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Plato. --- Dialogues, Greek --- Greek dialogues --- Greek literature --- History and criticism --- Alcibiades --- Plato --- Aflāṭūn --- Aplaton --- Bolatu --- Platon, --- Platonas --- Platone --- Po-la-tʻu --- Pʻŭllatʻo --- Pʻŭllatʻon --- Pʻuratʻon --- Πλάτων --- אפלטון --- פלאטא --- פלאטאן --- פלאטו --- أفلاطون --- 柏拉圖 --- 플라톤 --- Alkibiades --- Alcibiade --- Alkibiad --- Criticism and interpretation. --- Spurious and doubtful works. --- Alcibiades 2. --- Alkiviadēs B' --- Alcibiades two --- Alcibiades II --- Zweite Alkibiades --- Alkibiades II --- Second Alcibiades --- Ἀλκιβιάδης δεύτερος --- Alkibiadēs deuteros --- Περὶ προσευχῆς --- Peri proseuchēs --- Platon --- Platoon --- Платон --- プラトン
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Wie die meisten unechten platonischen Schriften ist der Alkibiades II unzureichend erforscht. Die vorliegenden Untersuchungen zum pseudoplatonischen Alkibiades II enthalten umfangreiche Quellenforschungen, durch die die philosophischen Vorstellungen, die dem Werk zugrunde liegen, als die des Antisthenes erwiesen werden. Dabei werden neben den Memorabilien weitere philosophische Schriften des Xenophon und andere pseudoplatonische Dialoge in den Blick genommen, die in einzelnen Abschnitten dieselben Quellen wie der Alkibiades II zu verwenden scheinen. Im Alkibiades II werden einerseits Schriften des 4. Jh. v. Chr. (Platon, Antisthenes) als Quellen verwandt, andererseits wird gegen die Stoa des Zenon von Kition und den Peripatos der damaligen Zeit als zeitgenössische philosophische Konkurrenten polemisiert. Der pseudoplatonische Dialog ordnet sich auf Grund seiner Polemik und seines spezifischen Umgangs mit der philosophischen Protreptik in die Akademie z.Zt. des Polemon ein. Anhand seiner Struktur wird das Werk als ein sokratischer Alkibiades-Dialog verstanden. So ist sein Titel "Alkibiades" erklärbar.
Dialogues, Greek --- Greek dialogues --- Greek literature --- History and criticism. --- Plato. --- Alcibiades --- Alkibiades --- Alcibiade --- Alkibiad --- Platon --- Plato --- Aflāṭūn --- Aplaton --- Bolatu --- Platonas --- Platone --- Po-la-tʻu --- Pʻŭllatʻo --- Pʻŭllatʻon --- Pʻuratʻon --- Πλάτων --- אפלטון --- פלאטא --- פלאטאן --- פלאטו --- أفلاطون --- 柏拉圖 --- 플라톤 --- Платон --- プラトン --- Criticism and interpretation. --- Alcibiades 2. --- Alkiviadēs B' --- Alcibiades two --- Alcibiades II --- Zweite Alkibiades --- Alkibiades II --- Second Alcibiades --- Ἀλκιβιάδης δεύτερος --- Alkibiadēs deuteros --- Περὶ προσευχῆς --- Peri proseuchēs --- Academy at the Time of Polemon. --- Antisthenes. --- Prayer. --- Pseudo-Plato Alkibiades II. --- Socratic Alkibiades Dialogue.
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This volume makes available to the modern reader selected writings of Thomas Taylor, the eighteenth-century English Platonist. TO Taylor we are indebted for the first full translation into English of Plato and Aristotle. Platonism, as Taylor saw it, was an informing principle, transmitted through a "golden chain of philosophers," a doctrine received by Socrates and Plato from the Orphic and Pythagorean past and transmitted to the future. It emerged again and again, enriched in the School of Alexandria, in Renaissance art, in the works of Spenser, Shelley, Yeats. Kathleen Raine is well known as a poet. GEorge Mills Harper is Professor of English, University of Florida. Bollingen Series LXXXVIII.Originally published in 1969.The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make available previously out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press. These editions preserve the original texts of these important books while presenting them in durable paperback and hardcover editions. The goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly increase access to the rich scholarly heritage found in the thousands of books published by Princeton University Press since its founding in 1905.
Philosophy. --- Alchemy. --- Allegory. --- Antithesis. --- Apuleius. --- Aristotle. --- Arnobius. --- Asclepius. --- Baconian method. --- Cambridge Platonists. --- Carthusians. --- Chaldean Oracles. --- Charmides (dialogue). --- Classicism. --- Claudian. --- Cratylus (dialogue). --- Cupid and Psyche. --- Democrates. --- Democritus. --- Dionysian Mysteries. --- Divine law. --- Eleusinian Mysteries. --- Epithet. --- Erudition. --- Explanation. --- First principle. --- Form of life (philosophy). --- George Meredith. --- Hegelianism. --- Henry Fuseli. --- Henry More. --- Hermetica. --- Hippias. --- Horace Walpole. --- Idealism. --- Isaac Casaubon. --- John Flaxman. --- Kabbalah. --- Kathleen Raine. --- Muse. --- Necromancy. --- Neoplatonism. --- Onomacritus. --- Oracle. --- Orphism (religion). --- Pandarus. --- Parmenides. --- Perennial philosophy. --- Phaedo. --- Phaedrus (dialogue). --- Phidias. --- Philosopher. --- Philosophy of mind. --- Plato. --- Platonic Academy. --- Platonic Theology (Ficino). --- Platonic idealism. --- Platonism. --- Plotinus. --- Poetry. --- Polytheism. --- Positivism. --- Pre-Socratic philosophy. --- Profanum. --- Prudentius. --- Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite. --- Pythagoreanism. --- Ralph Cudworth. --- Ralph Waldo Emerson. --- René Guénon. --- Republic (Plato). --- Romanticism. --- Ronald B. Levinson. --- Samuel Palmer. --- Samuel Taylor Coleridge. --- Scholasticism. --- Second Alcibiades. --- Sophist (dialogue). --- Spirituality. --- Stephen MacKenna. --- Stoicism. --- Superiority (short story). --- Supplication. --- Synesius. --- Syrianus. --- The Dissertation. --- The Hermetic Tradition. --- The Philosopher. --- The Soul of the World. --- The Transcendentalist. --- Theology. --- Theory. --- Theosophy. --- Thomas Love Peacock. --- Thomas Wentworth Higginson. --- Timaeus (dialogue). --- Transcendentalism. --- Treatise. --- Tyrtaeus. --- Writing.
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