Results for 'Tim Whitmarsh'

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  1.  43
    Alexander’s Hellenism and Plutarch’s textualism.Tim Whitmarsh - 2002 - Classical Quarterly 52 (1):174-192.
  2.  20
    The greek novel: Titles and genre.Tim Whitmarsh - 2005 - American Journal of Philology 126 (4):587-611.
    Were the Greek novels titled according to a consistent convention? This article confronts the view that the original titles were always historiographical in form (Assyriaka, Lesbiaka, Aithiopika, etc.) and that readers were thus steered to expect, in the first instance, realistic narrative. Examining the evidence in detail, it argues that the formula the novels were likeliest to have shared was ta kata + girl's name (or girl's + boy's names). On this basis, it is concluded that what the titles of (...)
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  3.  59
    The second sophistic.Tim Whitmarsh - 2005 - Oxford ;: Oxford University Press, published for the Classical Association.
    The 'Second Sophistic' is arguably the fastest-growing area in contemporary classical scholarship. This short, accessible account explores the various ways in which modern scholarship has approached one of the most extraordinary literary phenomena of antiquity, the dazzling oratorical culture of the Early Imperial period. Successive chapters deal with historical and cultural background, sophistic performance, technical treatises (including the issue of Atticism and Asianism), the concept of identity, and the wider impact of sophistic performance on major authors of the time, including (...)
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  4.  16
    An I for an I: reading fictional autobiography1.Tim Whitmarsh - 2013 - In Anna Marmodoro & Jonathan Hill (eds.), The Author's Voice in Classical and Late Antiquity. Oxford University Press. pp. 233.
    This chapter begins with Augustine of Hippo’s curious assumption, in The City of God, that in The Golden Ass the claim to have been transformed into a donkey was Apuleius’, rather than that of the fictional narrator, Lucius. Why should Augustine have made such a glaring error? The chapter argues that antiquity lacked a strong sense of ‘the narrator’. What we tend to call ‘first-person’, antiquity would have understood as ‘fictional autobiography’, in which the author illusionistically impersonates the narrating character.
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  5.  9
    Love and Providence: Recognition in the Ancient Novel by Silvia Montiglio.Tim Whitmarsh - 2015 - American Journal of Philology 136 (1):166-169.
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  6.  29
    L. Pernot: Éloges grecs de Rome. Pp. 199. Paris: Les Belles Lettres, 1997. ISBN: 2-251-33931-0.Tim Whitmarsh - 1998 - The Classical Review 48 (2):487-488.
  7.  25
    Melancholy, Love, and Time: Boundaries of the Self in Ancient Literature.Tim Whitmarsh - 2005 - American Journal of Philology 126 (2):281-294.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:...
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  8.  6
    Memories of Odysseus. Frontier Tales from Ancient Greece (Book).Tim Whitmarsh - 2003 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 123:217-218.
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  9.  2
    Theomachy and Theology in Early Greek Myth.Tim Whitmarsh - 2018 - Philosophie Antique 18:13-36.
    Cet article se penche sur la représentation de la famille des Éolides dans le Catalogue des femmes du pseudo-Hésiode. Les Éolides, qui apparaissent très tôt dans le cycle mythique (et de façon particulièrement proche de la phase originelle de la vie humaine dans laquelle dieux et mortels ont été convives), présentent un cas remarquable de jalousie du divin. Ils cherchent en particulier à rivaliser avec la divinité en faisant usage d’artefacts humains : le langage, l’artisanat, le spectacle. Cette emphase sur (...)
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  10.  11
    The pseudo-Lucianic Nero: Greek and Roman in dialogue.Tim Whitmarsh - 1999 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 119:142-160.
  11.  20
    Allusive Apuleius.Tim Whitmarsh - 1999 - The Classical Review 49 (2):414-415.
  12.  18
    Domestic Poetics: Hippias' House in Achilles Tatius.Tim Whitmarsh - 2010 - Classical Antiquity 29 (2):327-348.
    Other Greek novels open in poleis, before swiftly shunting their protagonists out of them and into the adventure world. Why does Achilles Tatius' Leucippe and Clitophon open in a house , and stay there for almost one quarter of the novel? This article explores the cultural, psychological, and metaliterary role of the house in Achilles, reading it as a site of conflict between the dominant, patriarchal ideology of the father and the subversive intent of the young lovers. If the house (...)
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  13. Reading Power in Roman Greece: the.Tim Whitmarsh - forthcoming - Paideia.
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  14.  6
    Review. Plutarch's Lives. Exploring Virtue and Vice T. Duff.Tim Whitmarsh - 2001 - The Classical Review 51 (1):33-34.
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  15.  41
    Galen and the world of knowledge.Christopher Gill, Tim Whitmarsh & John Wilkins (eds.) - 2009 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This volume of new essays is based on a conference with the same title held at the University of Exeter in 2005. All those speaking on that occasion have written chapters in this volume, along with Riccardo Chiaradonna whose chapter has been specially prepared for the volume. The aim of this volume, like the conference on which it is based, is to contribute to the upsurge of new research on Galen by focusing on a topic that bridges the interests of (...)
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  16.  53
    Ordering Knowledge in the Roman Empire.Jason König & Tim Whitmarsh (eds.) - 2007 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    The Romans commanded the largest and most complex empire the world had ever seen, or would see until modern times. The challenges, however, were not just political, economic and military: Rome was also the hub of a vast information network, drawing in worldwide expertise and refashioning it for its own purposes. This fascinating collection of essays considers the dialogue between technical literature and imperial society, drawing on, developing and critiquing a range of modern cultural theories. How was knowledge shaped into (...)
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  17.  27
    Christian scribes K. Haines-Eitzen: Guardians of letters. Literacy, power, and the transmitters of early Christian literature . Pp. X + 212. Oxford: Oxford university press, 2000. Cased, £49.95. Isbn: 0-19-513564-. [REVIEW]Tim Whitmarsh - 2002 - The Classical Review 52 (01):87-.
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  18.  27
    Lucian. [REVIEW]Tim Whitmarsh - 1999 - The Classical Review 49 (2):372-375.
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  19.  23
    Fairy Tales. [REVIEW]Tim Whitmarsh - 2002 - The Classical Review 52 (1):34-36.
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  20.  29
    Fairy tales G. Anderson: Fairytale in the ancient world . Pp. XI + 240. London and new York: Routledge, 2000. Paper, £16.99. Isbn: 0-415-23703-. [REVIEW]Tim Whitmarsh - 2002 - The Classical Review 52 (01):34-.
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  21.  33
    Plutarch Remade T. Duff: Plutarch's Lives. Exploring Virtue and Vice. Pp. xx + 423. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1999. Cased, £55. ISBN: 0-19-815058-X. [REVIEW]Tim Whitmarsh - 2001 - The Classical Review 51 (01):33-.
  22.  49
    PAUSANIAS S. E. Alcock, J. F. Cherry, J. Elsner (edd.): Pausanias: Travel and Memory in Roman Greece . Pp. xii + 379, ills. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001. Cased, £49. ISBN: 0-19-512816-. [REVIEW]Tim Whitmarsh - 2002 - The Classical Review 52 (02):271-.
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  23.  33
    R. Bargheer: Die Gottesvorstellung Heliodors in den Aithopika. Pp. 187. Frankfurt am Main, etc.: Peter Lang, 1999. Paper, £35. ISBN: 3-631-33836-8. [REVIEW]Tim Whitmarsh - 2000 - The Classical Review 50 (1):291-292.
  24.  28
    Review. Phantasie und Lachkultur. Lukians 'Wahre Geschichten'. U Rutten\Lucian's Science Fiction Novel True Histories. Interpretation and Commentary. A Georgiadou\Untersuchungen zum Juppiter Confutatus Lukians. P Groblein. [REVIEW]Tim Whitmarsh - 1999 - The Classical Review 49 (2):372-375.
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  25.  34
    Varia Lucianea[REVIEW]Tim Whitmarsh - 2003 - The Classical Review 53 (1):75-78.
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  26.  39
    Varia lucianea A. camerotto: Le metamorfosi Della parola. Studi sulla parodia in Luciano di samosata . Pp. 349. Pisa and Rome: Istituti editoriali E poligrafici internazionali, 1998. Paper. Isbn: 88-8147-161-2. P. Von möllendorff: Lukian : Hermotimos, oder lohnt es sich, philosophie zu studieren? Pp. 226. Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche buchgesellschaft, 2000. Cased, dm 78. isbn: 3-534-14976-9. M. billerbeck, C. zubler: Das Lob der fliege Von Lukian bis L.b. Alberti. Gattungsgeschichte, texte, übersetzungen und kommentar . Pp. 264. Bern, etc.: Peter Lang, 2000. Cased, £29. Isbn: 3-906765-24-. [REVIEW]Tim Whitmarsh - 2003 - The Classical Review 53 (01):75-.
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  27.  10
    “Socratic Therapy” from Aeschines of Sphettus to Lacan. [REVIEW]Kurt Lampe, Seth D. Pevnick, Karin Schlapbach, Mario Telò & Tim Whitmarsh - 2010 - Classical Antiquity 29 (2):181-221.
    Recent research on “psychotherapy” in Greek philosophy has not been fully integrated into thinking about philosophy as a way of life molded by personal relationships. This article focuses on how the enigma of Socratic eros sustains a network of thought experiments in the fourth century BCE about interpersonal dynamics and psychical transformation. It supplements existing work on Plato's Symposium and Phaedrus with comparative material from Aeschines of Sphettus, Xenophon, and the dubiously Platonic Alcibiades I and Theages. In order to select (...)
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  28.  16
    Christopher Gill;, Tim Whitmarsh;, John Wilkins . Galen and the World of Knowledge. xvii + 327 pp., bibl., index. Cambridge/New York: Cambridge University Press, 2009. $99. [REVIEW]Charlotte Schubert - 2012 - Isis 103 (2):395-396.
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  29. Jesus of Nazareth, in The Oxford Classical Dictionary, digital edition, ed. Sander Goldberg, Elizabeth DePalma Digeser, and Tim Whitmarsh, Oxford: OUP, 2021.Ilaria L. E. Ramelli - forthcoming - Oxford Classical Dictionary.
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  30.  16
    Christopher Gill, Tim Whitmarsh and John Wilkins , Galen and the World of Knowledge. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009. Pp. xv+327. ISBN: 978-0-521-76751-4. £60.00. [REVIEW]Laurence Totelin - 2010 - British Journal for the History of Science 43 (3):478-479.
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  31.  12
    Dirty Love: The Genealogy of the Ancient Greek Novel by Tim Whitmarsh.J. R. Morgan - 2020 - Common Knowledge 26 (3):438-439.
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  32.  14
    Reading Roman knowledge: Christopher Gill, Tim Whitmarsh and John Wilkins : Galen and the world of knowledge. Cambridge and New York, Cambridge University Press, 2009, xvii + 327 pp, £60, US $99 HB.Helen King - 2011 - Metascience 20 (1):131-133.
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  33. Desire.Tim Schroeder - 2006 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 1 (6):631-639.
    To desire is to be in a particular state of mind. It is a state of mind familiar to everyone who has ever wanted to drink water or desired to know what has happened to an old friend, but its familiarity does not make it easy to give a theory of desire. Controversy immediately breaks out when asking whether wanting water and desiring knowledge are, at bottom, the same state of mind as others that seem somewhat similar: wishing never to (...)
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  34. Frameworks for an archaeology of the body.Tim Yates - 1993 - In Christopher Y. Tilley (ed.), Interpretative archaeology. Providence: Berg. pp. 31--72.
  35.  87
    Philosophy and Model Theory.Tim Button & Sean P. Walsh - 2018 - Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. Edited by Sean Walsh & Wilfrid Hodges.
    Philosophy and model theory frequently meet one another. Philosophy and Model Theory aims to understand their interactions -/- Model theory is used in every ‘theoretical’ branch of analytic philosophy: in philosophy of mathematics, in philosophy of science, in philosophy of language, in philosophical logic, and in metaphysics. But these wide-ranging appeals to model theory have created a highly fragmented literature. On the one hand, many philosophically significant mathematical results are found only in mathematics textbooks: these are aimed squarely at mathematicians; (...)
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  36. Is Pain “All in your Mind”? Examining the General Public’s Views of Pain.Tim V. Salomons, Richard Harrison, Nat Hansen, James Stazicker, Astrid Grith Sorensen, Paula Thomas & Emma Borg - 2022 - Review of Philosophy and Psychology 13 (3):683-698.
    By definition, pain is a sensory and emotional experience that is felt in a particular part of the body. The precise relationship between somatic events at the site where pain is experienced, and central processing giving rise to the mental experience of pain remains the subject of debate, but there is little disagreement in scholarly circles that both aspects of pain are critical to its experience. Recent experimental work, however, suggests a public view that is at odds with this conceptualisation. (...)
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  37. The Problem of Perception.Tim Crane & Craig French - 2021 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
    The Problem of Perception is a pervasive and traditional problem about our ordinary conception of perceptual experience. The problem is created by the phenomena of perceptual illusion and hallucination: if these kinds of error are possible, how can perceptual experience be what we ordinarily understand it to be: something that enables direct perception of the world? These possibilities of error challenge the intelligibility of our ordinary conception of perceptual experience; the major theories of experience are responses to this challenge.
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  38. Epistemological Disjunctivism’s Genuine Access Problem.Tim Kraft - 2015 - Theoria 81 (4):311-332.
    Epistemological disjunctivism, as defended by, for example, McDowell, Neta and Pritchard, is the view that epistemic justification can be – and in paradigmatic cases of perceptual knowledge actually is – both factive and reflectively accessible. One major problem for this view is the access problem: apparently, epistemological disjunctivism entails that ordinary external world propositions can be known by reflection alone. According to epistemological disjunctivism, seeing that the sun is shining is reflectively accessible and seeing that the sun is shining entails (...)
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  39. The meaning of pain expressions and pain communication.Emma Borg, Tim Salomons & Nat Hansen - 2017 - In Simon van Rysewyk (ed.), Meanings of Pain. Springer. pp. 261-282.
    Both patients and clinicians frequently report problems around communicating and assessing pain. Patients express dissatisfaction with their doctors and doctors often find exchanges with chronic pain patients difficult and frustrating. This chapter thus asks how we could improve pain communication and thereby enhance outcomes for chronic pain patients. We argue that improving matters will require a better appreciation of the complex meaning of pain terms and of the variability and flexibility in how individuals think about pain. We start by examining (...)
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  40.  35
    Problems of Stakeholder Theory.Tim Ambler & Andrea Wilson - 1995 - Business Ethics: A European Review 4 (1):30-35.
    Stakeholder theory diverts attention from creating business success to concentrating on who share its fruits. But what right have stakeholders to make the claims they do? Perhaps a new model is needed. T.F.J. Ambler is Grand Metropolitan Senior Research Fellow at London Business School, Sussex Place, Regent's Park, London NW1 4SA, where Andrea Wilson completed her MBA in 1993. She is now a consultant in New York.
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  41. The Unity of Consciousness.Tim Bayne - 2010 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press UK.
    Tim Bayne draws on philosophy, psychology, and neuroscience in defence of the claim that consciousness is unified. He develops an account of what it means to say that consciousness is unified, and then applies this account to a variety of cases - drawn from both normal and pathological forms of experience - in which the unity of consciousness is said to break down. He goes on to explore the implications of the unity of consciousness for theories of consciousness, for the (...)
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  42. The Limits of Realism.Tim Button - 2013 - Oxford: Oxford University Press UK.
    Tim Button explores the relationship between words and world; between semantics and scepticism. -/- A certain kind of philosopher – the external realist – worries that appearances might be radically deceptive. For example, she allows that we might all be brains in vats, stimulated by an infernal machine. But anyone who entertains the possibility of radical deception must also entertain a further worry: that all of our thoughts are totally contentless. That worry is just incoherent. -/- We cannot, then, be (...)
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  43. Epistemic Cans.Tim Kearl & Christopher Willard-Kyle - forthcoming - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research.
    We argue that S is in a position to know that p iff S can know that p. Thus, what makes position-to-know-ascriptions true is just a special case of what makes ability-ascriptions true: compossibility. The novelty of our compossibility theory of epistemic modality lies in its subsuming epistemic modality under agentive modality, the modality characterizing what agents can do.
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  44. Cognitive Phenomenology.Tim Bayne & Michelle Montague (eds.) - 2011 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press UK.
    Does thought have distinctive experiential features? Is there, in addition to sensory phenomenology, a kind of cognitive phenomenology--phenomenology of a cognitive or conceptual character? Leading philosophers of mind debate whether conscious thought has cognitive phenomenology and whether it is part of conscious perception and conscious emotion.
  45.  36
    Geographies of rhythm: nature, place, mobilities and bodies.Tim Edensor - 2010 - Burlington, Vt.: Ashgate.
    can highlight how everyday rhythms complicate chronological orderings of past and present and how what appears 'utterly changed' repeats in fascinating ways ...
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  46.  5
    Ethics in government, 1978-1988: a selected bibliography.Tim J. Watts - 1988 - Monticello, Ill.: Vance Bibliographies.
  47. A fictionalist theory of universals.Tim Button & Robert Trueman - 2024 - In Peter Fritz & Nicholas K. Jones (eds.), Higher-Order Metaphysics. Oxford University Press.
    Universals are putative objects like wisdom, morality, redness, etc. Although we believe in properties (which, we argue, are not a kind of object), we do not believe in universals. However, a number of ordinary, natural language constructions seem to commit us to their existence. In this paper, we provide a fictionalist theory of universals, which allows us to speak as if universals existed, whilst denying that any really do.
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  48.  1
    Bare Land: Alienation as Deracination in Anna Tsing and John Steinbeck.Tim Christiaens - 2024 - In Re-imagining Class. pp. 257-277.
    In The Mushroom at the End of the World: On the Possibility of Life in Capitalist Ruins, Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing explains how bare land is formed. Capitalism produces ‘ruins’ by stripping living beings of the capacity to form their own ecological relations, a necessary condition for the reproduction of life. Contemporary capitalism alienates living beings from ecological relations, i.e. capitalism generates “the ability to stand alone, as if the entanglements of living did not matter. Through alienation, people and things become (...)
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  49. Amputees by choice: Body integrity identity disorder and the ethics of amputation.Tim Bayne & Neil Levy - 2005 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 22 (1):75–86.
    In 1997, a Scottish surgeon by the name of Robert Smith was approached by a man with an unusual request: he wanted his apparently healthy lower left leg amputated. Although details about the case are sketchy, the would-be amputee appears to have desired the amputation on the grounds that his left foot wasn’t part of him – it felt alien. After consultation with psychiatrists, Smith performed the amputation. Two and a half years later, the patient reported that his life had (...)
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  50. The perception of the environment: essays on livelihood, dwelling & skill.Tim Ingold - 2000 - New York: Routledge.
    In this work Tim Ingold provides a persuasive new approach to the theory behind our perception of the world around us. The core of the argument is that where we refer to cultural variation we should be instead be talking about variation in skill. Neither genetically innate or culturally acquired, skills are incorporated into the human organism through practice and training in an environment.They are as much biological as cultural.
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