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  1. Platon og appropriasjonsteoriene: En kritisk lesning av feministisk platonfortolkning.Oda Elisabeth Wiese Tvedt - 2023 - Norsk Filosofisk Tidsskrift 58 (4):202-216.
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  • Considering Privacy as a Public Good and Its Policy Ramifications for Business Organizations.Dheeraj Sharma Shaheen Borna - 2011 - Business and Society Review 116 (3):331-353.
    ABSTRACTThe main objective of this study is to discuss the ramifications of considering privacy as a public good for business organizations. Using an extensive literature review, an attempt to achieve this objective is made by trying to answer the following questions: What are the historical and philosophical roots of privacy? How is the concept of privacy defined and what are the controversies surrounding different definitions of privacy? Does an individual have a right to privacy? If the answer to question three (...)
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  • Diversity and Ancient Democracy.Arlene W. Saxonhouse - 1996 - Political Theory 24 (2):321-325.
  • Another Antigone: The Emergence of the Female Political Actor in Euripides' "Phoenician Women".Arlene W. Saxonhouse - 2005 - Political Theory 33 (4):472-494.
    The Phoenician Women, Euripides' peculiar retelling and refashioning of the Theban myth, offers a portrait of Antigone before she becomes the actor we mostly know today from Sophocles' play. In this under-studied Greek tragedy, Euripides portrays the political and epistemological dissolution that allows for Antigone 's appearance in public. Whereas Sophocles' Antigone appears on stage ready to confront Creon with her appeal to the universal unwritten laws of the gods and later dissolves into the female lamenting a lost womanhood, Euripides' (...)
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  • Another Antigone.Arlene W. Saxonhouse - 2005 - Political Theory 33 (4):472-494.
    The Phoenician Women, Euripides’ peculiar retelling and refashioning of the Theban myth, offers a portrait of Antigone before she becomes the actor we mostly know today from Sophocles’ play. In this under-studied Greek tragedy, Euripides portrays the political and epistemological dissolution that allows for Antigone’s appearance in public. Whereas Sophocles’ Antigone appears on stage ready to confront Creon with her appeal to the universal unwritten laws of the gods and later dissolves into the female lamenting a lost womanhood, Euripides’ Antigone (...)
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  • Seeming and Being in the "Cosmetics" of Sophistry: The Infamous Analogy of Plato's Gorgias.Robin Reames - 2016 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 49 (1):74-97.
    Only all the effete latecomers, with their overly clever wit, believe that they can be done with the historical power of seeming by explaining it as “subjective,” where the essence of this “subjectivity” is something extremely dubious.The Gorgias dialogue is widely recognized as the source of Plato’s harshest condemnation of rhetoric. In it, he ultimately concludes that rhetoric is not “a technē but a knack, because it can give no rational explanation of the thing it is catering for, nor of (...)
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  • Ecofeminist Citizenship.Katherine Pettus - 1997 - Hypatia 12 (4):132-155.
    In this article I discuss how some women activists experience their citizenship locally and around the world through their work for the environment and resistance to systems which threaten world existence. By looking at the oikos-polis distinction in Aristotle as the genesis of environmental pathologies which give rise to newly complementary categories of citizenship and ecofeminism, I consider moral pluralism and agonistic liberalism as non-hierarchical theoretical frameworks for thinking about citizenship.
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  • No Title available: Dialogue.Catalin Partenie - 2012 - Dialogue 51 (1):176-179.
    Book Reviews Catalin Partenie, Dialogue: Canadian Philosophical Review/Revue canadienne de philosophie, FirstView Article.
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  • Greek Tragedy and Political Philosophy: Rationalism and Religion in Sophocles’ Theban Plays Peter Ahrensdorf Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2009 , 2011 , x + 192 pp, $ 23.00 , $84.00. [REVIEW]Catalin Partenie - 2012 - Dialogue 51 (1):176-179.
    Book Reviews Catalin Partenie, Dialogue: Canadian Philosophical Review/Revue canadienne de philosophie, FirstView Article.
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  • Lemnos, Cimon, and the Hephaisteion.Jeremy McInerney - 2021 - Classical Antiquity 40 (1):151-193.
    This paper presents the case for reading the Hephaisteion as a temple planned and begun by the Philaid family early in the fifth century. It was originally designed to give a house to Hephaestus in Athens after the successful campaign of Miltiades brought the island of Lemnos, traditionally the home of Hephaestus, under Athenian control. Work on the temple was interrupted by the death of Miltiades but resumed in the wake of Cimon’s successful northern ventures. The strong association of Miltiades (...)
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  • Rhetorical authority in athenian democracy and the chinese legalism of Han Fei.Arabella Lyon - 2008 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 41 (1):51-71.
  • Civic Ideology and the problem of difference: the politics of Aeschylean tragedy, once again.Simon Goldhill - 2000 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 120:34-56.
  • Considering Privacy as a Public Good and Its Policy Ramifications for Business Organizations.Shaheen Borna & Dheeraj Sharma - 2011 - Business and Society Review 116 (3):331-353.
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  • Politics and Philosophy in Plato’s Menexenus: Education and Rhetoric, Myth and History, written by Nickolas Pappas and Mark Zelcer.Andreas Avgousti - 2016 - Polis 33 (1):218-223.