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Offers a collection of essays exploring notions of authority and authorship through ancient Greek and Roman philosophy.
List of contents
Introduction: authorship and authority in ancient philosophy Jenny Bryan, Robert Wardy and James Warren; 1. Reconsidering the authority of Parmenides' Doxa Jenny Bryan; 2. Authority and the dialectic of Socrates Nicholas Denyer; 3. Socratic discussions of death and immortality in Plato Alex Long; 4. A superannuated student: Aristotle and authority in the Academy Dorothea Frede; 5. Words, deeds, and lovers of truth in Aristotle Sarah Broadie; 6. Aristotle's Categories 7 adopts Plato's view of relativity Matthew Duncombe; 7. Theophrastus and the authority of the de Sensibus Kelli Rudolph; 8. Pseudo-Archytas and the Categories Myrto Hatzimichali; 9. Numenius on intellect, soul, and the authority of Plato George Boys-Stones; 10. Demetrius of Laconia on Epicurus On the Telos (Us. 68) James Warren; 11. Lucretius the madman on the gods David Butterfield; 12. In and out of the Stoa: Diogenes Laertius on Zeno A. A. Long; 13. The emergence of Platonic and Aristotelian authority in the First Century BCE Georgia Tsouni; 14. Cicero on auctoritas Malcolm Schofield; 15. Authors and authorities in ancient China: some comparative observations G. E. R. Lloyd; 16. Antique authority? Robert Wardy.
About the author
Jenny Bryan is Lecturer in Classical Philosophy in the Department of Classics and Ancient History at the University of Manchester. She is the author of Likeness and Likelihood in the Presocratics and Plato (Cambridge, 2011).Robert Wardy is a Reader in Ancient Philosophy at the University of Cambridge and a Fellow of St Catharine's College. He is the author of The Chain of Change: A Study of Aristotle's Physics VII (Cambridge, 1990), The Birth of Rhetoric: Gorgias, Plato and their Successors (1998), Aristotle in China: Language, Categories and Translation (Cambridge, 2000), and Doing Greek Philosophy (2005).James Warren is Professor of Ancient Philosophy at the University of Cambridge and a Fellow of Corpus Christi College. He is the author of Epicurus and Democritean Ethics: An Archaeology of Ataraxia (Cambridge, 2002), Facing Death: Epicurus and His Critics (2004), Presocratics (2007) and The Pleasures of Reason in Plato, Aristotle, and the Hellenistic Hedonists (Cambridge, 2014) alongside articles on a range of topics in ancient philosophy, including on various topics in Epicureanism and ancient scepticism. He is the editor of The Cambridge Companion to Epicureanism (Cambridge, 2009) and, with Frisbee Sheffield: The Routledge Companion to Ancient Philosophy (2013).
Summary
Leading scholars explore how ancient Greek and Roman philosophy developed over its long history a sense in which philosophers might acknowledge the authority of some other philosopher or group of philosophers, as well as a number of canonical texts whose discussion itself became a mode of philosophical debate.