Pythagoras and Heraclitus developed theories of the universe and mankind’s place in it which were taken seriously by all later Greek thinkers. None of their works remains, however, except in later paraphrases that all too often are misrepresentations. Pythagoras had followers who attributed their own ideas to their master; Heraclitus wrote in a prose style so ambiguous that he came to be known as the Shadow, so that even the most earnest attempts to paraphrase his views had to smooth out his intentional rough edges. Nonetheless, enough remains to allow the authors of this volume, edited by David Sider and Dirk Obbink (Oxford), to offer new ways of viewing their views and the way others perceived them. The contributors are Gábor Betegh (Budapest), Roman Dilcher (Heidelberg), Aryeh Finkelberg (Tel Aviv), Daniel Graham (Brigham Young University), Herbert Granger (Wayne State University), Carl Huffman (DePauw), Enrique Hülsz Piccone (Mexico City), Anthony Long (Berkeley), Richard McKirahan (Pomona), Catherine Rowett (East Anglia), David Sider (New York), and Leonid Zhmud (St. Petersberg).
Author(s): David Sider, Dirk Obbink
Series: Sozomena, 14
Publisher: De Gruyter
Year: 2013
Language: English
Pages: 360
City: Berlin
I. Pythagoras
1. Philosophy’s Numerical Turn: Why the Pythagoreans’ Interest in Numbers is Truly Awesome
2. Pythagorean Communities: From Individuals to a Collective Portrait
3. Aristotle on the Pythagoreans: His Sources and his Accounts of Pythagorean Principles
4. Philolaus’ Critique of Heraclitus
II. Heraclitus
5. Heraclitus, the Rival of Pythagoras
6. Early Natural Theology: The Purification of the Divine Nature
7. Heraclitus on Measure and the Explicit Emergence of Rationality
8. On the physical aspect of Heraclitus’ psychology: With New Appendices
9. How Not to Conceive Heraclitean Harmony
10. Heraclitus on Logos: Language, Rationality and the Real
11. Once More unto the Stream
12. Heraclitus’ Ethics
Contributors
General Index
Index Locorum Potiorum