736 résultats
262pp. + 1p. corrigenda, in the series "Zur modernen Deutung der Aristotelischen Logik" volume 2, 22cm., publisher's hardcover in red cloth with gilt lettering (with a small vague stain), good condition, F105602
Some foxing. Chipping to edges of wraps. Former owner's name stamped to ffep with another stamp crossed out. Former owner's bookplate on inner cover. Pages tanned. ; Text, Dutch translation and commentary. ; Thesis/dissertation; 87 pages
[vi +] 87pp. + losbladig 3pp. stellingen, 25cm., gebroch., wat roestplekjes, [Proefschrift ter verkrijging van den graad van doctor in de letteren en wijsbegeerte aan de Rijksuniversiteit te Utrecht, 18 nov.1932, promotor: Bolkestein], F39817
Former scholar's name on inner cover (David Furley). ; Essays by Ravaisson, Bywater, Diels, Cherniss, Festugière, Wilpert, Stark, Düring, Thillet, Berti, Weil, Flashar, Owen, de Vogel, Plezia, Pépin. ; Wege Der Forschung CCXXIV (224) ; 366 pages
Some pencilling to a few pages. ; Essays by Ravaisson, Bywater, Diels, Cherniss, Festugière, Wilpert, Stark, Düring, Thillet, Berti, Weil, Flashar, Owen, de Vogel, Plezia, Pépin. ; Wege Der Forschung CCXXIV (224) ; 366 pages
347pp., 21cm., softcover (bit used), text and interior are clean and bright, good condition, F105569
241pp., 21cm., softcover, in the series "Europäische Hochschulschriften. Reihe XX Philosophie" volume 89, text clean and bright, good condition, F105545
pp. xiv, 362. Some pages underlined. Book label of Mrs. Daniel J. Wetzel on title page. Tall 8vo. Original cloth spine over paper covered boards. Hardbound. Very good. PHILOSOPHY 2
DJ spine has minor browning. DJ has light edgewear with one chip to top corner of wraps. Light pencil underlining and marginalia on a few pages. Former owner's name to ffep. ; Contents: Romantic Beauty in Plato; Sense of Beauty; Plato's evaluation of Art and Poetry; the Poetic Process; Aristotle on Art and Beauty; Mimesis and Rhythm; Catharsis. ; 168 pages
Book has minor shelfwear and rubbing. DJ spine and section of back panel are browned. Small closed tear to bottom of front panel (1"). ; Contents: Romantic Beauty in Plato; Sense of Beauty; Plato's evaluation of Art and Poetry; the Poetic Process; Aristotle on Art and Beauty; Mimesis and Rhythm; Catharsis. ; 168 pages
Light pencilling to a few pages. ; Readings in the History of Philosophy; 8.2 X 5.5 X 1.2 inches; 200 pages
Gutes Ex.; Einband mit Läsuren, berieben u. stw. fleckig; innen kl. Stempel. - Mit marmorierten Vorsätzen. - INHALT : I. Aischylos, Agamemnon / II. Aischylos, Das Opfer am Grabe (Choephoren) / III. Aischylos, Die Versöhnung (Eumeniden). --- ... Der Gegenstand hat es mit sich gebracht, dass meine drei Einleitungen sich mit der hellenischen Religion und ihrer geschichtlichen Entwickelung befassen. Ob ich hinreichend verständlich werde, ist mir unsicher, denn diese Seite des griechischen Lebens ist nicht nur an sich dunkel, sondern von falschen Lichtern täuschend erhellt, und die Wissenschaft hat erst in den letzten beiden Decennien energisch begonnen, nicht mehr Mythologie, luxe de croyance, oder Symbolik, sondern Religion auch bei den Hellenen zu suchen. Was Religion ist, das lerne, wer es nicht weifs, bei Carlyle oder bei Lagarde: Schleiermacher redet dafür zu leise und zu dialektisch. Für den Glauben der Hellenen ist es besonders verhängnisvoll, dass Homer über ihn nur ein täuschendes Zeugnis ablegt. Leider kann ich auf kein darstellendes Werk verweisen, das dem tiefer Strebenden ein einigermassen richtiges Bild des Ganzen giebt, von dem ich doch nur ein paar Stücke behandele, vielleicht eben dadurch täuschend, dass nun das Übrige in zu tiefem Schatten zu liegen scheint. … (Vorwort)
208pp., in the series "Monographien zur philosophischen Forschung" volume 135, 23cm., softcover, text and interior clean and bright, good condition, F105494
xi + 193pp., in the series "Miscellanea Historiae Pontificiae" vol.XI, 24cm., original softcover, text is celana dn bright, text in Italian, good condition, F106793
Endpapers tanned. Very light foxing. Else fine. ; 211 pages
Endpapers tanned. Errata page with pen line has been stamped to rear free endpaper. Pencil notes and underlining. Lower edges a bit bumped with small stain to rear board. Else VG. ; 211 pages
viii + 238pp., 24cm., softcover, 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.
25pp., 22cm., excerpt from a doctoral dissertation ("Excerpta ex dissertatione ad lauream in Facultate Philosophica Pontificiae Universitatis Gregorianae"), softcover, stamp at verso of title page, text is clean and bright, F112988
199pp., 24cm., ex.bibl. (enkele stempeltjes), goed
336pp., 26cm., in de reeks "Verhandelingen van de Koninklijke Academie voor Wetenschappen, Letteren en Schone Kunsten van België. Klasse der Letteren" Jg.42 nr.94, stempeltje, goede staat, F59621
3 delen: samen x + 696pp., in-4, [pro manuscripto proefschrift tot het behalen van de graad van doctor in de Wijsbegeerte en Letteren (klassieke filologie) aan de Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, promotor: prof.Verbeke]
253pp., brochure originale, 22cm., bon état, dans la série "Recherches de philosophie" vol.1, [contient 6 contributions], F58404
An original vintage copy NOTa reproduction (Volunme II of a 2 Volume set - will NOT be sold seperately) Clean, tight, unmarked text. Scuffing to head and foot of spine, corners slightly bumped Book
Still wrapped in Plastic. ; In German; Studien Und Texte Zur Geistesgeschichte Des Mittelalters; 2.46 x 9.62 x 6.66 Inches; 986 pages; This monograph deals with the philosophical approach of thirteenth-century masters to concrete, practical manifestations of 'quantum ad naturalia' in human lives in their commentaries on Aristotle’s works on natural philosophy, both his genuine works and those then considered genuine. It inquires into what they deemed worthy of philosophical debate regarding this topic and how they tackled it. The first of the two volumes describes the cultural surroundings, the scholars’ way of approaching the topic, and their discourses on the peculiarity (singularity, unity, consistency) of humankind and on its internal differentiation according to gender, stage of life, social stratification, and differences due to ethnic status or geographic (climatic) diversity. This is the first comprehensive source-based study of the subject; it draws heavily on unedited texts.