultures:
  • Mesopotamian Civilization:
  • Egyptian Civilization: ...
  • Uniqueness of Medieval Western Europe:
    The Traditional World:
    The great traditions: (civilizations of ancient origin)
    the dry-belt arc:
    the mountain barrier of Eurasia
    Pastoral nomads
    the major cultivable river basins
    the great hydraulic oases:
    geographical terms
    : steppe, savanna, forest, temperate, tropical, subtropical, arid, and oasis.
    the silk road
    modes of production
    capitalist mode of production
    tributary mode of production market exchange: peasant society market economy primary group secondary group feudalism:
    a system based on a personal, military contract or labor agreement imperial monarchy traditionalism folk behavior
    Early Cultures:
    Paleolithic (Old Stone Age) Neanderthal humans Cromagnon humans Neolithic (New Stone Age) Culture Civilization Towns (or cities) Writing Bronze Age Complex divisions of labor Iron Age (c. 1475 B.C. with Hittites)
    Mesopotamian Civilization:
    Sumerians Akkadians Sargon of Akkad Babylonians Hammurabi Hittites Assyrians Chaldeans (New Babylonians) Nebuchadnezzar Persians Cyrus Cuneiform
    Egyptian Civilization:
    Old Kingdom Middle Kingdom Empire Age (New Kingdom) Ra Osiris Thutmose III Amenhotep IV Monotheism Hieroglyphics
    Other Eastern Mediterranean Cultures:
    Aegean Crete Minoan Hebrews Moses David Solomon Israel Judah Jerusalem Nebuchadnezzar Jaweh Monotheism Hebrew Bible Torah Ten Commandments Phonecians Myceneans
    Indus Civilization:
    Indus R.
  • 80. Re Orion-list New Article On Posidonius, Proposed Source On

    http://www.mail-archive.com/orion@panda.mscc.huji.ac.il/msg00363.html
    orion
    Chronological Find Thread
    Re: orion-list New article on Posidonius, proposed source on Essenes; 4QD; etc.
    • From: RGmyrken
    • Subject: Re: orion-list New article on Posidonius, proposed source on Essenes; 4QD; etc.
    • Date: Sat, 02 Jun 2001 08:37:41 -0700
    http://orion.mscc.huji.ac.il

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