427 résultats
xv + 148pp., 21cm., softcover, text and inteior clean and bright, good condition, F105337
vii + 87pp., original 1964-edition, in the series "Philosophia Antiqua, A series of Monographs on Ancient Philosophy" volume 12, 25cm., original softcover (bit sunfaded), text and interior clean and bright, pages still uncut, good condition, F105033
Book is in excellent condition, as new with deep green cloth HB covers, gilt print at spine. 388 pages with decorated endpapers, top edge page ends in orange. Binding is solid and square, covers have sharp corners, exterior shows no blemishes, text/interior is clean and free of marking of any kind. Dust jacket shows light wear, scuffing at edges, no tears. Aristotle , Born 384 B.C. Greece, Tutor to Alexander the Great of Macedonia.
Book is in excellent condition. Binding is solid and square, covers have sharp corners, exterior shows no blemishes, text/interior is clean and free of marking of any kind. Dust jacket shows the slightest signs of shelf wear only, no tears. 275 pages. Contents include: Differentiations of consciousness, Social reality, Society and disorder, Struggle for order: Israel and the prophets, Struggle for order: Plato and the polis, Is the good society possible? Beyond order, etc.
Book is fine. Very light shelfwear to DJ. ; Zina Giannopoulou argues that Theaetetus -- Plato's most systematic examination of knowledge - is a philosophically sophisticated elaboration of Apology that successfully differentiates Socrates from the sophists. In Apology Socrates defends his philosophical activity partly by distinguishing it from sophistic practices, and in Theaetetus he enacts this distinction: the self-proclaimed ignorant and pious Socrates of Apology poses as the barren practitioner of midwifery, an art that enjoys divine support, and helps his pregnant interlocutor to birth his ideas. Whereas sophistic expertise fills others' souls with items of dubious epistemic quality, Socratic midwifery removes, tests, and discards falsities. ; 224 pages
Pages toned. Original front wrap mounted in grey card covers with black spine. ; Pp 225-389; Nachrichten Der Akademie Der Wissenschaften in Göttingen I. Philologisch-Historische Klasse. Jahrgang 1941, Nr. 11; 165 pages
Very light soiling to a couple of pages else Fine. ; 311 pages
Light bump to base of spine. Small stain to fore-edge of textblock. Scholar's name to ffep (M. F. Fresco; 307 pages
Faint tanning to pages. Chipping and fraying to spine ends. 1 corner bent. Light wear to corners. ; Liv, 228 pp. ; 228 pages
Light bump to base of spine. Light shelfwear to wraps. ; Value Inquiry Book Series, VIBS 17; 187 pages; This book is a detailed study of how Plato constructs his seminal philosophical dialogue, the Phaedo, as a unique tragedy, a poetic masterpiece whose structure is organic and symmetrical. Plato's mental Odyssey leads to the internal drama of the Phaedo plot. The analysis examines how Plato's literary art overcomes the philosophical problem of the separation of Ideas from sensible things. And it traces literary and philosophical offspring of the mental Odyssey, including Joyce and Proust.
xxiv + 482pp. + 3pp. theses, 24cm., softcover, text in German, Doctoral Dissertation (Rijksuniversiteit te Leiden, Netherlands), stamp at verso of title page, text is clean and bright (looks unread), F109841
212pp., dans la série "Bibliothèque d'histoire de la philosophie", 22cm., brochure originale, bon état, F105242
xiii + 241pp., 1st edition, 22cm., publisher's hardcover in blue cloth, dustwrapper (some few vague foxing & small loss of paper at upper end of spine), text and interior clean and bright, good condition, F105311
152pp., 26cm., brochure originale, dans la série "Bibliothèque d'histoire de la philosophie", peu de rousseurs sur la couverture et aux tranches, toujours non coupée, bon état, F104655
189pp., 21cm., softcover, text in German, Doctoral dissertation (Inaugural-Dissertation zur Erlangung der Doktorwürde der Philosophischen Fakultät der Rheinischen Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität zu Bonn), stamp at verso of title page, text is clean and bright, good condition, F109055
8vo., First Edition, with portrait frontispiece (original tissue guard present), tiny contemporary signature on front free endpaper; blue cloth, gilt back, a very good, bright, clean copy in unclipped, mildly age-soiled dustwrapper. SCARCE IN THIS CONDITION.
8vo., small neat contemporary signature on front free endpaper; original series binding of light green cloth, upper board blocked in blind, gilt back, patterned endpapers, a near fine copy in unclipped dustwrapper. Contains 'Ion' and four other dialogues on poetic inspiration. First published in EL in 1910. EL 456; Seymour 784.0. VERY SCARCE IN THIS CONDITION.
Lecturae Platonis 2; 130 pages; Tracing a central theme of Plato's Republic, G. R. F. Ferrari reconsiders in this study the nature and purpose of the comparison between the structure of society and that of the individual soul. In four chapters, Ferrari examines the personalities and social status of the brothers Glaucon and Adeimantus, Plato's notion of justice, coherence in Plato's description of the decline of states, and the tyrant and the philosopher king - a pair who, in their different ways, break with the terms of the city-soul analogy. In addition to acknowledging familiar themes in the interpretation of the Republic - the sincerity of its utopianism, the justice of the philosopher's return to the Cave - Ferrari provocatively engages secondary literature by Leo Strauss, Bernard Williams, and Jonathan Lear. With admirable clarity and insight, Ferrari conveys the relation between the city and the soul and the choice between tyranny and philosophy.
Very light yellowing to endpapers. Scholar's name to ffep (M. F. Fresco). A couple of small dot-sized soiling to front board. Very light rubbing. ; Unchanged reprint of 1923 edition. ; 399 pages
Scholar's name to ffep (M. F. Fresco) else book is fine. ; Unchanged reprint of 1922 3rd edition. ; 571 pages
Stain to titlepage (stamp? Blotted out). Corners bumped. Minor shelfwear. ; Greek Text with Latin Introduction and commentary. ; Ceskoslovenská Akademie Ved; 246 pages
A few pages at risk of falling out but still attached. Foxing to textblock. Front wrap cut a bit short. ; 136 pages
Scholar's stamp to titlepage (M. F. Fresco). Small bump to top edge of front board. ; Wege Der Forschung 70 (LXX) ; 544 pages
Gutes Exemplar. - Englisch. - Substantially, the essays in this collection formed part of the 2000 meeting of the Midlands Classics Colloquium, held on that occasion in Nottingham. We are sad to say that Thomas Wiedemann's contribution on the consilium principis, though a highlight of the day, could not be recovered to be included in this volume. The essays by Desmond Costa and Gideon Nisbet, as well as our own essay, are additions to the original conference essays - we hope that they help to illuminate different facets of our subject. At its most basic, advice is the help that a friend or comrade gives - a gesture that saves one from acting, and also from feeling, alone. This, surely, is Diomedes' point when asking for someone to come with him on his nocturnal expedition: If another comrade would escort me though, there'd be more comfort in it, confidence too. When two work side by side, one or the other spots the opening first if a kill's at hand. When one looks out for himself, alert but alone, his reach is shorter - his sly moves miss the mark. (Homer Iliad 10.224-226). It is settled that Odysseus will go with him, and so Diomedes achieves both the comfort he asks for and the practical benefits to be had from being part of a pair. He also now has as his partner one of the Iliad's best advisers - and the added bonus of Athena, an even greater Homeric adviser. There are, of course, many more public roles for advice or counsel in the Iliad itself: the process of making plans and taking decisions - of boule in the broadest sense - is central to the poem. And the giving and the receiving of good counsel, both in assemblies and between friends, seem to be as much part of the world of the Iliad as the relentless pursuit of glory in warfare. ... (Vorwort der Herausgeberinnen). - INHALT : Notes on Contributors --- List of illustrations --- Introduction --- DIANA SPENCER and ELENA THEODORAKOPOULOS --- 'Good men who have skill in speaking': performing advice in Rome DIANA SPENCER and ELENA THEODORAKOPOULOS --- On the receiving end: the hidden protagonist of Plato's Laches ANDREW BARKER --- Advice and Advisers in Xenophon's Anabasis TIM ROOD --- Consul and consilium: suppressing the Catilinarian conspiracy CATHERINE STEEL --- Telling it like it is: Seneca, Alexander and the dynamics of epistolary advice DIANA SPENCER --- Advice from on high - Pliny and Trajan ANDY FEAR --- Dio Chrysostom and the development of On Kingship literature HARRY SIDEBOTTOM --- 'That's not funny': advice in skoptic epigram GIDEON NISBET --- Afterword: giving advice in Greek letters DESMOND COSTA --- Bibliography Index. ISBN 9788879494397
xiv + 406pp., 1st edition, 24cm., publisher's hardcover in cloth, text and interior clean and bright, good condition, F105327