Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Scientists - Antiphon The Sophist

e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 5     81-95 of 95    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5 
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Antiphon The Sophist:     more detail
  1. Antiphon the Sophist: The Fragments (Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries) by Antiphon, 2010-01-14
  2. ANTIPHON(c. 480411 BCE): An entry from Gale's <i>Encyclopedia of Philosophy</i> by Michael Gagarin, 2006
  3. Die Anfänge der abendländischen Philosophie by Pherekydes von Syros, Thales, et all 1991
  4. The Older Sophists
  5. Antiphon the Athenian: Oratory, Law, and Justice in the Age of the Sophists by Michael Gagarin, 2009-08-01
  6. Sophists: Protagoras, Gorgias, Hippias, Prodicus, Thrasymachus, Diagoras of Melos, Antiphon, Callicles, Theodorus of Byzantium
  7. The Older Sophists: a Complete Translation By Several Hands of the Fragments in Die Fragmente Der Vorsokratiker Edited By Diels-Kranz with a New Edition of Antiphon and of Euthydemus by Rosamond Kent (Edited by) Sprague, 1990

81. The Philosophy Resource Center: Gorgias The Sophist On Not Being
The sophist does not espouse an ideational theory of meaning either. Disposition inder alten techne rhetoriken (Korax Gorgias-antiphon), Rhetorische Studien
http://radicalacademy.com/studentrefphil6k.htm
THE RADICAL ACADEMY Homepage M
A
I
N
M
E
N
U
Online Newsletter Search Central About the Academy Guestbook ... Philosophical Quotations
Resource Centers: Philosophy Politics Religion Education ... Media Please Support The Radical Academy By Shopping In Our
Bookstore
Magazine NewsStand Emporium Philosophy
Resource Center
Select a Feature... Philosophy Main Page General Resources Resources: Ancient Philosophy Resources: Medieval Philosophy Resources: Modern Philosophy Resources: Recent Philosophy Philosophical Quotations Philosophical Issues Philosophy Mini-Courses Philosophy Search Engine Philosophy Resource Center Main Page Academy Resources Timeline of Philosophy A Timeline of American Philosophy Diagram: Development of Philosophic Thought ... Books about Philosophy in The Radical Academy Bookstore Shop Amazon Stores Bookstore Magazine Outlet Music Store Video Store ... Shop at the Office Depot on Amazon.com

82. Sophist Lecture Notes
making and debate, skills which were a commondenominator of sophist curricula but to defend both a positive claim and its opposite (eg antiphon of Athens).
http://www.cnu.edu/academics/phil/carr/SophiNot.htm
  • Sept 4: The Pre-Socratics vs. their Successors; the Sophists
  • "Sophist" is a professional title taken in the fifth century, first by Protagoras and later by others; originally "a clever man", the term took on the technical use of meaning a person who secures employment by teaching people for money, especially if this requires them to travel from their place of origin.
  • Xenophon says Socrates described them as those who prostitute wisdom ( Memorabilia I 6.13). Note that the charges used to convict Socrates to death present him as if he were a Sophist, "making the weaker argument seem the stronger"; Aristophanes falsely presented him as running a school.
  • CRUCIAL: in the melieu, democracy was on the rise and in a (direct) democracy it is valuable for one to have skills at speech making and debate, skills which were a common-denominator of sophist curricula but many other topics and skills were taught as well
  • Protagoras 490-420 or 485-421 (born in Abdera; Prepared Constitution for
  • 83. The Symbolic Structure Of Plato's Parmenides
    Parmenides with Aristotle exhibits the arrangment of the sophist, and that's what froman underground cave!) kept retelling it before young antiphon ( the echo
    http://plato-dialogues.org/email/960204_1.htm
    Bernard SUZANNE Last updated November 21, 1998 Plato and his dialogues : Home Biography Works and links to them History of interpretation New hypotheses - Map of dialogues : table version or non tabular version . Tools : Index of persons and locations Detailed and synoptic chronologies - Maps of Ancient Greek World . Site information : About the author
    E-mail Archives :
    The symbolic structure of Plato's Parmenides
    February 4, 1996 This page is part of the "e-mail archives" section of a site, Plato and his dialogues , dedicated to developing a new interpretation of Plato's dialogues. The "e-mail archives" section includes HTML edited versions of posts that I submitted on various e-mail discussion lists about Plato and ancient philosophy.
    Date : February 4, 1996, 19:28:39
    Subject : re: Parmenides the Pythagorean While Christopher is busy trying to get back to Xenophanes and Pythagoras to find the source of Parmenides' doctrines as a prelude to studying the Parmenides of Plato, please allow me to submit to you the result of some investigations I made in Plato's own text to check the value he attributes to most of what's in the Parmenides . In order to do so, I studied in great detail the form and "scenic" details of the dialogue, as compared with the trilogy

    84. Plato's Dialogues And Socrates' Chronology
    which is the introduction to the whole trilogy Theæetetus, sophist, Statesman)shows doesn't understand, only to recite it in front of antiphon, Mr. Echoman
    http://plato-dialogues.org/email/960607_1.htm
    Bernard SUZANNE Last updated November 21, 1998 Plato and his dialogues : Home Biography Works and links to them History of interpretation New hypotheses - Map of dialogues : table version or non tabular version . Tools : Index of persons and locations Detailed and synoptic chronologies - Maps of Ancient Greek World . Site information : About the author
    E-mail Archives :
    Plato's dialogues and Socrates' chronology
    June 7-14, 1996 This page is part of the "e-mail archives" section of a site, Plato and his dialogues , dedicated to developing a new interpretation of Plato's dialogues. The "e-mail archives" section includes HTML edited versions of posts that I submitted on various e-mail discussion lists about Plato and ancient philosophy.
    Date : June 7, 1996, 21:51:25
    Subject : Re: names and dates Republic and the , and the and Sophist . And further, there are the historical events mentioned in the dialogues. Using all of these, I would not be surprised if we could discover the dramatic sequence of a large number of the dialogues. I don't think Plato was trying to set a chronology of Socrates. He was trying to be true to his spirit, not to his life. And the chronological indications have more to do with philosophy than with ordering the dialogues.

    85. Untitled
    except antiphon of Athens) and they used to give a lecture on or several examplesof eloquence. According to Socrates (= Plato), the sophist revealed only the
    http://www.csudh.edu/phenom_studies/greekphil/greek09.htm
    THE ATHENIAN PHILOSOPHERS
    The history of Greek philosophy started from Ionia in the Asia Minor, which was the closest to and was most easily influenced by Persia (the cultural inheritance of the Mesopotamia). Due to Persian military expansions, the Ionian intellectuals and "technocrats" had to take the refuge to the rest of Magna Graeca The Sophists Through this geo-political transition of culture to Athens, the central question of the problems of philosophy was no longer sought in Heaven and Earth, in nature and its principles (Anaxagoras was still preoccupied with this philosophy of nature in Athens). They were now concerned about the Human beings Themselves. In order that such a radical shift of questions in philosophy was possible, some cultural, psychological and philosophical preparations had to be done in ahead.
    1) The problem of human-being oneself and of the society as well as the politics became more serious questions tot the consciousness of the people rather than those of the heaven and nature. Why? Because what had been previously taken for granted as self-evident was no longer acceptable as true, but on the contrary, everything which was taken for granted in humanity and society had become questionable.
    2) After the Persian War (490-480 B.C.) Athens became the leader of

    86. Visible Darkness This Public Address 04/19/2002
    Can these two systems be reconciled? Are we hopelessly separate and at oddswith our animal selves? antiphon, the sophist, seems to have thought so.
    http://www.visibledarkness.com/blog/archives/00000614.html

    87. Sophists
    A third important sophist was antiphon c. 480411 BC. Fragment 3opposes nomos (human law or custom) to phusis (nature). Claims
    http://www.uky.edu/~jjord0/Sophist.htm
    Return to Philo 260 Home Page
    2. The Sophists
    • "Sophist" is from sophos , skilled or having special expertise, hence "wise" (cf. sophia , wisdom). Many people were "sophists" in particular areas" e.g., carpenters, charioteers, poets. What distinguished the Sophists was that they were not practitioners of a trade, but itinerant tutors who claimed to teach all that was necessary for success in public life. In practice they mainly taught rhetoric and related fields such as grammar, history, and literary criticism.
    • The Sophists were at first widely admired. Eventually they came into disrepute because of their high fees and the radical nature of what many of them taught. People were particularly suspicious of their claim to be able to teach a student how "to make the weaker argument stronger" (Protagoras [4]). Coupled with the Sophists’ exaggerated rhetorical displays, this claim created the impression that the Sophists were more concerned with rhetorical effectiveness than with truth. Hence the meanings of "sophist" and "sophistry" today.
    • The first great Sophist was Protagoras , c. 490-420 BC. He was from Abdera but settled in Athens. He was more modest than some of the later Sophists, and is treated respectfully by Plato in the

    88. Gagarin: Antiphon The Athenian

    http://www.utexas.edu/utpress/books/gagani.html
    July 2002 6 x 9 in., 250 pp.
    ISBN 0-292-72841-7
    $40.00, hardcover
    Antiphon the Athenian
    Oratory, Law, and Justice in the Age of the Sophists By Michael Gagarin
    "Gagarin demonstrates persuasively that Antiphon the logographer is identical with the Antiphon who made intellectual contributions on more abstract topics."
    Antiphon was a fifth-century Athenian intellectual (ca. 480-411 BCE) who created the profession of speechwriting while serving as an influential and highly sought-out adviser to litigants in the Athenian courts. Three of his speeches are preserved, together with three sets of Tetralogies (four hypothetical paired speeches), whose authenticity is sometimes doubted. Fragments also survive of intellectual treatises on subjects including justice, law, and nature (physis), which are often attributed to a separate Antiphon the Sophist. Were these two Antiphons really one and the same individual, endowed with a wide-ranging mind ready to tackle most of the diverse intellectual interests of his day? Through an analysis of all these writings, this book convincingly argues that they were composed by a single individual, Antiphon the Athenian. Michael Gagarin sets close readings of individual works within a wider discussion of the fifth-century Athenian intellectual climate and the philosophical ferment known as the sophistic movement. This enables him to demonstrate the overall coherence of Antiphon's interests and writings and to show how he was a pivotal figure between the sophists and the Attic orators of the fourth century. In addition, Gagarin's argument allows us to reassess the work of the sophists as a whole, so that they can now be seen as primarily interested in

    89. Taming The Winds
    Antipater. Anthologia Palatina 11.550. tr. WR Paton, Loeb. Antiphonthe sophist. frg.11, 29. tr. K. Freeman, Ancilla. Apollodorus.
    http://www.angelfire.com/al3/anemokoitai/app3.html
    appendix 3: ancient sources
    Acts of the Apostles 19.10; 27.13-15. Book of Genesis, 41. Book of James, 5.17. Book of Psalms, 104.3-4. First Book of Kings, 16.29-18. Gospel of St. Luke, 4.24. RgVeda tr. P. Thieme, in Hinnells (ed.), Manchester U.P. The Epic of Gilgamesh tr. S. Dalley, Penguin. Achilles Tatius Leucippe and Clitophon p.189. tr. J. J. Winkler, CAGN. Acusilaus of Argos Geneaologies, tr. K. Freeman, Presocratics Adespota frg.565. In TrGF. Aelian On Animals tr. A. F. Scholfield, Loeb. Aelian Varia Historia tr. A. F. Scholfield, Loeb. Aeschylus Agamemnon tr. H. W. Smyth, Loeb. Aeschylus Oreithuia frg. F 281. TrGF III. Aeschylus Prometheus tr. H. W. Smyth, Loeb. Aesop Fables tr. S. A. Handford, Penguin. Alcaeus To Love frg.13, 38b. tr. J. M. Edmonds, Loeb. Alcaeus frg. 1, ii, 8-20 + 2166 (b) 1. tr. D. A. Campbell, Loeb. Alcman PMG tr. Bing and Cohen, Routledge. Amphis frg.27/48k. tr. J. M. Edmonds, FrAC. Anacreon Anacreonta tr. D. A. Campbell, Loeb. Anacreon PMG tr. Bing and Cohen, Routledge. Anaxagoras frg.1, 2, 19. tr. K. Freeman, Ancilla. Anaximenes frg.2.

    90. Références A

    http://www.aph.cnrs.fr/RSPA/References/References_A.html
    Auteurs anciens Textes Auteurs modernes Accueil ... COLLI, Giorgio [Fragmenta et testimonia] / Abaris. , I, p. 324-325, 328-331, 334-337
    Acusilaus Argivus
    JACOBY, Felix [Fragmenta et testimonia] / Akusilaos von Argos. , p. 47-58, *5, 375-386, 537 et 563 (corrigenda)
    DIELS, Hermann
    KRANZ, Walther [Fragmenta et testimonia] / Akusilaos. , Bd. I, p. 52-60 et 484
    Trad. ital. GIANNANTONI, Gabriele [Fragmenta et testimonia] / Acusilao. , I, p. 62-70
    Aeschines Sphettius
    Commentaire CARLINI, Antonio [Fragmenta et testimonia] / Aeschines.
    PErlangen 7. PLille 70a-f + 85 + 86.
    DITTMAR, Heinrich
    Aischines von Sphettos : Studien zur Literaturgeschichte der Sokratiker / Untersuchungen und Fragmente von Heinrich Dittmar.
    GIANNANTONI, Gabriele
    [Fragmenta et testimonia] / Aeschines Socraticus. , II, p. 593-629 et IV, p. 585-596 (notices)
    ANDORLINI, Isabella
    LINGUITI, Alessandro [Fragmenta et testimonia] / Aeschines Socraticus.
    POxy 2087. Bibliogr. p. 146-147.
    [RED.]
    ROSSETTI, Livio [Fragmenta et testimonia] / Aeschines Socraticus. POxy 1608, 2889, 2890. Bibliogr. p. 120-121, 134-135, 139. Aesopus GALLO, Italo

    91. Oedipus, University Of Saskatchewan
    This hostility appears in an even more extreme form in the writings of the sophistAntiphon Justice consists of not transgressing any of the laws nomima of
    http://duke.usask.ca/~porterj/CourseNotes/Oed.html

    92. Publikationsliste
    der allgemeinen Sprachwissenschaft (Ferdinand de Saussure); De
    http://www.menschenrechtserziehung.de/publikationslistewesel.htm
    Publikationen: Das Konzept der "Integrierten ländlichen Entwicklung". Neuansatz oder Rhetorik? Saarbrücken/Fort Lauderdale: Breitenbach 1982 Ernährung und Landwirtschaft, in: Opitz, Peter J. (Hrsg.): Die Dritte Welt in der Krise. Grundprobleme der Entwicklungsländer, München: Beck 1984, 21985, S.64-80 Nicaragua, zus. mit Udo Nimsdorf, Mediatus Sonderheft Januar 1985 Agricultural Trade Development and Assistance Act of 1954 (United States); Colonialism; Food Weapon; Myrdal, Gunnar; Universal Declaration on the Eradication of Hunger and Malnutrition; World Food Conference, in: World Encyclopedia of Peace, hrsg.v. Ervin Laszlo u. Jong Youl Yoo, 2 Bände , Oxford u.a.: Pergamon 1986 Aletheia/Von der Wahrheit (Antiphon der Sophist); Cours de linguistique générale/Grundfragen der allgemeinen Sprachwissenschaft (Ferdinand de Saussure); De rerum natura/Von der Natur der Dinge (Titus Lucretius Carus); Fragmente (Eudoxos von Knidos); Language, Thought and Reality/Sprache, Denken, Wirklichkeit (Benjamin Lee Whorf); Pros Eratosthenen ephodos/Methodenlehre (Archimedes); Der sinnhafte Aufbau der sozialen Welt (Alfred Schütz); The Uses of Argument/Der Gebrauch von Argumenten (Stephen E. Toulmin), in: Lexikon der philosophischen Werke, hrsg. v. Franco Volpi u. Julian Nida-Rümelin, Stuttgart: Kröner 1988 Osttimor, in: Opitz, Peter J. (Hrsg.): Das Weltflüchtlingsproblem. Ursachen und Folgen, München: Beck 1988, S.166-170

    93. TOC

    http://uts.cc.utexas.edu/~gagarin/toc.htm
    Antiphon the Athenian
    by
    Michael Gagarin
    Table of Contents
    Introduction 1. The Sophistic Period
    • Who Were the Sophists? Inquiry and experiment Paradox and Play Public Competition Logos, Argument, Rhetoric Relativism and Humanism Conclusion.
    2. Antiphon: Life and Works
    • Orator and Sophist The Authenticity of the Tetralogies
    3. Truth
    • The Papyrus Fragments Nomos and Physis Justice Advantage and Disadvantage, Pleasure and Pain The Senses and the Intellect Language and Truth Structure and Style Conclusion
    4. Concord, Dream-Interpretation
    • Concord: The Fragments Concord: Content Concord: Style Dream Interpretation Other Works
    5. The Tetralogies
    • The Tetralogies and their Audience Pollution Tetralogy 1 Tetralogy 2 Tetralogy 3 Conclusion
    6. Public Discourse: The Court Speeches
    • Athenian Homicide Law Antiphon 6: On the Chorus Boy Antiphon 1: Against the Stepmother Antiphon 5: The Murder of Herodes Antiphon's Speech in his Own Defense Antiphon's Logographic Strategies Conclusion
    7. From the Sophists to Forensic Oratory
    • The Complete Antiphon Style Argument Thought The Career of Antiphon A Summary

    94. ECampus.com - Books And Stuff. Cheap!
    Search This Category Title.
    http://ecampus.com/category.asp?cat1=Philosophy&cat2=Ancient

    95. Biblioteca De Filología Clásica - Boletín De Nuevas Adquisiciones
    with introduction, translation and commentary by Gerard J. Pendrick.
    http://alfama.sim.ucm.es/boletines/boletinFLLCLA.asp
    Biblioteca de Filología Clásica
    Boletín de nuevas adquisiciones, 01/01/2003 - 28/02/2003

    [A]
    [B] [C] [D] ... [Z]
    Autor(es): sin especificar
    Título: Odigíes gia ti didaktéa kai ti didaskalía ton matimáton sto Gymnásio kai to Lýkeio katá to scolikó étos 1989 - 1990 Teúcos B' : Matimatiká / Yporgeio Etn. Paideias Triskeumaton Paidagogiko Tmima Deuterobatmias Ekpaideusis.
    Publicación: Atina : Organismos Ekdoseos Didaktikon Biblion, 1989.
    Materia(s): Matemáticas Pedagogía.
    Clasificación:
    Ubicación:
    Signatura: GM51(035)ODI.
    [A]
    Autor(es): Abumalham Mas, Montserrat, coord. Universidad Complutense de Madrid. Instituto Universitario de Ciencias de las Religiones.
    Título: Mito, religión y superstición en la literatura árabe contemporánea/ Montserrat Abumalham coord.
    Publicación: Madrid : Universidad Complutense, Servicio de Publicaciones, 1998.
    Colección: 'Ilu. Cuadernos ; 1.
    Materia(s): Literatura árabe 1900- Mitología árabe.
    Clasificación:
    Ubicación:
    Signatura: CLA 901 F-61.
    Autor(es): Abumalham Mas, Montserrat, dir. Universidad Complutense de Madrid. Instituto Universitario de Ciencias de las Religiones.
    Título: Literatura árabe cristiana / Monserrat Abumalham, coordinadora.

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 5     81-95 of 95    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5 

    free hit counter