Centre Louis Gernet: Bibliothèque Translate this page eudemus of rhodes / ed. by Istvan Bodnar, William M. Fortenbaugh.- New Brunswick,NJ Transaction Publishers, 2002.- 24 cm., IX-383 p.- Notes bibliogr http://www.ehess.fr/centres/gernet/BIBLIOTHEQUE.html
Extractions: Centre Louis Gernet : Bibliothèque et documentation Responsable : Rosine Adda. Domaines couverts - littérature antique grecque et romaine - histoire et anthropologie politique, sociale et religieuse du monde antique - géographie du monde antique - recherches sur les secteurs de la culture : textes, images, objets et spécialement iconographie (céramique grecque) - analyse des savoirs modernes sur l'antiquité, épistémologie et historiographie - histoire de l'archéologie Fonds : 16 000 volumes; abonnement à 25 périodiques ; 9 CDROM ; 7500 tirés à part. Libre accès Fichier FRANTIQ : Réservé : étudiants avancés (DEA et thèses) sur demande d'un enseignant, chercheurs. Services : Photocopie Heures d'ouverture - Lundi : 10h00 - 18h00 - Mardi : 10h00 - 13h00, 14h00 - 18h00 - Mercredi : 10h00 - 13h00, 14h00 - 17h00 - Jeudi : 10h00 - 13h00, 14h00 - 18h00 - Vendredi : 10h00 - 18h00 Pour tout renseignement adda@ehess.fr Nouvelles acquisitions Janvier 2003 COTE A / ARCHEOLOGIE 8°A DEMOULE Méthodes - Studien zur unteritalischen Vasenmalerei / Konrad Schauenburg.- Kiel : Ludwig, 1999.- 27 cm., 3 vol., 109 p., 152 p., 167 p., ill.- Index.- ISBN : 3-933598-05-2/3-933598-11-7/3-933598-12-5 4°A SCHAUENBURG Vasenmalerei (1-2-3) - The Parthenon frieze / Jenifer Neils.- Cambridge : Cambridge Univ. press., 2001.- 27 cm., XIX-294 p., ill., + 1 f. de dépl., 1 CD-ROM.- Bibliogr.- ISBN : 0-521-64161-6
BMCR-L: BMCR 2003.02.06, BMCR Books Received (January) $65.00. ISBN 08071-2830-9. *Bodna/r, Istva/n and William W. Fortenbaugh (edd.),eudemus of rhodes. Rutgers University Studies in Classical Humanities, XI. http://omega.cohums.ohio-state.edu:8080/hyper-lists/bmcr-l/2003/0042.html
Extractions: BMCR Books Received (January). Titles marked by an asterisk are available for review. Qualified volunteers should indicate their interest by REPLY to this message, stating their qualifications (both in the sense of degrees held and in the sense of experience in the field concerned) and explaining any previous relationship with the author. Allen, Danielle S., The World of Prometheus. The Politics of Punishing in Democratic Athens. First published in 2000. First Paperback edition. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2003. Pp. 449. $18.95 (pb). ISBN 0-691-09489-6. Ameling, Walter (ed.), Ma+rtyrer und Ma+rtyrerakten. Altertumswissenschaftliches Kolloquium 6. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag, 2002. EUR 44.00. ISBN 3-515-08234-4. *Amery, Colin and Brian Curran, Jr., The Lost World of Pompeii.
New Library Materials In Call Number Order University Press of America, c2002. Books B528 .B29 2002. eudemus of rhodesNew Brunswick, NJ Transaction Publishers, c2002. Books B577.E54 E93 2002. http://www.lib.cmich.edu/recacq/octrecacq.htm
Diane's Mathematics Page 1999 last accessed 29 Jul 2002 Euclid's Plan and Proposition 6 2000 last accessed29 Jul 2002 eudemus of rhodes University of St Andrews, Scotland 1999 last http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Academy/9468/mathematics.htm
PHILTAR - Compendium Of Philosophers/E and thought. Euclides (c430360 BC) A brief introduction to his lifeand work. eudemus of rhodes (c350-c290 BC) An introduction to http://philtar.ucsm.ac.uk/compendium_of_philosophers/e/
Extractions: Links to materials by and/or about over a thousand philosophers from thousands of years from all over the world from A to Z This compendium contains entries large and small, single or multiple, on hundreds of philosophers. Links vary in size from a few lines of biography to the whole of the Summa Theologica. Sometimes you are directed to a site which has further links. In that case there is no guarantee that all the further links will work, but enough work to make a visit worthwhile. This compendium does not provide links to philosophers own home pages. A list of them can be found here A B C ... Z Eck, Johann (1486-1543) An introduction to his life and work
Peter Fosl's Philosophical Chronology mid 4th century BCE) eudemus of rhodes (4th century BCE) Mencius (Master Meng) (Mengtzu)(371 - 289 BCE) Crantor (fl. early 2nd century BCE) Theophrastus ( ? http://www.transy.edu/homepages/philosophy/chronology.html
Ancientsyllbs.htm fl. mid 4th century BCE) eudemus of rhodes (4th century BCE) Mencius(Master Meng) (Mengtzu) (371 - 289 BCE) Crantor (fl. early http://www.transy.edu/homepages/philosophy/ancientsyllbs.htm
Extractions: Lexington, Kentucky TTH 1:30-4:30 and by apptmt. Course Description: This course will examine some of the principal theories developed by ancient philosophers. Through a careful reading of a few of that period's most important philosophical works, we will attempt to reconstruct the arguments, doctrines, and principles composing the thought of each author under examination. A sustained attempt will also be undertaken to place each philosopher's work in its proper intellectual and historical context
Philosophy - Notable Lib Materials - September PUBLISHER, DATE Rowman Littlefield, 2002 CALL /LOCATION B2430 .D483 H8613 2002Columbia Cooper eudemus of rhodes AUTHOR Bodnar, Istvan M. PUBLISHER, DATE http://www.sc.edu/library/lis/phil09.html
Notable Lib Materials By Author - September for Romanian Studies, 2002 CALL /LOCATION ND3380.4 .M44 B64 2002 Columbia CooperSUBJECT Art Bodnar, Istvan M. TITLE eudemus of rhodes PUBLISHER, DATE http://www.sc.edu/library/lis/auth09.html
Extractions: Khan, Muhammad Akram, TITLE: Framed : trumped up as an Indian spy PUBLISHER, DATE: Muhammad Akram Khan, 2002 CALL #/LOCATION: DS385 .K518 A3 2002 Columbia Cooper SUBJECT: History ÛAbd al-Wali, Muhammad. TITLE: They die strangers PUBLISHER, DATE: Center for Middle Eastern Studies the University of Te, 2001 CALL #/LOCATION: PJ7804 .W35 A6 2001 Columbia Cooper SUBJECT: History A.M. Best Company. TITLE: Bests insurance reports Property-casualty, United States. VOLUME: 2002:v.1 2002:v.2 PUBLISHER, DATE: A.M. Best Co., 1994 CALL #/LOCATION: HG9655 .B5 Columbia Business SUBJECT: Business Administration A.M. Best Company. TITLE: Bests insurance reports Life-health. VOLUME: 2002:v.1 2002:v.2 PUBLISHER, DATE: A.M. Best Co., 1994 CALL #/LOCATION: HG8943 .B3 Columbia Business SUBJECT: Business Administration Abbott, Chris, TITLE: Special educational needs and the Internet : issues for the inclusive class PUBLISHER, DATE: RoutledgeFalmer, 2002 CALL #/LOCATION: LC4024 .S63 2002 Columbia Cooper SUBJECT: Education Abdo-Zubi, Nahla
New Books, Videos, & Microforms In Philosophy/Religion eudemus of rhodes / edited by Istvan Bodnar, William M. Fortenbaugh. NewBrunswick, NJ Transaction Publishers, c2002. ix, 383 p. ; 24 cm. http://www.library.unlv.edu/newstuff/october.2002/philos.html
Www.infomotions.com/serials/bmcr/bmcr-v4n01-white-aristotle.txt Eudemian Ethics. Ninety years ago, many scholars ascribed the worknot to Aristotle but to his colleague, eudemus of rhodes. But as http://www.infomotions.com/serials/bmcr/bmcr-v4n01-white-aristotle.txt
Hipponotes.html court of the Persian king. 6. eudemus of rhodes (350?BCE290?BCE)was the first historian of mathematics. He was a fellow student http://cerebro.cs.xu.edu/math/math147/02f/hippocrates/hipponotes.html
Extractions: 1. The geometer Hippocrates of Chios is sometimes confused with a contemporary of his, the famous physician Hippocrates of Cos , for whom the Hippocratic Oath is named. Not much is known about him past what is read here. He was an accomplished geometer, but was thought to have been otherwise simple-minded. A more detailed biography can be found here 2. John Philoponus, also called Grammaticus, was a sixth century (AD) scholar of philosophy (and a Christian theologian) who studied the texts of Greek philosophers, especially Aristotle, and wrote commentaries on them. A native of Alexandria in Egypt, he comes at the end of the period of Greek progress in the sciences. 3. A lune is a figure bounded by two circular arcs. The term is very descriptive of the resulting shape. 4. We will analyze in detail Hippocrates' quadrature of a lune below. It is enough now to understand the sentiment alluded to in this portion of the text. For the first time, someone had determined the area of a figure with curved sidesin fact, circular sidesand it was thought that the techniques used for the quadrature of the lune might lead to the quadrature of the circle. Simplicius was another sixth century commentator on early Greek texts, notably on the work of Aristotle and Euclid. He was born in Cilicia, a Roman province in modern-day Turkey, studied in Athens at the Academy that Plato had instituted centuries earlier, and served for a time in the court of the Persian king.
Symmetry It is hard to say how the detailed knowledge of Thales' geometrical studies waspreserved, but it is nevertheless a fact that eudemus of rhodes, a pupil of http://teachertech.rice.edu/Participants/rjesus/
Extractions: Thales and Geometry Thales is the founder of Greek geometry. 41 This statement implies not only that he introduced geometrical studies into Greek usage, but also that he founded Greek geometry with its striking specificity. According to the evidence of Proclus (who used Eudemus's book systematically), Thales proved that the circle is halved by its diameter; he found out and stated that the angles at the base of an isosceles triangle are equal; and he discovered the theorem of the equality of vertical angles and that of the equality of triangles with equal bases and adjoining angles (11A20 DK). In the two latter cases there are direct references to Eudemus (frag. 135, 134 Wehrli). [End Page 404] There are no grounds for believing that tradition has preserved all of Thales' achievements. Thus, according to Pamphila's evidence quoted by Diogenes Laertius (D.L.1.24), but naturally absent from Proclus's commentary on the first book of Euclid's Elements, Thales also inscribed a right-angled triangle in a circle. A. I. Zaitsev defines Thales' achievements as a "real revolution in the forms of human cognition," to wit: "first, Thales realized the necessity or at least the desirability of proving geometrical statements that seemed self-evident, and second, he gave those proofs." Now we may ask, why did Thales (unlike the Egyptians and Babylonians) begin to prove theorems? "The first mathematical proofs," Zaitsev writes, "were the natural fruit of a social climate where the discovery of a new truth not only gave an immediate satisfaction but could also bring fame. For it is clear that in these conditions, mathematical truths confirmed with proof became a particularly attractive object of search; one who found a faultless proof could as a rule count on public recognition, while the achievements in any other field of knowledge could as a rule be disputed." 42
THEOPOMPUS his own removal to Chalcis. eudemus of rhodes also had some claims to thisposition, and Aristoxenus is said to have resented Aristotles choice. http://91.1911encyclopedia.org/T/TH/THEOPOMPUS.htm
Extractions: 1897); and authorities under ROMAN EMPIRE, LATER. On the early campaigns against the Arabs see J. B. Bury, in Journ. Hell. Stud. xxix., 1909, pt. i. From the lists of the ancients it appears that the activity of Theophrastus extended over the whole field of contemporary knowledge. His writing probably differed little from the Aristotelian treatment of the same themes, though supplementary in details (see PERIPATETICS). He served his age mainly as a great popularizer of science. The most important of his books are two large botanical treatises, On the History of Plants, in nine books (originally ten), and On the Causes of Plants, in six books (originally eight), which constitute the most important contribution to botanical science during antiquity and the middle ages. We also possess in fragments a History of Physics, a treatise On Stones, and a work On Sensation, and certain metaphysical Airoptai, which probably once formed part of a systematic treatise. Various smaller scientific fragments have been collected in the editions of J. G. Schneider (181821) and F. Wimmer (184262) and in Useners Analecta Theophrastea. The Ethical Characters (HOucoi ,c~paicr,iass) deserves a separate mention. The work consists of brief, vigorous and trenchant delineations of moral types, which contain a most valuable picture of the life of his time. They form the first recorded attempt at systematic character writing. The book has been regarded by some as an independent work; others incline to the view that the sketches were written from time to time by Theophrastus, and collected and edited after his death; others, again, regard the Characters as part of a larger systematic work, but the style of the book is against this. Theophrastus has found many imitators in this kind of writing, notably Hall (1608), Sir Thomas Overbury (161416), Bishop Earle (1628) and La Bruyhre (1688), who also translated the Characters.
The Dying God invocations. This is again confirmed by eudemus of rhodes. But Heccataeusrelates that according to them the gods are subject to birth. http://www.thedyinggod.com/diogenes.htm
Extractions: CHALDEAN MAGI There are some who say that the study of philosophy had its beginning among the barbarians. They urge that the Persians have had their Magi, the Babylonians or Assyrians their Chaldeans, and the Indians their Gymnosophists; and among the Celts and Gauls there are the people called Druids or Holy Ones, for which they cite as authorities the Magicus of Aristotle and Sotion in the twenty-third book of his Succession of Philosophers. Also they say that Mochus was a Phoenician, Zalmoxis a Thracian, and Atlas a Lybian. If we may believe the Egyptians, Hephaestus was the son of the Nile, and with him philosophy began, priests and prophets being its chief exponents. Hephaestus lived 48,863 years before Alexander of Macedon, and in the interval there occurred 373 solar and 832 lunar eclipses. The date of the Magians, beginning with Zoroaster the Persian, was 5000 years before the fall of Troy, as given by Hermodorus the Platonist in his work on mathematics; but Xanthus the Lydian reckons 6000 years from Zoroaster to the expedition of Xerxes, and after that event he places a long line of Magians in succession, bearing the names of Ostanes, Astrampsychos, Gobryas, and Pazatas, down to the conquest of Persia by Alexander. These authors forget that the achievements which they attributed to the barbarians belong to the Greeks, with whom not merely philosophy but the human race itself began. For instance, Musaeus is claimed by Athens, Linus by Thebes. It is said that the former, the son of Eumolpus, was the first to compose a genealogy of the gods and to construct a sphere, and that the maintained that all things proceed from unity and are resolved again into unity. He died at Phelerum, and this is his epitath:
William Rhode Discussion eudemus of rhodes (Rutgers University Studies in Classical Humanities,11) by Bodnar, Istvan Released 07/2002. Discussion william rhode http://www.gnooks.com/discussion/william rhode.html
English Books > Philosophy > Logic 0300062125 Ethics In Community Mental Health Care Commonplace Concerns Backlar,Patricia; Hardback; Book ISBN 0306467046 eudemus of rhodes Bodnar, Istvan http://book.netstoreusa.com/index/bkbph100D.shtml
Extractions: First page Prev Next Last page ... Decision Making: Its Logic and Practice Roth, Byron M. Mullen, John D. Hardback; Book; ; ISBN: 0847676196 Decision Theory as Philosophy Kaplan, Mark Paperback; ; ISBN: 0521624967 Decisions and Revisions Levi, Isaac Hardback; Book; ; ISBN: 0521254574 Deductive Logic Leblanc, Hugues Wisdom, William A. Hardback; Book; ; ISBN: 0132038528 Defeasible Deontic Logic Hardback; Book; ; ISBN: 0792346300 Definition of the Thing Miller, John William Hardback; Book; ; ISBN: 0393013774 Demonstrative Sense Bozickovic, Vojislav (School of History, Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia) Hardback; Book; ; ISBN: 1859722733 Deontic Logic: Introductory and Systematic Readings Hardback; Book; ; ISBN: 9027701679 Deontic Logic: Introductory and Systematic Readings Risto Hilpinen (University of Turku, Finland and University of Miami, USA) Paperback; ; ISBN: 9027713022 Descriptive Mysteries Albertus, Karen et al Paperback;
Apollonius While Apollonius was at Pergamum he met Eudemus of Pergamum (not to be confusedwith eudemus of rhodes who wrote the History of Geometry ) and also Attalus http://www.math.hcmuns.edu.vn/~algebra/history/history/Mathematicians/Apollonius