Classical Philosophy: Hellenistic philosophyTerence Irwin Taylor & Francis, 1995 - 426 oldal |
Tartalomjegyzék
Carneades Distinction between Assent and Approval | 19 |
The Beliefs of a Pyrrhonist | 37 |
Contents | 64 |
Protagoras and SelfRefutation in Later Greek Philosophy | 66 |
Innatism and the Stoa | 93 |
Perceptual Content in the Stoics | 125 |
The Stoic Criterion of Identity | 133 |
Diodorus Cronus and Hellenistic Philosophy | 149 |
Necessity in the Stoic Doctrine of Fate | 221 |
Problems About Possibility | 239 |
David Sedley | 270 |
The Basis of Stoic Ethics | 317 |
The Role of Oikeiosis in Stoic Ethics | 353 |
Carneades and the Stoic telos | 377 |
Chrysippus Understand Medea? | 410 |
Acknowledgments | 425 |
Gyakori szavak és kifejezések
according action Alexander Alexander of Aphrodisias animals Antipater Arcesilaus argued Aristotle Aristotle's assent atoms behaviour beliefs body Carneades Chrysippus Cicero claim Cleanthes concept context debate definition Democritus determinist dialectical Diodorus Diogenes Diogenes Laertius Dion discussion distinction Döring Epictetus Epicurean Epicurus ethics evidence external fact fate fato Galen Greek Growing Argument human idea imply impossible impression impulse innate innatist interpretation knowledge Leibniz logic Lucretius matter means mind moral nature necessary necessity notion oikeiosis Panaetius passage perception perceptual appearance perish peritrope Philo philosophical Plato Plutarch Pohlenz position possible principle proposition Protagoras Pyrrhonist question rational reason refutation Rist scepticism seems self-refutation sense Sextus Sextus Empiricus Socrates soul Stoa Stobaeus Stoic Stoic doctrine Stoicism suggest swerve telos term theory thesis things true truth University virtue volition word Zeno Zeno's δὲ καὶ κατὰ μὲν τὰ τὴν τὸ τοῦ τῶν