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  1. Embracing the humanistic vision: Recurrent themes in Peter Roberts’ recent writings.James Reveley - 2018 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 50 (3):312-321.
    Running like a leitmotif through Peter Roberts’ recently published philosophico-educational writings there is a humanistic thread, which this article picks out. In order to ascertain the quality of this humanism, Roberts is positioned in relation to a pair of extant humanisms: radical and integral. Points of comparability and contrast are identified in several of the writer’s genre-crossing essays. These texts, it is argued, rectify deficiencies in how the two humanisms envision alternatives to capitalism. Roberts skilfully teases out the non-obvious futurological (...)
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  • Honey and the Indecency of Epicurus’ aurea dicta_( _DRN 3.12).Michael Pope - 2023 - Philologus: Zeitschrift für Antike Literatur Und Ihre Rezeption 167 (2):214-235.
    In this article theaurea dictaof Epicurus (DRN3.12) are placed in conversation with larger discourses related to apian, floral, and honey imagery. Within these literary contexts, bees and honey are often associated with morally suspect appetites, effeminacy, and potentially dangerous erotic entanglements. Lucretius, I argue, seems to allude to these risky literary valences and manipulates them for his own poetic and rhetorical ends. Honey, we discover, is much more than a sugary substance.
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  • Hesiod the cosmopolitan: utopian and dystopian discourse and ethico-political education.Marianna Papastephanou - 2008 - Ethics and Education 3 (2):89-105.
    The modern tendency to treat all Greek Golden Age textuality as apolitical and escapist has contributed to the ongoing neglect of the first Western educational text, Hesiod's Works and days. Most commentators have missed the interplay of utopian and dystopian images in Hesiodic poetry for lack of the appropriate conceptual framework. Once the escapist prejudice is overcome, the Hesiodic text appears as the first extant Occidental coupling of political utopianism with emancipatory ethico-political education. Once freed of its dated metaphysical-theological resonances, (...)
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  • The Notion of "state of Nature" in 16th century Spanish political thought.Gonzalo Letelier Widow - 2018 - Ideas Y Valores 67 (167):199-222.
    RESUMEN Se analiza la presencia de la noción de "estado de naturaleza" en los teólogos y juristas españoles del siglo XVI, mostrando las diferencias y semejanzas entre cuatro temas que antecedieron a la formación del concepto: el estado de inocencia original, las consecuencias del pecado original en la naturaleza humana, la hipótesis de un pacto legitimador de la autoridad política y la hipótesis teológica de la naturaleza pura. A partir de este análisis, se proponen algunos criterios para delimitar el concepto (...)
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  • La noción de “estado de naturaleza” en el pensamiento político español del siglo XVI.Gonzalo Letelier Widow - 2018 - Ideas Y Valores 67 (167):199-222.
    Se analiza la presencia de la noci.n de “estado de naturaleza” en los teólogos y juristas españoles del siglo XVI, mostrando las diferencias y semejanzas entre cuatro temas que antecedieron a la formaci.n del concepto: el estado de inocencia original, las consecuencias del pecado original en la naturaleza humana, la hipótesis de un pacto legitimador de la autoridad política y la hipótesis teológica de la naturaleza pura. A partir de este análisis, se proponen algunos criterios para delimitar el concepto de (...)
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  • El mythos, el logos y la historia. La reconstrucción filosófica del pasado en el mythos del Político de Platón.Giuseppe Greco - 2022 - Anales Del Seminario de Historia de la Filosofía 39 (2):289-303.
    This article considers the function and value of the mythos in Plato's Statesman. As first, I recall the context of the story and its function within the framework of diairetic inquiry about the definition of the real politician. Secondly, I point out that the formulation of the myth is based on a series of traditional stories to which a historical-reconstructive method is applied. I then highlight the ways of reasoning used by the characters in order to reconstruct a rational and (...)
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  • Slouching towards Boeotia: Age and Age-Grading in the Hesiodic Myth of the Five Races.Thomas M. Falkner - 1989 - Classical Antiquity 8 (1):42-60.
  • Fundamentos áureos de la teoría política platónica: sobre el mito del Político y la tradición religiosa.David Hernández del la Fuente - 2016 - Endoxa 38:47-74.
    El presente artículo pretende, tras pasar revista a la bibliografía existente y al estado de la cuestión sobre el mito delPolítico de Platón, proponer en primer lugar una nueva lectura de este a la luz de la tradición religiosa griega y, concretamente, del Leitmotiv hesiódico del mito de las edades del hombre. En segundo lugar, la comparación de este mito y su trasfondo religioso con otros diálogos políticos del filósofo ateniense, notablemente con las Leyes, revela a nuestro ver a una (...)
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  • “I would rather die before or be born afterwards”.Néstor Luis Cordero - 2017 - Archai: Revista de Estudos Sobre as Origens Do Pensamento Ocidental 21:41-64.
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  • Thales – the ‘first philosopher’? A troubled chapter in the historiography of philosophy.Lea Cantor - 2022 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 30 (5):727-750.
    It is widely believed that the ancient Greeks thought that Thales was the first philosopher, and that they therefore maintained that philosophy had a Greek origin. This paper challenges these assumptions, arguing that most ancient Greek thinkers who expressed views about the history and development of philosophy rejected both positions. I argue that not even Aristotle presented Thales as the first philosopher, and that doing so would have undermined his philosophical commitments and interests. Beyond Aristotle, the view that Thales was (...)
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  • ‘The golden age is proclaimed’? the Carmen Saeculare and the renascence of the golden race.Duncan Barker - 1996 - Classical Quarterly 46 (2):434-446.
    The idea of a returning golden age is widely understood and commonly presented both as a staple of Augustan propaganda and as a pervasive aspiration of Augustan society. TheCarmen Saeculare—an official commission for a public festival—is presented as a means by which the regime proclaimed to an enthusiastic populace the imminent renascence of the golden race. The aim of this article is to draw attention both to thefailureof theCarmen Saeculareexplicitly to proclaim the renascence of the race, and to the critique (...)
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