Liverpool Classical Monthly, Bände 7-9John Pinsent John Pinsent., 1982 |
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Seite 16
... ancient philosophy , to assume that , the more the study of ancient philo- sophy has to do with modern philosophy , the less it is a part of classical studies ; this would simply ensure that classicists studied ancient philosophy in the ...
... ancient philosophy , to assume that , the more the study of ancient philo- sophy has to do with modern philosophy , the less it is a part of classical studies ; this would simply ensure that classicists studied ancient philosophy in the ...
Seite 17
... Ancient historians , in the narrower sense of political and social historians , do not seem to have this assumption ; and we are all ' ancient historians ' , in a wider sense . 3. One of the strengths of Classics as a subject is , or ...
... Ancient historians , in the narrower sense of political and social historians , do not seem to have this assumption ; and we are all ' ancient historians ' , in a wider sense . 3. One of the strengths of Classics as a subject is , or ...
Seite 21
... ancient or modern , decides what to believe on his own criteria of probability . C. quotes Livy's rejection of late - annalistic casualty figures at Trasimene in favour of Fabius Pictor's as if it proved that ' divergenc- ies from the ...
... ancient or modern , decides what to believe on his own criteria of probability . C. quotes Livy's rejection of late - annalistic casualty figures at Trasimene in favour of Fabius Pictor's as if it proved that ' divergenc- ies from the ...
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accept Aeneas Aeneid Aeschylus ancient appears argued argument Aristophanes Aristotle Athenian Athens AthPol Attis Brutus Caecilius Cambridge Catullus century Cicero cited CLASSICAL MONTHLY commentary connexion context contrast Copyright Diggle discussion Dorians edition Editor Encolpius Eumolpus Euripides evidence example explain fact follows Gellius Greek Herakles Herodotus Homer Horace Iliad inter interpretation Juvenal Latin Lichas literary Liverpool Livy Martial meaning Menander mentioned Minoan Odes Ovid Oxford parallel passage perhaps Petronius Philoctetes phrase Pindar Plato Plautus play Plotinus Plutarch poem poet poetry Polybius possible Pylos quae question quod readers reason reference Roman Rome Satyricon Scaliger scholars seems sense sexual Sophocles speech suggests Tacitus Thucydides tradition translation Virgil words Zeus γὰρ δὲ ἐν καὶ μὲν οὐ τὰ τε τὴν τῆς τὸ τὸν τοῦ τῶν ὡς