A History of Ancient Philosophy I: From the Origins to SocratesSUNY Press, 1.08.1987 г. - 425 страници Beginning with the origins of Western philosophy, the profound creation of the Hellenic genius, Reale presents an appreciation of the Naturalists, the Sophists, Socrates, and the Minor Socratics. Special attention is paid to the Eleatics because their problems decisively mark Platonic and Aristotelian philosophy. Interpretation of the Sophists benefits from the recent reevaluation of their thought. Socrates himself would be inconceivable without the Sophists since he is one of them. Socrates is given major prominence. Plato, Aristotle, and all of Hellenistic philosophy are deeply impregnated with his words and spirit. The teachings of the Minor Socratics are interpreted as one-sided reductions of the pluralistic values of Socratic thought and as anticipations of some issues that explode later in the Hellenistic Age. There are two appendices. The first concerns Orphism and contains a series of documents indispensable for the comprehension of some aspects of pre-Socratic and Platonic thought. The second explains the key to understanding the message of the Greeks the message of theorein . |
Между кориците на книгата
Резултати 1 - 5 от 82.
Страница ix
... Moral notions II . Parmenides 83 1. The three ways of inquiry 2. The way of unconditioned truth 3. The way of error 4. The third way : the explanation of the plausibility of phenomena and the Parmenidean " doxa " 5. The structural ...
... Moral notions II . Parmenides 83 1. The three ways of inquiry 2. The way of unconditioned truth 3. The way of error 4. The third way : the explanation of the plausibility of phenomena and the Parmenidean " doxa " 5. The structural ...
Страница x
... Moral Reflection Prior to the Birth of Moral Philosophy 141 Second Section THE SOPHISTS I. The Origin , Nature , and Goals of the Sophistic Movement 149 1. The significance of the term " sophist " 2. The reasons for the rise of ...
... Moral Reflection Prior to the Birth of Moral Philosophy 141 Second Section THE SOPHISTS I. The Origin , Nature , and Goals of the Sophistic Movement 149 1. The significance of the term " sophist " 2. The reasons for the rise of ...
Страница xii
... MORAL PHILOSOPHY First Section SOCRATES AND THE DISCOVERY OF THE NATURE OF MAN I. The Socratic Question and the Problem of the Sources 195 II . Socratic Ethics 199 1. Socrates in relationship to the philosophy of " nature " 2. The ...
... MORAL PHILOSOPHY First Section SOCRATES AND THE DISCOVERY OF THE NATURE OF MAN I. The Socratic Question and the Problem of the Sources 195 II . Socratic Ethics 199 1. Socrates in relationship to the philosophy of " nature " 2. The ...
Страница xiv
... moral ramifications of philosophy : Greek " theorein " is not abstract thinking , but a thinking that is profoundly immersed in the ethico - political life 317 5. Philosophy and " eudaimonia " 321 6. The radical faith of Greek ...
... moral ramifications of philosophy : Greek " theorein " is not abstract thinking , but a thinking that is profoundly immersed in the ethico - political life 317 5. Philosophy and " eudaimonia " 321 6. The radical faith of Greek ...
Страница xvi
... moral philosophy . As many have already recognized , Socrates would be unthinkable without the Sophists ; he is ... morality of human beings ( and hence as the essence of what it is to be human ) that we read over again the various ...
... moral philosophy . As many have already recognized , Socrates would be unthinkable without the Sophists ; he is ... morality of human beings ( and hence as the essence of what it is to be human ) that we read over again the various ...
Съдържание
VI | 5 |
VII | 6 |
VIII | 9 |
IX | 10 |
X | 11 |
XI | 12 |
XII | 14 |
XIII | 15 |
XCV | 158 |
XCVI | 159 |
XCVIII | 161 |
XCIX | 163 |
C | 165 |
CIII | 166 |
CIV | 167 |
CV | 168 |
XIV | 17 |
XV | 20 |
XVI | 23 |
XVII | 25 |
XVIII | 27 |
XIX | 29 |
XX | 33 |
XXI | 35 |
XXII | 37 |
XXIII | 39 |
XXIV | 41 |
XXV | 42 |
XXVI | 45 |
XXVIII | 46 |
XXX | 49 |
XXXI | 50 |
XXXII | 51 |
XXXIII | 53 |
XXXIV | 57 |
XXXV | 59 |
XXXVI | 61 |
XXXVII | 62 |
XXXVIII | 64 |
XXXIX | 65 |
XL | 67 |
XLI | 71 |
XLII | 73 |
XLIII | 75 |
XLIV | 77 |
XLV | 78 |
XLVI | 79 |
XLVII | 81 |
XLVIII | 82 |
XLIX | 83 |
LII | 87 |
LIII | 88 |
LIV | 90 |
LV | 91 |
LVI | 92 |
LVII | 94 |
LVIII | 96 |
LIX | 97 |
LX | 99 |
LXI | 101 |
LXII | 103 |
LXIV | 104 |
LXV | 105 |
LXVI | 106 |
LXVII | 107 |
LXIX | 111 |
LXX | 113 |
LXXI | 115 |
LXXII | 117 |
LXXIII | 120 |
LXXIV | 122 |
LXXV | 123 |
LXXVI | 124 |
LXXVII | 127 |
LXXVIII | 128 |
LXXIX | 130 |
LXXX | 133 |
LXXXI | 135 |
LXXXII | 137 |
LXXXIII | 139 |
LXXXIV | 141 |
LXXXV | 147 |
LXXXVI | 149 |
LXXXVII | 150 |
LXXXVIII | 152 |
XC | 153 |
XCI | 154 |
XCII | 155 |
XCIV | 157 |
CVI | 169 |
CVII | 171 |
CVIII | 173 |
CIX | 176 |
CX | 179 |
CXI | 180 |
CXII | 181 |
CXIII | 183 |
CXIV | 185 |
CXV | 189 |
CXVI | 191 |
CXVII | 193 |
CXVIII | 195 |
CXIX | 199 |
CXX | 201 |
CXXI | 202 |
CXXII | 208 |
CXXIII | 210 |
CXXIV | 214 |
CXXV | 217 |
CXXVI | 220 |
CXXVII | 221 |
CXXVIII | 222 |
CXXIX | 225 |
CXXX | 227 |
CXXXI | 232 |
CXXXII | 235 |
CXXXIII | 239 |
CXXXIV | 241 |
CXXXV | 243 |
CXXXVI | 244 |
CXXXVII | 248 |
CXXXVIII | 253 |
CXXXIX | 257 |
CXL | 259 |
CXLI | 263 |
CXLII | 264 |
CXLIII | 266 |
CXLIV | 267 |
CXLV | 268 |
CXLVI | 271 |
CXLVII | 273 |
CXLVIII | 275 |
CXLIX | 278 |
CL | 281 |
CLI | 282 |
CLII | 283 |
CLIII | 284 |
CLIV | 287 |
CLV | 289 |
CLVI | 291 |
CLVII | 293 |
CLVIII | 294 |
CLIX | 297 |
CLX | 300 |
CLXI | 301 |
CLXII | 304 |
CLXIII | 305 |
CLXIV | 307 |
CLXV | 312 |
CLXVI | 315 |
CLXVII | 317 |
CLXVIII | 321 |
CLXIX | 323 |
CLXX | 325 |
CLXXI | 327 |
CLXXII | 329 |
383 | |
387 | |
395 | |
CLXXVI | 397 |
Други издания - Преглед на всички
A History of Ancient Philosophy I: From the Origins to Socrates Giovanni Reale Ограничен достъп - 1987 |
A History of Ancient Philosophy I: From the Origins to Socrates Giovanni Reale,John R. Catan Ограничен достъп - 1987 |
Често срещани думи и фрази
affirmation Anaxagoras Anaximander Anaximenes ancient philosophy Antisthenes aporias arete argument Aristippus Aristotle Aristotle Metaphysics atoms body clear Colli conception concerned considered contrary cosmos Cyrenaics daimonion Decleva Caizzi Democritus derived dialectic dialogue Diogenes Laertius Diogenes of Apollonia divine doctrine Döring earth Eleatic Eleaticism elements Empedocles ethics Euclid Euthydemus everything evil exist explain expressly fact frag fragments Gods Gorgias happiness hence Heraclitus Hippias human infinite insofar interpretation knowledge Leucippus living logos means Melissus moral multiplicity naturalistic nature notion origin Orphic Orphism Parmenides passage Phaedo physical Plato Plato The Apology pleasure position possible precisely Presocratics principle problems Prodicus Protagoras psyche Pythagoras Pythagoreans reality reason scholars seen sense Sextus Empiricus Sextus Empiricus Adv Simplicius In Arist Socrates Sophists soul sources speak testimonies Thales theogony things thought true truth unlimited values virtue whole wisdom writes Xenophon Memorabilia Zeller Zeller-Mondolfo LFG Zeller-Reale LFG Zeno