<p>"This volume contains thirteen papers from a conference held at Notre Dame.... The papers discuss the interpretation and significance of Plato's Timaeus from the Old Academy to nineteenth-century German philosophy. There is an introductory overview by the editor, as well as a bibliography, index locorum, and a general index. ...of high quality." —<em>Speculum</em></p>
<p>"...Reydams-Schils' Plato's Timaeus as Cultural Icon is a paradigm of what a book of essays on the influence of a dialogue should be. First and foremost, the articles are first-rate. Moreover, they cover an extraordinary range of topics, thinkers and time-periods. This is an excellent collection." —<em>Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews</em></p>
<p>“As a collaborative effort of expert philosophers, classicists, and historians, this remarkable book serves as a wonderful starting point and research tool for anyone with an interest in Plato’s Timaeus.” —<em>Philosophical Inquiry</em></p>
<p>“Under the capable editorship of Reydams-Schils, the present volume brings together 13 essays by scholars from the United States, Europe and Canada that address the influence and cultural status of the <em>Timaeus</em> since its appearance more than two millennia ago...This collection is an excellent and reasonably priced support for studies of Plato’s dialogs in general and the <em>Timaeus</em> in particular." —<em>Library Journal</em></p>
<p>“Each essay is a model of careful scholarship.” —<em>The Sixteenth Century Journal</em></p>
<p>“...an impressive testimony to the dialogue’s enduring influence.” —<em>Mouseion: Journal of the Classical Association of Canada</em></p>
<p>"The overall quality of the papers is far better than average for a volume of this sort. They deserve to be read by all advanced students in the Platonic tradition." —<em>Classical World</em></p>
<p>“The thirteen articles in this volume are papers originally presented in 2000 at a conference at Notre Dame. Two of them deal with some intrinsic problems of the dialogue itself, while the rest depict the various phases of its fortuna up to Schelling.” —<em>Classical World</em></p>
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Gretchen Reydams-Schils is associate professor in the Program of Liberal Studies at the University of Notre Dame.
Contributors: Michael J. B. Allen, Werner Beierwaltes, Luc Brisson, Cristina D’Ancona, John Dillon, Paul Edward Dutton, Stephen Gersh, Carlos Lévy, Rhonda Martens, Mitchell Miller, David T. Runia, Kenneth Sayre, and Richard Sorabji