Themes in Plato, Aristotle, and Hellenistic Philosophy: Keeling Lectures 2011-18

Fiona Leigh
University of London Press
2021-01-28

<p>The present volume collects together papers based on the annual Keeling Memorial Lecture in ancient philosophy given at University College London, over 2011-18 (and one from 2004, previously unpublished). It contains contributions to theoretical as well as practical ancient philosophy, and in some cases, to both. Susanne Bobzien argues that Frege plagiarised the Stoics in respect of logic, Gail Fine compares uses of <i>doxa</i> and <i>epistêmê</i> in the <i>Phaedo</i> to contemporary notions of belief and knowledge, David Sedley offers a novel interpretation of ‘safe’ causal explanation in the <i>Phaedo</i>, and Gábor Betegh understands the ingredients of the soul in the <i>Timaeus</i> as structuring thought and speech. Dorothea Frede presents new considerations against a ‘particularist’ reading of Aristotle’s ethics, Lesley Brown examines the role of agreement in establishing what is just and the correctness of names in Plato, and Gisela Striker gives an analysis of the role of Stoic therapy in the good life. A. A. Long details a new reading of divinity in the <i>Republic</i> that reveals the Good as the essence of the divine, and Malcolm Schofield explores the tension between unfettered theoretical debate and the demand of determinacy in practical philosophy in Cicero. </p><p></p>

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Keywords

  • Ancient Greek and Roman philosophy
  • BCE to c 500 CE
  • Classical texts
  • History of Western philosophy
  • Ancient Greek and Roman philosophy
  • c 1 to c 500 CE
  • Classical Studies ⇒ Classical Philosophy
  • ethics
  • Frege
  • Phaedo
  • philosophy
  • Plato
  • Stoics

Themes in Plato, Aristotle, and Hellenistic Philosophy: Keeling Lectures 2011-18

Fiona Leigh

University of London Press

2021-01-28

CC BY-NC-ND

<p>The present volume collects together papers based on the annual Keeling Memorial Lecture in ancient philosophy given at University College London, over 2011-18 (and one from 2004, previously unpublished). It contains contributions to theoretical as well as practical ancient philosophy, and in some cases, to both. Susanne Bobzien argues that Frege plagiarised the Stoics in respect of logic, Gail Fine compares uses of <i>doxa</i> and <i>epistêmê</i> in the <i>Phaedo</i> to contemporary notions of belief and knowledge, David Sedley offers a novel interpretation of ‘safe’ causal explanation in the <i>Phaedo</i>, and Gábor Betegh understands the ingredients of the soul in the <i>Timaeus</i> as structuring thought and speech. Dorothea Frede presents new considerations against a ‘particularist’ reading of Aristotle’s ethics, Lesley Brown examines the role of agreement in establishing what is just and the correctness of names in Plato, and Gisela Striker gives an analysis of the role of Stoic therapy in the good life. A. A. Long details a new reading of divinity in the <i>Republic</i> that reveals the Good as the essence of the divine, and Malcolm Schofield explores the tension between unfettered theoretical debate and the demand of determinacy in practical philosophy in Cicero. </p><p></p>

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Included in Packages

Topics

  • Ancient Greek and Roman philosophy
  • BCE to c 500 CE
  • Classical texts
  • History of Western philosophy
  • Ancient Greek and Roman philosophy
  • c 1 to c 500 CE
  • Classical Studies ⇒ Classical Philosophy
  • ethics
  • Frege
  • Phaedo
  • philosophy
  • Plato
  • Stoics