Teleology in the Ancient World
Philosophical and Medical Approaches
Herausgeber: Rocca, Julius
Teleology in the Ancient World
Philosophical and Medical Approaches
Herausgeber: Rocca, Julius
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This collection provides a comprehensive examination of ancient teleological arguments from philosophical and medical perspectives.
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This collection provides a comprehensive examination of ancient teleological arguments from philosophical and medical perspectives.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 344
- Erscheinungstermin: 7. November 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 233mm x 156mm x 27mm
- Gewicht: 624g
- ISBN-13: 9781107036635
- ISBN-10: 1107036631
- Artikelnr.: 47721110
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 344
- Erscheinungstermin: 7. November 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 233mm x 156mm x 27mm
- Gewicht: 624g
- ISBN-13: 9781107036635
- ISBN-10: 1107036631
- Artikelnr.: 47721110
Introduction Julius Rocca; Part I. The Socratic Foundations of Teleology:
1. Socrates, Darwin, and teleology David Sedley; Part II. Plato and the
Platonic Tradition: 2. Atemporal teleology in Plato Samuel Scolnicov; 3.
Teleology and names in the Platonic and Anaxagorean traditions Harold
Tarrant; 4. Why doesn't the Moon crash into the Earth? Platonic and Stoic
teleologies in Plutarch's Concerning the face which appears in the orb of
the Moon Jan Opsomer; 5. Signs and tokens: do the gods of Neoplatonism
really care? John Dillon; Part III. Aristotle and the Aristotelian
Tradition: 6. Biology and teleology in Aristotle's account of the city
Mariska Leunissen; 7. Aristotelian mechanistic explanation Monte Ransome
Johnson; 8. The purpose of the natural world: Aristotle's followers and
interpreters R. W. Sharples; 9. William Harvey: enigmatic Aristotelian of
the seventeenth century James G. Lennox; Part IV. Teleology in Medicine:
10. Teleology in Hippocratic texts: clues to the future? Elizabeth Craik;
11. The place of disease in a teleological worldview: Plato, Aristotle,
Galen Philip van der Eijk; 12. Teleology and necessity in Greek embryology
R. J. Hankinson.
1. Socrates, Darwin, and teleology David Sedley; Part II. Plato and the
Platonic Tradition: 2. Atemporal teleology in Plato Samuel Scolnicov; 3.
Teleology and names in the Platonic and Anaxagorean traditions Harold
Tarrant; 4. Why doesn't the Moon crash into the Earth? Platonic and Stoic
teleologies in Plutarch's Concerning the face which appears in the orb of
the Moon Jan Opsomer; 5. Signs and tokens: do the gods of Neoplatonism
really care? John Dillon; Part III. Aristotle and the Aristotelian
Tradition: 6. Biology and teleology in Aristotle's account of the city
Mariska Leunissen; 7. Aristotelian mechanistic explanation Monte Ransome
Johnson; 8. The purpose of the natural world: Aristotle's followers and
interpreters R. W. Sharples; 9. William Harvey: enigmatic Aristotelian of
the seventeenth century James G. Lennox; Part IV. Teleology in Medicine:
10. Teleology in Hippocratic texts: clues to the future? Elizabeth Craik;
11. The place of disease in a teleological worldview: Plato, Aristotle,
Galen Philip van der Eijk; 12. Teleology and necessity in Greek embryology
R. J. Hankinson.
Introduction Julius Rocca; Part I. The Socratic Foundations of Teleology:
1. Socrates, Darwin, and teleology David Sedley; Part II. Plato and the
Platonic Tradition: 2. Atemporal teleology in Plato Samuel Scolnicov; 3.
Teleology and names in the Platonic and Anaxagorean traditions Harold
Tarrant; 4. Why doesn't the Moon crash into the Earth? Platonic and Stoic
teleologies in Plutarch's Concerning the face which appears in the orb of
the Moon Jan Opsomer; 5. Signs and tokens: do the gods of Neoplatonism
really care? John Dillon; Part III. Aristotle and the Aristotelian
Tradition: 6. Biology and teleology in Aristotle's account of the city
Mariska Leunissen; 7. Aristotelian mechanistic explanation Monte Ransome
Johnson; 8. The purpose of the natural world: Aristotle's followers and
interpreters R. W. Sharples; 9. William Harvey: enigmatic Aristotelian of
the seventeenth century James G. Lennox; Part IV. Teleology in Medicine:
10. Teleology in Hippocratic texts: clues to the future? Elizabeth Craik;
11. The place of disease in a teleological worldview: Plato, Aristotle,
Galen Philip van der Eijk; 12. Teleology and necessity in Greek embryology
R. J. Hankinson.
1. Socrates, Darwin, and teleology David Sedley; Part II. Plato and the
Platonic Tradition: 2. Atemporal teleology in Plato Samuel Scolnicov; 3.
Teleology and names in the Platonic and Anaxagorean traditions Harold
Tarrant; 4. Why doesn't the Moon crash into the Earth? Platonic and Stoic
teleologies in Plutarch's Concerning the face which appears in the orb of
the Moon Jan Opsomer; 5. Signs and tokens: do the gods of Neoplatonism
really care? John Dillon; Part III. Aristotle and the Aristotelian
Tradition: 6. Biology and teleology in Aristotle's account of the city
Mariska Leunissen; 7. Aristotelian mechanistic explanation Monte Ransome
Johnson; 8. The purpose of the natural world: Aristotle's followers and
interpreters R. W. Sharples; 9. William Harvey: enigmatic Aristotelian of
the seventeenth century James G. Lennox; Part IV. Teleology in Medicine:
10. Teleology in Hippocratic texts: clues to the future? Elizabeth Craik;
11. The place of disease in a teleological worldview: Plato, Aristotle,
Galen Philip van der Eijk; 12. Teleology and necessity in Greek embryology
R. J. Hankinson.