Renowned scholar of Ancient Greek Martin Ostwald explains, for a modern audience, the terms by which the ancient Greeks saw and lived their lives--and influenced ours.
Renowned scholar of Ancient Greek Martin Ostwald explains, for a modern audience, the terms by which the ancient Greeks saw and lived their lives--and influenced ours.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Martin Ostwald is William R. Kenan, Jr. Professor Emeritus of Classics at Swarthmore College. From 1968 to 1992 he taught in the Department of Classical Studies and the Graduate Group in Ancient History at the University of Pennsylvania. He is author of From Popular Sovereignty to the Sovereignty of Law, among many distinguished books and essays.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction A. POLITICAL CULTURE OF THE POLIS 1. Shares and Rights: "Citizenship" Greek Style and American Style 2. Isokratia as a Political Concept 3. Oligarchy and Oligarchs in Ancient Greece 4. Stasis and Autonomia in Samos: A Comment on an Ideological Fallacy 5. Peace and War in Plato and Aristotle B. NOMOS IN GREEK HISTORY AND THOUGHT 6. Pindar, Nomos, and Heracles (Pindar, frg. 169 [Snell3] and POxy. No. 2450, frg. 1) 7. Was There a Concept Agraphos Nomos in Classical Greece? 8. Nomos and Physis in Antiphon's Peri Alethias C. CONSTITUTIONAL AND POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS OF ATHENS 9. Athenian Democracy—Reality or Illusion? 10. Public Expense: Whose Obligation? Athens 600-454 B.C.E. 11. Diodotus, Son of Eucrates 12. Athens and Chalkis: A Study in Imperial Control 13. The Areopagus in the Athenaion Politeia 14. The Sophists and Athenian Politics. D. LITERATURE AND HISTORY 15. Herodotus and Athens 16. Thucydides Bibliography of Martin Ostwald Index Acknowledgments
Introduction A. POLITICAL CULTURE OF THE POLIS 1. Shares and Rights: "Citizenship" Greek Style and American Style 2. Isokratia as a Political Concept 3. Oligarchy and Oligarchs in Ancient Greece 4. Stasis and Autonomia in Samos: A Comment on an Ideological Fallacy 5. Peace and War in Plato and Aristotle B. NOMOS IN GREEK HISTORY AND THOUGHT 6. Pindar, Nomos, and Heracles (Pindar, frg. 169 [Snell3] and POxy. No. 2450, frg. 1) 7. Was There a Concept Agraphos Nomos in Classical Greece? 8. Nomos and Physis in Antiphon's Peri Alethias C. CONSTITUTIONAL AND POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS OF ATHENS 9. Athenian Democracy—Reality or Illusion? 10. Public Expense: Whose Obligation? Athens 600-454 B.C.E. 11. Diodotus, Son of Eucrates 12. Athens and Chalkis: A Study in Imperial Control 13. The Areopagus in the Athenaion Politeia 14. The Sophists and Athenian Politics. D. LITERATURE AND HISTORY 15. Herodotus and Athens 16. Thucydides Bibliography of Martin Ostwald Index Acknowledgments
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