Body and Soul in Hellenistic Philosophy

כריכה קדמית
Brad Inwood, James Warren
Cambridge University Press, 11 ביוני 2020 - 262 עמודים
"Brad Inwood and James Warren The relationship of soul to body was one of the earliest and most persistent questions in ancient thought. It emerges in the Homeric poems, where the psuchē is a breath-like stuff that animates the human being until it departs at death for the underworld, leaving the corpse (sōma or nekros) behind. In the Odyssey these souls are found lurking wraith-like in the underworld until they are revitalized by a sacrifice of blood which gives them a temporary power to think and speak again. Among Pythagoreans and others, the soul lives imprisoned in the body until it is liberated at death, only to be reincarnated for a new life in a new body in accordance with its merits. Plato embraces this theory in several of his dialogues, but even this relatively autonomous substance is deeply affected by the conditions of the body it inhabits during life and the choices this embodied soul makes. Other early Greek thinkers regarded the soul as little more than the life force animating a body, a special kind of material stuff that accounts for the functions of a living animal but then disperses at death. Democritean atomism embraced this notion of soul, which was also common in the medical tradition. Aristotle's analysis of all substances into form and matter facilitated the identification of soul with the form of a suitably organized body, a form responsible for all of the abilities and capacities (dunameis) that constitute the life of any living thing (both plants and animals)"--
 

תוכן

Introduction
1
Herophilus and Erasistratus on the Hegemonikon
30
Galen on Soul Mixture and Pneuma
62
Epicurus Demetrius
89
Cosmic and Individual Soul in Early Stoicism
113
Edelstein and I G Kidd 198899 Posidonius 3 vols
128
The Stoic Conception of the Soul
145
The Platonic Soul from the Early Academy
171
Tusculans 1 4976
199
Bibliography
231
G Kühn 192133 Claudii Galeni Opera Omnia 22 vols
249
Index Locorum
252
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מידע על המחבר (2020)

Brad Inwood is a Professor of Philosophy and Classics at Yale University, Connecticut. His major works include Ethics and Human Action in Early Stoicism (1985), The Poem of Empedocles, 2nd edition (2001), Reading Seneca: Stoic Philosophy at Rome (2005), Seneca: Selected Philosophical Letters (2007), Ethics after Aristotle (2014), and Stoicism: A Very Short Introduction (2018). He has edited or co-edited several volumes, including The Cambridge Companion to the Stoics (Cambridge, 2003), and from 2007 to 2015 he was the editor of Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. James Warren is a 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 (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). He is the editor of The Cambridge Companion to Epicureanism (2009), with Frisbee Sheffield, The Routledge Companion to Ancient Philosophy (2014), and with Jenny Bryan and Robert Wardy, Authors and Authorities in Ancient Philosophy (Cambridge, 2018).

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