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Empedocles’ Persika

Ancient Philosophy 2 (2):76-78 (1982)

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  1. Putting Fragments in Their Places: The Lost Works by Empedocles.Carlo Santaniello - 2022 - Elenchos: Rivista di Studi Sul Pensiero Antico 43 (2):197-228.
    The author deals with the lost works of Empedocles, an often neglected subject, in the frame of the discussion concerning the number of the poems and their main features. He reviews the traces of the Passage of Xerxes, of the Medical Discourse, and of the Proem to Apollo among the fragments and witnesses, taking his cue from textual aspects and dealing with the contents, the significance of each of these writings in Empedocles’ culture and thought and their multifarious relationships with (...)
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  • Θεός, Δαίμων, Φρὴν Ἱερή: Empedocles and the Divine.Carlo Santaniello - 2012 - Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 75 (3):301.
    L'auteur analyse d'abord la relation entre Theos et Daimôn dans le Poème Physique et dans les Purifications. Dans le premier, Empédocle appelle theoi le Sphairos et les éléments. Précisément, le philosophe d'Acragas appelle le Sphairos tout simplement theos. Pourtant, il appelle les éléments theoi dolichaiônes, alors qu'ils forment quatre masses séparées et avant qu'ils ne se mêlent pour constituer les « choses mortelles »; tandis que, lorsqu'ils se mêlent et abandonnent la condition de pureté pour créer un composé, il les (...)
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  • Hermarchus, Against Empedocles.Dirk Obbink - 1988 - Classical Quarterly 38 (02):428-.
    The standard histories give notice of a polemical treatise entitled Letters on Empedocles, 'Eπιστολικ. περ'Eμπεδοκλους in twenty two books by Hermarchus, Epicurus' favourite pupil and successor. The work survives in some twenty fragments of more than probable ascription. The most important of these is an extensive extract preserved by Porphyry at De Abstinentia 1.7–12 on the origin in human history of justice, homicide law, and expiatory purifications, which has been the subject of much discussion. Porphyry himself never names the title (...)
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  • A New Empedocles? Implications of the Strasburg Fragments for Presocratic Philosophy.Patricia Curd - 2002 - Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium of Ancient Philosophy 17 (1):27-59.