Christopher Moore is Associate Professor of Philosophy and Classics at The Pennsylvania State University. He has written widely on classical Greek philosophy, intellectual history, and ethical language, and has edited several volumes on the reception of Socrates. He is the author of Socrates and Self-Knowledge and Calling Philosophers Names: On the Origin of a Discipline.
Selected Abbreviations and Editions
1. Debating a virtue
2. The early history of sôphrosunê
3. Heraclitus, self-knowledge, and the greatest virtue
4. Tragic sôphrosunê in two plays of Euripides
5. The late fifth century
6. The figure of Socrates
7. Xenophon on sôphrosunê and enkrateia
8. Plato 1 - sôphrosunê and the capacity for action
9. Plato 2 - two formulations of agency
10. Plato 3 - sôphrosunê with wisdom in two late dialogues
11. Aristotle and the later fourth century
12. Pythagorean sôphrosunê
13. Sôphrosunê for later Greek women
Epilogue: Translating an ancient virtue for modern times
Epigraphical Appendix
Bibliography
Index