Search results for ""elea""
Austrian Academy of Sciences Press Materielle Kultur Und Kulturelle Identitat in Elea in Spatarchaisch-Fruhklassischer Zeit: Untersuchungen Zur Gefass- Und Baukeramik Aus Der Unterstadt (Grabungen 1987-1994)
£137.04
£27.04
Prestel The Museum of Mysteries Arts Best Kept Secrets
Art and mystery collide in this fascinating look at the secrets behind some of the world's most important masterpieces and their creators.
£17.99
Plan9 Verlag Phoenix Rises
£16.00
Edition Michael Fischer Was du nicht siehst
£18.00
Retrato de grupo con Editor
En este número de Texturas se pueden encontrar textos de Enrique Tierno Galván, Gustavo Guerrero, Michael Bhaskar, Elea Giménez Toledo, Ana García García, Jorge Mañana Rodríguez, Manuel Rodríguez Rivero, William Marling, Carolina Herrera Zamarrón, Jesús Ortiz, Mike Shatzkin, Cliff Guren, Thad Mcilroy, Steven Sieck, Gaia Banks y Maica Rivera.
£17.51
DEAD SOFT Verlag Unter einem Banner
£14.95
Plan9 Verlag Kalubs End
£16.00
Bassermann, Edition Die grten Rtsel der Kunst Die geheimen Botschaften hinter den bedeutendsten Werken der Kunstgeschichte
£14.99
Rowman & Littlefield The Paradox of Political Philosophy: Socrates' Philosophic Trial
In engaging five of Plato's dialogues—Theaetetus, Euthyphro, Cratylus, Sophist, and Statesman—and by paying particular attention to Socrates' intellectual defense in the "philosophic trial" by the Stranger from Elea, Jacob Howland illuminates Plato's understanding of the proper relationship between philosophy and politics. This insightful and innovative study illustrates the Plato's understanding of the difference between sophistry and philosophy, and it identifies the innate contradictions of political philosophy that Plato observed and remain entrenched within the field to this day. This is essential reading for anyone interested in the past, present, and future of political philosophy.
£137.14
American Occupational Therapy Perspectives for Occupation-Based Practice: Foundation and Future of Occupational Therapy
This new compilation of the most influential literary works in occupational therapy presents the richness of the profes-sion’s heritage while addressing current realities and future directions for practice. A comprehensive anthology of more than 70 recognized classics and landmark recent works, this publication provides essential knowledge about theory and practice. From Adolf Meyer’s 1922 Philosophy to Elea-nor Clark Slagle Lectures to seminal international writings to the latest Occupational Therapy Practice Framework, this text provides a convenient library of the “best of the best” in occupational therapy literature. Thought-provoking intro-ductions with study questions challenge readers to analyze their perceptions about person-directed, occupation-based practice.
£141.30
Puta
Un testimonio de una fuerza sobre-cogedora, una obra literaria de gran belleza que nos grita su sufrimiento sin jamás regodearse en él.?Eléa Pires, Deuxième pageNelly Arcan tuvo un destino oscuro [?]. Sufrió mucho, y eso se refleja en su obra [?] pero también deseaba alcanzar algo mejor, buscaba constantemente la luz.?Marie BrassardUna de los mejores escritores que ha dado Canadá.?Jade Colbert, The Globe and Mail[Nelly Arcan] era asombrosa, brillante, original, talentosa. En mi opinión, los libros de Arcan deberían ser de lectura obligatoria en los institutos y universidades de todo el mundo occidental. En qué asignatura? Filosofía.?Nancy HustonUna reflexión sobre la feminidad [?] Inteligencia, sensibilidad y lucidez a raudales son las marcas de esta magnífica obra, por momentos casi filosófica.?Buzz littéraireIncreíblemente inteligente, nunca dejó de cuestionar cómo debía ser una mujer. ?J. C. Suttcliffe, TLS
£18.54
Los inicios de la filosofía en Grecia
Una rica y exuberante investigación sobre los orígenes del pensamiento filosófico en la cultura griega. New York Review of BooksCómo podemos hablar hoy sobre los inicios de la filosofía? Cómo evitar la tradicional oposición entre mito y logos y, en su lugar, explorar los múltiples estilos de pensamiento que surgieron entre ambos extremos? En este esclarecedor ensayo, Maria Michela Sassi reconstruye, mediante una exploración lúcida y detallista, el mundo intelectual de los presocráticos para ofrecer una comprensión matizada de las raíces de lo que más tarde se conocería como el milagro griego.De Mileto a Elea, de Éfeso a Agrigento, Sassi comienza por las preguntas canónicas ?el cuándo y el cómo del origen del pensamiento, sus reflexiones en torno al orden cósmico, su naturaleza concreta y sus formas distintivas? para trazar la historia del saber arcaico y analizar, además, el ambiente de competencia intelectual, la descentralización geográfica
£28.80
Princeton University Press Around Proust
A study in obsession, Marcel Proust's A la recherche du temps perdu is seemingly a self-sufficient universe of remarkable internal consistency and yet is full of complex, gargantuan digressions. Richard Goodkin follows the dual spirit of the novel through highly suggestive readings of the work in its interactions with music, psychoanalysis, philosophy, and cinema, and such literary genres as epic, lyric poetry, and tragedy. In exploring this fascinating intertextual network, Goodkin reveals some of Proust's less obvious creative sources and considers his influence on later art forms. The artistic and intellectual entities examined in relation to Proust's novel are extremely diverse, coming from periods ranging from antiquity (Homer, Zeno of Elea) to the 1950s (Hitchcock) and belonging to the cultures of the Greek, French, German, and English-speaking worlds. In spite of this variety of form and perspective, all of these analyses share a common methodology, that of "digressive" reading. They explore Proust's novel not only in light of such famous passages as those of the madeleine and the good-night kiss, but also on the basis of seemingly small details that ultimately take us, like the novel itself, in unexpected directions.
£31.50
Boydell & Brewer Ltd Becoming Socrates: Political Philosophy in Plato's "Parmenides"
A rigorous investigation of Socrates' early education, pinpointing the thought that led Socrates to turn from natural science to the study of morality, ethics, and politics Plato's Parmenides is regarded as a canonical work in ontology. Depicting a conversation between Parmenides of Elea and a young Socrates, the dialogue presents a rigorous examination of Socrates' theory of the forms, the most influential account of being in the philosophic tradition. In this commentary on the Parmenides, Alex Priou argues that the dialogue is, in actuality, a reflection on politics. Priou begins from the accepted view that the conversation consists of two discrete parts -- a critique of the forms, followed by Socrates' philosophical training -- but finds a unity to the dialogue yet to be acknowledged. By paying careful attention to what Parmenides calls the "greatest impasse" facing Socrates' ontology, Priou reveals a political context to the conversation. The need in society for order and good rule includes the need, at a more fundamental level, for an adequate andefficacious explanation of being. Recounting here how a young Socrates first learned of the primacy of political philosophy, which would become the hallmark of his life, Becoming Socrates shows that political philosophy, and not ontology, is "first philosophy." Alex Priou is an instructor in the Herbst Program in the Humanities in Engineering at the University of Colorado Boulder.
£81.00
Princeton University Press Studies in Greek Philosophy, Volume I: The Presocratics
Gregory Vlastos (1907-1991) was one of the twentieth century's most influential scholars of ancient philosophy. Over a span of more than fifty years, he published essays and book reviews that established his place as a leading authority on early Greek philosophy. The two volumes that comprise Studies in Greek Philosophy include nearly forty contributions by this acknowledged master of the philosophical essay. Many of these pieces are now considered to be classics in the field. Perhaps more than any other modern scholar, Gregory Vlastos was responsible for raising standards of research, analysis, and exposition in classical philosophy to new levels of excellence. His essays have served as paradigms of scholarship for several generations. Available for the first time in a comprehensive collection, these contributions reveal the author's ability to combine the skills of a philosopher, philologist, and historian of ideas in addressing some of the most difficult problems of ancient philosophy. Volume I collects Vlastos's essays on Presocratic philosophy. Wide-ranging concept studies link Greek science, religion, and politics with philosophy. Individual studies illuminate the thought of major philosophers such as Heraclitus, Parmenides, Anaxagoras, and Democritus. A magisterial series of studies on Zeno of Elea reveals the author's power in source criticism and logical analysis. Volume II contains essays on the thought of Socrates, Plato, and later thinkers and essays dealing with ethical, social, and political issues as well as metaphysics, science, and the foundations of mathematics.
£52.20
Harvard University Press Greek Thought: A Guide to Classical Knowledge
Ancient Greek thought is the essential wellspring from which the intellectual, ethical, and political civilization of the West draws and to which, even today, we repeatedly return. In more than sixty essays by an international team of scholars, this volume explores the full breadth and reach of Greek thought--investigating what the Greeks knew as well as what they thought about what they knew, and what they believed, invented, and understood about the conditions and possibilities of knowing. Calling attention to the characteristic reflexivity of Greek thought, the analysis in this book reminds us of what our own reflections owe to theirs.In sections devoted to philosophy, politics, the pursuit of knowledge, major thinkers, and schools of thought, this work shows us the Greeks looking at themselves, establishing the terms for understanding life, language, production, and action. The authors evoke not history, but the stories the Greeks told themselves about history; not their poetry, but their poetics; not their speeches, but their rhetoric. Essays that survey political, scientific, and philosophical ideas, such as those on Utopia and the Critique of Politics, Observation and Research, and Ethics; others on specific fields from Astronomy and History to Mathematics and Medicine; new perspectives on major figures, from Anaxagoras to Zeno of Elea; studies of core traditions from the Milesians to the various versions of Platonism: together these offer a sense of the unquenchable thirst for knowledge that marked Greek civilization--and that Aristotle considered a natural and universal trait of humankind. With thirty-two pages of color illustrations, this work conveys the splendor and vitality of the Greek intellectual adventure.
£77.36
Hackett Publishing Co, Inc The Handbook (The Encheiridion)
From the Introduction: "Stoic philosophy, of which Epictetus (c. a.d. 50–130) is a representative, began as a recognizable movement around 300 b.c. Its founder was Zeno of Cytium (not to be confused with Zeno of Elea, who discovered the famous paradoxes). He was born in Cyprus about 336 b.c., but all of his philosophical activity took place in Athens. For more than 500 years Stoicism was one of the most influential and fruitful philosophical movements in the Graeco-Roman world. The works of the earlier Stoics survive only in fragmentary quotations from other authors, but from the Renaissance until well into the nineteenth century, Stoic ethical thought was one of the most important ancient influences on European ethics, particularly because of the descriptions of it by Cicero, through surviving works by the Stoics Seneca, Marcus Aurelius, and also Epictetus--and also because of the effect that it had had in antiquity, and continued to have into the nineteenth century, on Christian ethical views. Nowadays an undergraduate or graduate student learning about ancient philosophy in a university course may well hear only about Plato and Aristotle, along perhaps with the presocratics; but in the history of Western thought and education this situation is somewhat atypical, and in most periods a comparable student would have learned as much or more about Stoicism, as well as two other major ancient philosophical movements, Epicureanism and Scepticism. In spite of this lack of explicit acquaintance with Stoic philosophers and their works, however, most students will recognize in Epictetus various ideas that are familiar through their effects on other thinkers, notably Spinoza, in our intellectual tradition."
£25.19
Princeton University Press Studies in Greek Philosophy, Volume II: Socrates, Plato, and Their Tradition
Gregory Vlastos (1907-1991) was one of the twentieth century's most influential scholars of ancient philosophy. Over a span of more than fifty years, he published essays and book reviews that established his place as a leading authority on early Greek philosophy. The two volumes that comprise Studies in Greek Philosophy include nearly forty contributions by this acknowledged master of the philosophical essay. Many of these pieces are now considered to be classics in the field. Perhaps more than any other modern scholar, Gregory Vlastos was responsible for raising standards of research, analysis, and exposition in classical philosophy to new levels of excellence. His essays have served as paradigms of scholarship for several generations. Available for the first time in a comprehensive collection, these contributions reveal the author's ability to combine the skills of a philosopher, philologist, and historian of ideas in addressing some of the most difficult problems of ancient philosophy. Volume I collects Vlastos's essays on Presocratic philosophy. Wide-ranging concept studies link Greek science, religion, and politics with philosophy. Individual studies illuminate the thought of major philosophers such as Heraclitus, Parmenides, Anaxagoras, and Democritus. A magisterial series of studies on Zeno of Elea reveals the author's power in source criticism and logical analysis. Volume II contains essays on the thought of Socrates, Plato, and later thinkers and essays dealing with ethical, social, and political issues as well as metaphysics, science, and the foundations of mathematics.
£52.20
Hackett Publishing Co, Inc The Handbook (The Encheiridion)
From the Introduction: "Stoic philosophy, of which Epictetus (c. a.d. 50–130) is a representative, began as a recognizable movement around 300 b.c. Its founder was Zeno of Cytium (not to be confused with Zeno of Elea, who discovered the famous paradoxes). He was born in Cyprus about 336 b.c., but all of his philosophical activity took place in Athens. For more than 500 years Stoicism was one of the most influential and fruitful philosophical movements in the Graeco-Roman world. The works of the earlier Stoics survive only in fragmentary quotations from other authors, but from the Renaissance until well into the nineteenth century, Stoic ethical thought was one of the most important ancient influences on European ethics, particularly because of the descriptions of it by Cicero, through surviving works by the Stoics Seneca, Marcus Aurelius, and also Epictetus--and also because of the effect that it had had in antiquity, and continued to have into the nineteenth century, on Christian ethical views. Nowadays an undergraduate or graduate student learning about ancient philosophy in a university course may well hear only about Plato and Aristotle, along perhaps with the presocratics; but in the history of Western thought and education this situation is somewhat atypical, and in most periods a comparable student would have learned as much or more about Stoicism, as well as two other major ancient philosophical movements, Epicureanism and Scepticism. In spite of this lack of explicit acquaintance with Stoic philosophers and their works, however, most students will recognize in Epictetus various ideas that are familiar through their effects on other thinkers, notably Spinoza, in our intellectual tradition."
£9.37