Synopses & Reviews
The mutual interaction of philosophy and Roman political and cultural life has aroused more and more interest in recent years among students of classical literature, Roman history, and ancient philosophy. In this volume, which gathers together some of the papers originally delivered at a series of seminars in the University of Oxford, scholars from all three disciplines explore the role of Platonism and Aristotelianism in Roman intellectual, cultural, and political life from the second century BC to the third century AD.
Review
Praise for Philosophia Togata I: "An invaluable contribution to the long-overdue exploration of an important but neglected area".--Greece and Rome
Table of Contents
1. Roman Aristotle
2. The Theory of the Mixed Constitution at Rome
3. From Aristotle to Atticus: Cicero and Matius on Friendship
4. Plato's Auctoritas and the Rebirth of the Commentary Tradition
5. Varro and the Antiquarianism of Philosophy
6. Plutarch, Plato, Athens, and Rome
7. Favorinus: the Man of Paradoxes
8. Celsus' Attack on the Christians
9. Porphyry: Ethnicity, Language, and Alien Wisdom