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Gretchen Reydams-Schils is a Professor within the Program of Liberal Studies and a Fellow of the Medieval Institute at the University of Notre Dame, Indiana. She holds concurrent appointments in Classics, Philosophy, and Theology. Her areas of specialization are the traditions of Platonism and Stoicism and she is the author of Demiurge and Providence: Stoic and Platonist Readings of Plato's Timaeus (1999) and The Roman Stoics: Self, Responsibility, and Affection (2005). She is also the editor of Plato's Timaeus as Cultural Icon (2003), Thinking Through Excerpts: Studies on Stobaeus (2011), and Pouvoir et puissances chez Philon d'Alexandrie (2016).
Introduction
Part I: 1. An authorial voice
2. How to read Plato's Timaeus
3. The coherence of the commentary
Part II: 4: Time and the universe
5. On soul and souls (1): the world soul
6. On soul and souls (2): the human soul and its relation to the world soul
7. God and gods
8. Providence and fate
9. Matter and evil
10. Matter, being, and form
Part III: 11. Calcidius and Aristotle
12. Calcidius and the Stoics
13: Source and sources (1): Numenius
14. Source and sources (2): Porphyry
15: Calcidius Christianus? (1): an authorial voice revisited
16. Calcidius Christianus? (2): God, matter, and creation
Conclusion: who is Calcidius?