736 résultats
232pp., dans la série "Bibliothèque d'histoire de la philosophie", 26cm., brochure originale, texte et intérieur frais, bon état, F105395
viii + 183pp., 24cm., in the series "Ancient commentators on Aristotle", hardcover (cloth), dustwrapper, VG, [English translation]
viii + 181pp., 24cm., in the series "Ancient commentators on Aristotle", hardcover (cloth), dustwrapper, fine condition, [English translation]
63pp., 22cm., Doctoral Dissertation (Inaugural-Dissertation zur Erlangung der Doktorwürde genehmigt von der philosophischen Fakultät der Rheinischen Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität zu Bonn), stamp at verso of title page, text is clean and bright, F113065
282pp., in the series "Philosophische Abhandlungen", 24cm., publisher's hardcover in blue cloth with gilt lettering on spine (corners bumped), duswtrapper worn, text and interior clean and bright, good, F105510
218pp., in the series "Ancient commentators on Aristotle", 24cm., publisher's hardcover in blue cloth, dustwrapper, text and interior clean and bright, very good, [English translation], F105451
ix + 253pp., 24cm., softcover, VG
xxiv + 215pp., 21cm., softcover, text in German, Doctoral dissertation (Inaugural-Dissertation zur Erlangung der Doktorwürde der Philosophischen Fakultät der Albert-Ludwigs-Universität zu Freiburg i. Br.), stamp at verso of title page, text is clean and bright, good condition, F108773
xvi + 336pp., 24cm., in the series "Studies in philosophy and the history of philosophy" vol.39, hardcover (cloth), dustwrapper, fine condition
210pp., 23cm., softcover, text and interior clean and bright, good condition, F105455
xiii + 246pp., 22cm., softcover, text and interior clean and bright, good condition, F105587
8vo., First Edition, neat signature on front free endpaper; strongly bound in red hald morocco, red cloth sides, back with five raised bands, second and third compartments lettered in gilt, gilt top, marbled endpapers, a few gatherings a little loose (but binding entitre;ly sound), a good, bright, working copy. With the trade ticket of Blackwell on front paste-down. Volume one of four; this volume is complete in itself.
Reprint of the 1882 London ed. xxxiii, 263pp.; Greek & Roman Philosophy Volume 26; 263 pages
Front hinge has weakened and is not sitting flush with the textblock. Faint dampstaining to boards (does not affect text). DJ is wavy and dampstained. ; Contents: Dikastic Thorubos; Rebels and Sambos in Classical Greece: Comparative View; Greek philosophy and the concept of an academic discipline; grain for Athens; Dona Ferentes: Some aspects of Bribery in Greek Politics; Thucydidean History and Democritean Theory; on Aristotle's Best State; Moral Science and Political Theory in Aristotle; Freedom, Slavery and Female Psyche; Change and Continuity in Religious Structures after Cleisthenes; Aspects of Inheritance in the Greek world; Some Glosses on Ste. Croix's 'Greek and Roman Accounting'; Jury Pay and Assembly Pay at Athens; Greek States and Greek Oracles; Freedom and Subordination in Ancient Agriculture: the Case of the Basilikoi Georgoi of Ptolemaic Egypt; Imperial Tyranny: some Reflections on Classical Greek Political Metaphor. Editors: P. A. Brunt, V. Bers, P A Cartledge, W W Charlton, P D A Garnsey, F. D Harvey, E L Hussey, T H Irwin, R Just, E Kearns, R Lane Fox, R Macve, M M Markle III, R C T Parker, J Rowlandson, C J Tuplin. ; 410 pages
Reprint of the 1962 edition. Endpapers very lightly tanned. Spine lightly sunned. ; Contents: The Treatise; Population and Explanations; Aristotelian Explanations; First Democracy: Solon and Pisistratus; Middle Democracy-Cleisthenes, the Areopagus; Fourth Democracy and Revolution; The AP and the Historian; University of California Publications in History Volume 73; 221 pages
xlviii + 450pp., 24cm., previous owner's name on first page, hardcover (cloth), fine condition
Palingenesia 96; 150 pages; This book offers a reappraisal of basic aspects of Aristotelian cosmology. Aristotle believed that all celestial objects consisted of the same substance that pervade the heavens, a stuff unlike those found near the center of the cosmos that compose us and everything in our immediate surroundings. Kouremenos argues that, contrary to the received view, Aristotle originally introduced this heavenly stuff as the matter of the stars alone, the remotest celestial objects from the Earth, and as filler of the outermost part of the heavens, forming a diurnally rotating spherical shell whose fixed parts are the stars, the crust of the cosmos which has the Earth at its center. The author also argues that, contrary to another common view, at no point in the development of his cosmological thought did Aristotle believe the heavens to be structured according to the theory of homocentric spheres developed by his older contemporary Eudoxus of Cnidus, in which the other celestial objects, the five planets known in antiquity, the Sun and the Moon, were hypothesized to move uniformly in circles, as if they were fixed stars.
Minor shelfwear. ; Elementa. Schriften Zur Philosophie Und Ihrer Problemgeschichte 35; 214 pages
Minor shelfwear. ; Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy; Vol. 4; 288 pages; The fourth volume of Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy presents essays in honor of Professor John Ackrill on the occasion of his 65th birthday. Contributors include David Wiggins, Colin Strang, Julius Moravcsik, Lesley Brown, Gail Fine, Julia Annas, David Charles, Michael Woods, Christopher Kirwan, Bernard Williams, Jonathan Barnes, and Richard Sorabji.
Very light creasing along edge of front wrap. ; Dans une République aristocratique où l’accès à la parole se trouve réservé aux individus reconnus comme légitimes par le biais des magistratures, l’image que l’orateur projette de lui-même à travers son discours constitue un facteur essentiel de persuasion. Héritiers d’une rhétorique grecque largement inadaptée aux conditions de l’éloquence romaine, les théoriciens latins ne réussiront que progressivement à penser cet aspect de la pratique oratoire en élaborant une catégorie propre à leur environnement politique, social et intellectuel : celle de persona, qui recouvre l’ensemble des qualités attendues de l’orateur. Tout en rapprochant la doctrine rhétorique et les conditions historiques de sa formulation, cette étude adopte un point de vue comparatiste qui permet de préciser ce qui unit et sépare les doctrines grecques de l’èthos (caractère) et l’analyse de la persona dans la rhétorique latine des années 80 av. J. -C. On peut ainsi rendre compte du processus par lequel une formalisation des exigences éthiques et comportementales qui s’imposaient à l’orateur romain a été peu à peu élaborée, ouvrant la voie à une théorisation complète de la persona oratoire dans les traités cicéroniens de la maturité. En analysant cette construction progressive de la notion de persona oratoire, cet ouvrage aborde la rhétorique comme le révélateur des représentations politiques, sociales et philosophiques qui prévalaient dans la Rome du I er siècle av. J. -C. ; Textes Et Traditions 18; Vol. 1; 431 pages
viii + 270pp., in the series "The Ancient Commentators on Aristotle", publisher's hardcover in black cloth with gilt lettering on spine, dustwrapper (partly sunfaded), 24cm., text and interior are clean and bright, good condition, F105426
ix + 188pp., in the series "The Ancient Commentators on Aristotle", publisher's hardcover in black cloth with gilt lettering on spine, dustwrapper, 24cm., text and interior are clean and bright, good condition, F105427
CCVI + 261pp., 3e tirage, 20cm., reliure cart. d'éditeur, petit cachet sur la fausse page de titre, texte et intérieur sont frais, bon état, [Introduction en français, édition du texte en grec avec la traduction en français en regard], F105694
xxii + 390pp. + 2 cartes dépliantes, 20cm., reliure cart. d'éditeur, petit cachet sur la page de titre, texte et intérieur sont frais, bon état, [Introduction en français, édition du texte en grec avec la traduction en français en regard], F105695
[234] pp., 21cm., brochure originale, petit cachet sur la p.d.t., bon état, F105657