توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Lucretius and His Sources: A Study of Lucretius, "De rerum natura" I 635-920
نام کتاب : Lucretius and His Sources: A Study of Lucretius, "De rerum natura" I 635-920
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : لوکرتیوس و منابع او: مطالعه ای درباره لوکرتیوس، "De rerum natura" I 635-920
سری : Sozomena, 12
نویسندگان : Francesco Montarese
ناشر : De Gruyter
سال نشر : 2012
تعداد صفحات : 328
ISBN (شابک) : 311019452X , 9783110194524
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 1 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Introduction
Chapter 1. Lucretius drew the Critique from an earlier Epicurean polemic
1.1 Lucretius’ information is second-hand
1.2 Lucretius’ source was an Epicurean text
1.2.1 Lucretius’ use of homoeomeria
1.2.2 The choice of Heraclitus as representative monist
1.2.2.1 The Stoics as fire monists?
1.2.2.2 The Stoic denial of void in the world?
1.2.3 Lucretius’ arguments against the limited pluralists
1.2.3.1 Lines 753–781
1.2.3.2 Lines 782–802
1.2.4 The Epicurean angle
1.3 Conclusion
Chapter 2. Books XIV and XV of Epicurus’ Περὶ φύσεως
2.1 The content of books XIV and XV
2.1.1 Book XIV was not dedicated to polemic
2.1.1.1 Evidence from the format of PHerc. 1148
2.1.1.2 Columns I–XXII
2.1.1.3 Columns XXIII and XXIV
2.1.1.4 Evidence from the sezioni
2.1.2 Epicurus did not discuss Heraclitus’ theory ΠΦ XIV
2.1.3 Epicurus did not refute Empedocles’ theory in ΠΦ XIV
2.1.4 Book XV was not dedicated to criticism of Anaxagoras
2.1.4.1 Cornice 2
2.1.4.2 Cornice 3
2.1.4.3 Cornice 4
2.1.4.4 Cornice 5
2.1.4.5 Cornici 6 and 7
2.1.4.6 Cornice 8
2.2 Other considerations intrinsic to Epicurus’ work
2.3 Do ΠΦ XIV and XV depend on Theophrastus’ Φυσιϰαὶ δόξαι?
2.3.1 Was Plato the last of the limited pluralists in Theophrastus’ Φυσιϰαὶ δόξαι?
2.3.2 The detail of the arguments against Plato and air monism
2.3.3 The dating of ΠΦ XIV and of Theophrastus’ Φυσιϰαὶ δόξαι
2.4 Conclusion
Chapter 3. Lucretius’ use of sources in DRN I
3.1 The source of DRN I.156–598 and 951–1107
3.2 Did Lucretius change source after line 598 of DRN I?
3.3 The Critique does not derive from the same source as 155 ff
3.4 The connection between lines 634 and 635
3.5 Why did Lucretius have the Critique at the centre of book I?
3.6 Was Epicurus the source of the Critique?
3.7 Did Lucretius use a later Epicurean source?
3.7.1 The choice of Heraclitus
3.7.2 Lucretius’ use of homoeomeria
3.8 Conclusion
Chapter 4. Lucretius in the Critique
4.1 Heraclitus as a general
4.2 Heraclitus’ army
4.2.1 Stolidi and inanes Graii
4.2.2 Sound and truth
4.2.3 Inversis sub verbis
4.3 The theme of the path and the search for truth
4.3.1 Lines 657–59
4.3.2 Lines 690–700
4.4 Empedocles and Sicily
4.4.1 Empedocles’ language: poetry as revelation
4.4.2 Lucretius’ praise
4.4.3 Etna
4.4.4 Lucretius’ endorsement of Empedocles’ discoveries
4.4.5 The four elements: Empedocles’ disastrous fall
4.5 Lucretius’ presentation of Anaxagoras’ theory
4.5.1 Lucretius’ transliteration homoeomeria
4.5.2 Parody of Anaxagoras
4.6 The mortality of Anaxagoras’ primordia
4.7 Lucretius’ strategy in lines 859–74
4.8 The analogy of letters and atoms
4.8.1 Lines 823–29
4.8.2 Intertextuality
4.8.3 Lines 906–14
4.9 Formularity
4.10 The parallelism between lines 803–29 and 897–920
4.11 The Critique as ‘dialogue’
4.12 Conclusion
Appendix (A) Two stages of composition?
Appendix (B) The format of PHerc. 1148 and PHerc. 1151
Appendix (C) Do Epicurus’ Ad Herodotum and Ad Pythoclem reflect continuous books of ΠΦ?
Abbreviations
Bibliography