Cargando…

Greek writers and philosophers in Philo and Josephus : a study of their secular education and educational ideals /

In Greek Writers and Philosophers in Philo and Josephus Erkki Koskenniemi investigates how two Jewish writers, Philo and Josephus, quoted, mentioned and referred to Greek writers and philosophers. He asks what this tells us about their Greek education, their contacts with Classical culture in genera...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Koskenniemi, Erkki (Autor)
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Boston : Brill, [2019].
Colección:Studies in Philo of Alexandria ; Volume 9.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Intro; ‎Contents; ‎Preface; ‎Chapter 1. Introduction; ‎1. The Task of the Study; ‎2. A Brief History of the Research; ‎3. The Outline of Graeco-Roman Education; ‎4. A More Precise Definition of the Task; ‎Chapter 2. Philo: Offspring from Sarah and Hagar; ‎1. Introduction; ‎2. Philo and Greek Writers; ‎2.1. Introduction; ‎2.2. Philo, Poets and Dramatists; ‎2.2.1. Greek Poets; ‎2.2.1.1. Homer; ‎2.2.1.2. Hesiod; ‎2.2.1.3. Solon; ‎2.2.1.4. Theognis; ‎2.2.1.5. Pindaros; ‎2.2.1.6. Unidentified Poets; ‎2.2.1.7. Poets in General; ‎2.2.2. Classical Drama; ‎2.2.2.1. Aeschylus; ‎2.2.2.2. Sophocles
  • ‎2.2.2.3. Euripides‎2.2.2.4. Ion; ‎2.2.2.5. Epicharmus; ‎2.2.2.6. Menander; ‎2.2.2.7. Theatre in General; ‎2.2.3. Summary; ‎2.3. Philo and Philosophers; ‎2.3.1. Pre-Socratic Philosophers; ‎2.3.1.1. The Seven Sages in General; ‎2.3.1.2. Bias; ‎2.3.1.3. Thales and Other Natural Philosophers; ‎2.3.1.4. Solon; ‎2.3.1.5. Pythagoras and the (Neo)Pythagoreans; ‎2.3.1.6. Zeno the Eleatic; ‎2.3.1.7. Heraclitus; ‎2.3.1.8. The Sophists; ‎2.3.1.9. Anaxagoras; ‎2.3.1.10. Democritus; ‎2.3.1.11. Empedocles; ‎2.3.2. Socrates and Plato; ‎2.3.2.1. Socrates; ‎2.3.2.2. Plato
  • ‎2.3.3. Aristotle and the Peripatetic School‎2.3.4. The Socratic Schools and Hellenistic Schools; ‎2.3.4.1. Cynics; ‎2.3.4.2. The Hedonists / the Cyreneans; ‎2.3.4.3. Epicurus and the Epicureans; ‎2.3.4.4. Stoics; ‎2.3.4.5. Sceptics; ‎2.3.5. Other Greek Philosophers; ‎2.3.6. Exotic Philosophers; ‎2.3.7. Summary; ‎2.4. Other Writers Cited; ‎2.5. Conclusion; ‎3. Philo's Educational Ideals and His Own Witness; ‎4. Jews and the Secular Education in Alexandria; ‎5. Conclusion; ‎Chapter 3. Josephus: It Is Difficult to Transplant an Old Tree; ‎1. Introduction; ‎2. Josephus and Greek Writers
  • ‎2.1. Introduction‎2.2. Josephus and Poets; ‎2.2.1. Homer; ‎2.2.2. Hesiod; ‎2.2.3. Choerilus; ‎2.2.4. Theodectes; ‎2.2.5. Allusions to Poets?; ‎2.2.6. Summary; ‎2.3. Josephus and Philosophers; ‎2.3.1. Pre-Socratic Philosophers; ‎2.3.2. Socrates and Plato; ‎2.3.3. Aristotle and the Peripatetics; ‎2.3.4. The Epicureans; ‎2.3.5. The Stoics; ‎2.3.6. Other Philosophers; ‎2.3.7. Summary; ‎2.4. Josephus and Historians; ‎2.4.1. Cadmus of Milet (6th Century B.C.E.) and Acusilaus of Argos (6th-5th Century B.C.E.); ‎2.4.2. Herodotus (c. 485-424B.C.E.); ‎2.4.3. Thucydides (c. 460-after 404)
  • ‎2.4.4. Ephorus (c. 400-330)‎2.4.5. Theopompus (378-c. 320B.C.E.), Polycrates (Fourth Century B.C.E.) and Timaeus (352-245B.C.E.); ‎2.4.6. Megasthenes (c. 300-290B.C.E.); ‎2.4.7. Hecataeus of Abdera (c. 300B.C.E.), Pseudo-Hecataeus (I-III); ‎2.4.8. Berosus (c. 290B.C.E.); ‎2.4.9. Manetho (c. 285B.C.E.); ‎2.4.10. Hieronymus of Cardia (c. 360-265B.C.E.); ‎2.4.11. Menander (c. 200B.C.E.); ‎2.4.12. Lysimachus (after 150B.C.E.); ‎2.4.13. Polybius (c. 199-120B.C.E.); ‎2.4.14. Agatharchides (Second Century B.C.E.); ‎2.4.15. Dius (Second Century B.C.E.?)