Stobaeus, Eclogues 2.7d, p.79, 18ff Wachsmuth-Hense = SVF 3.133, 140. 15 D. L., 7.104 = SVF 3.104. 16 Plutarch, de Stoicorum repugnantiis 1042A = SVF 3.55; cf. SVF 3.585, where the Stoics are reputed to have insisted, presumably, against Aristotle or other Peripaetetics, that it is indeed possible to be happy inside the bull of Phalaris. 17 The
This is what Stobaeus told us: Good are the following sorts of item: wisdom, moderation, justice, courage and that is virtue or participates in virtue. Bad are the following sorts of item: folly, intemperance, injustice, cowardice, and all that is vice or participates in vice. Stobaeus, Eclogues II 57.18-58.4
5th-century AD), from Stobi in Macedonia, was the compiler of a valuable series of extracts from Greek authors. The work was originally divided into two volumes containing two books each. Stobaeus quoted more than five hundred writers, generally beginning with the poets, and then proceeding to the historians, orators, philosophers, and physicians. [1] The works of the greater part of these have perished. [2] It is to him that we owe many of our most important fragments of the dramatists.
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Vg = Västergötlands Runinskrifter. Granskade och tolkade av H. [6] Citerad från Stobaeus, Eclogue, I, 862 [7] Isis Unveiled, i. xviii.] Detsamma gäller för den Esoteriska brahmanismen och de vedantinska adwaiterna. De två 0, Gre, Johannes Stobaios (Stobaeus), c400, Stobi, Antologi över 1 430 st antika 1529, Scen:Cancionero(1496)/Dikt:Placida and Vitorianos Eclogue(1513)/. Joannes Stobaeus (/ dʒ oʊ ˈ æ n ɪ s s t oʊ ˈ b iː ə s /; Greek: Ἰωάννης ὁ Στοβαῖος; fl.
For the other Wise Men,. Barkowski, in Pauly-Wissowa, Real-Encyclopädie der nothing originates without cause, but everything because of a cause and of necessity. Leucippus as quoted by Stobaeus in Eclogues.
This is what Stobaeus told us: Good are the following sorts of item: wisdom, moderation, justice, courage and that is virtue or participates in virtue. Bad are the following sorts of item: folly, intemperance, injustice, cowardice, and all that is vice or participates in vice. Stobaeus, Eclogues II 57.18-58.4
5th-century CE), from Stobi in Macedonia, was the compiler of a valuable series of extracts from Greek authors. The third of these (which is preserved only fragmentarily) drew heavily on Stobaeus, and preserves many titles of sections and extensive extracts. In order to check the reliability of Wachsmuth’s citations, these three manuscripts were collated at selected passages where they contain material from Aëtius.
In 1822, Gaisford put forth a much improved edition of the "Anthology." A cheap edition of the same, carefully edited by Augustus Meineke, was published by Teubner of Leipsic in 1855. It is to be followed by the "Eclogues," which, when published, will make this the most useful edition of Stobæus.
The collection is valuable because it preserves fragments from many since lost works of early Greek authors. Excerpted from The Imperial Dictionary of Universal Biography, Volume 3, 1876 ed., page 1068.(Ferrier's contributions to the Imperial Dictionary of Universal Biography were for for the edition published 1857-1863. That this is the subsequent edition of 1876 is evidenced in its mentioning later dates—including that of Ferrier's death in 1864.) As an illustration, Davies concludes her section on Melinno’s Hymn (Stobaeus, Eclogues 3.7.12)1 by stating that: ‘Roma stood at the helm, and the cities of the oikoumene contained all of HER peoples… “Roma” was coalescing with patris (or “home town/city”)’ (p. 100); and in the section on her analysis of Cicero’s De Legibus This is an automatically generated and experimental page. If everything goes well, this page should display the bibliography of the aforementioned article as it appears in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, but with links added to PhilPapers records and Google Scholar for your convenience. When logged in, you can choose up to 12 games that will be displayed as favourites in this menu. 2017-06-15 · Stobaeus’ Eclogae 2.7 (the section containing the excerpt of Stoic ethics) has been translated into Ebglish by Arthur J. Pomeroy (Arius Didymus.
The two volumes became separated in the manuscript tradition, and the first volume became known as the Extracts (also Eclogues) and the second volume
Иоанн Stobaeus ( / dʒoʊˈænɪs stoʊˈbiːəs / ; греч.
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He edited the Eclogues of Stobaeus and the tragedies of Euripides, Sophocles and Aeschylus. His Ratio emendandi (Basle, 1566) was a guide to editing and
In Aristotelis Categorias Commentarium (Commentary on. Aristotle's Categories). WORKS OF STOBAEUS.
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stultus ego huic nostrae similem, quo saepe solemus. pastores ovium teneros depellere fetus: sic canibus catulos similis, sic matribus haedos. noram, sic parvis componere magna solebam: 25 verum haec tantum alias inter caput extulit urbes, quantum lenta solent inter viburna cupressi. Meliboeus.
StPhoen. house of Jupiter, the mother of the Gods, and the basis coherence and measure of nature. Quoted by Johannes Stobaeus, Eclogues (5th-century CE) Phys. p.