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         Nicomachus Of Gerasa:     more detail
  1. The Thirteen Books of Euclid's Elements; The Works of Archimedes Including the Method; On Conic Sections; and Introduction to Arithmetic (Britannica Great Books, 11) by Euclid, Archimedes, et all 1952
  2. The Manual of Harmonics of Nicomachus the Pythagorean by Nicomachus, Flora R. Levin, 1993-12
  3. Nicomachus of Gerasa: An entry from Gale's <i>Science and Its Times</i> by Judson Knight, 2001
  4. Euclid - Archimedes - Apollonius of Perga - Nicomachus of Gerasa (The Great Books of the Western World, 25th Anniversary Edition) by Euclid, Archimedes, et all 1985
  5. The arithmetical philosophy of Nicomachus of Gerasa by George Johnson, 1916-01-01
  6. Volume 11 Great Books of the Western World: The Thirteen Books of Euclid's Elements; the Works of Archimedes Including the Method; on Conic Sections By Apollonius of Perga and Introduction to Arithmetic By Nicomachus of Gerasa by Unknown, 1952
  7. The Great Books of the St. John''s Program - Nicomachus of Gerasa (c.100 A.D.): Introduction to Arithmetic by Martin Luther (trans.) Nicomachus of Gerasa; D''Ooge, 1946
  8. Nicomachus of Gerasa: Introduction to Arithmetic by Nicomachus of Gerasa. Translated by Martin Luther D'ooge., 1960
  9. The Mathematical Writings of Euclid, Archimedes, Apollonius of Perga, Nicomachus of Gerasa (The Great Books of the Western World) by Euclid, Archimedes, et all 1985
  10. Introduction to Arithmetic by Martin [translator] Nicomachus of Gerasa; D'Ooge, 1926
  11. Introduction To Arithmetic by Nicomachus Of Gerasa; Translated By Martin Luther Dodge, 1960
  12. The Thirteen Books of Euclid's Elements: The Works of Archimedes Including the Method: On Conic Sections: Introduction to Arithmetic (Great Books of the Western World, Vol. 11) by Euclid, Archimedes, et all 1987

41. Cut The Knot!
In his Introduction to Arithmetic, nicomachus of gerasa (c 100 AD) writes, Everysquare figure diagonally divided is resolved into two triangles and every
http://www.maa.org/editorial/knot/pww.html
Cut The Knot!
An interactive column using Java applets
by Alex Bogomolny
Proofs Without Words
July 1998 In the beginning, when there was no language to express general mathematical ideas, proofs without words were the proofs. Martin Gardner wrote, "There is no more effective aid in understanding certain algebraic identities than a good diagram. One should, of course, know how to manipulate algebraic symbols to obtain proofs, but in many cases a dull proof can be supplemented by a geometric analogue so simple and beautiful that the truth of a theorem is almost seen at a glance." A classical example concerns triangular numbers: 1 + 2 + 3 + ... + N = N(N+1)/2 which is ascribed to the ancient Greeks. I would argue that, for the Ancients, if they ever drew them, the diagrams were more than an effective aid. In the absence of algebraic symbolism, they might have served as a combination of a statement and its proof in the most concise form available at the time. In his Introduction to Arithmetic , Nicomachus of Gerasa (c 100 A.D.) writes, "Every square figure diagonally divided is resolved into two triangles and every square number is resolved into two consecutive triangular numbers, and hence is made up of two successive triangular numbers." Obviously, he refers to the diagram on the right (although there is no indication that he had ever drawn such a diagram), and this is the only

42. A History Of Muslim Philosophy
by P. Nigidus Figulus, Sotion, and particularly Apollonius of Tyana, Modera­tusof Gades, and, in later times, nicomachus of gerasa and Numenius of Apamea.
http://www.al-islam.org/historyofmuslimphilosophy/8.htm
Subject Index Search Announcements Feedback ... Support this Site Chapter 5 Alexandrio Syriac Thought Alexandrio Syriac Thought by C.A Qadir A Reason thus assailed could find refuge only in faith. In the period that follows we find philosophy renouncing its independence and becoming merely an instrument of theology. Ritter says, "The feeling of alienation and the yearning after a higher revelation are characteristics of the last centuries of the ancient world; this yearning was, in the first place, but an expression of consciousness of the decline of the classical nations and their cultures, the presentiment of the approach of a new era, and it called into life not only Christianity but also before it pagan and Jewish Alexandrianism and other related developments." It would be incorrect to identify the present geographical boundaries of Syria with its old ones. In Roman days, at the beginning of the Christian era Syria denoted the country west of the Euphrates and north of the Arabian Desert, including Palestine and Palmyra and extending north to the Taurus. The usual language of Syria was Aramaic, a language akin to Hebrew. The Hebrew word "Aram" is rendered as "Syria" and originally the words Aramaean and Syrian were synonymous. After the Hellenization of the country, the Greek language was used by the ruling class and the officials with very little influence on the masses who continued using their dialect. This state of affairs con­tinued till the first/seventh century when after the Muslim conquest Syriac gradually gave way vernacularly and to some extent liturgically to Arabic, though it had great influence on the vocabulary, pronunciation, and even the grammatical forms of Arabic which supplanted it.

43. Neo-Pythagorean Philosophy - From The Catholic Encyclopedia
most prominently associated with this active philosophical campaign are those ofModeratus of Gades, Apollonius of Tyana, nicomachus of gerasa, Numenius, and
http://members.tripod.com/~Ertosi/Wisdom/NeoPythagorean/NeoPythagoreanCE.html
Neo-Pythagorean Philosophy - from the Catholic Encyclopedia SPECULATIVE SYSTEM ETHICS AND RELIGION Philostratus's Life of Apollonius, and the Letters ascribed to the latter were published in PHILOSTRATUS, Opera Omnia (Leipzig, ed. OLEARIUS, 1709); Ibid. (ed. KAYSER, 1870-71); the works of NICOMACHUS OF GERASA are included in IAMBLICHUS, Theologumena Arithmeticœ (ed. AST, Leipzig, 1817); ZELLER, Philosophie der Griechen, III, 2 (3rd ed., Leipzig, 1881), 79 ff.; NEWMAN, Historical Sketches, I (London, 1882), 301 ff.; TURNER, History of Philosophy (Boston, 1903), 204 ff. WILLIAM TURNER.
Transcribed by Douglas J. Potter
Dedicated to the Sacred Heart of Jesus Christ article from: The Catholic Encyclopedia

44. Terra Mir Bookstore: Subject MUSIC THEORY, PHILOSOPHY, & HISTORY
Sources Aristoxenus Harmonica The Sectio Canonis V. Music Theory II The RevivalPlutarch Cleonides nicomachus of gerasa Theon of Smyrna Claudius Ptolemy VI.
http://www.imagik.net/music.htm
*turn off images in browser if it loads slow
Search THIS WEB SITE for subjects, titles and authors
Search: All Products Books Popular Music Classical Music Video Toys Consumer Electronics Home Improvement Keywords: All book descriptions are the property of Amazon
Please visit the Terra Mir Music Store Classics Music History, Philosophy and Theory Click on the Title for more information To search CD's and Cassettes use search box above
Music and the Power of Sound
: the influence and tuning and interval on consciousness / Alain Danielou Music, above all other arts, has always been esteemed for its power to speak directly to our higher consciousness. Based on unchanging laws of number and proportion, music also embodies the fundamental metaphysical principles underlying everyday reality. How do these two aspects of music's power, its twin roots in consciousness and mathematics, relate to one another? And why does each of the world's music systems seem to have its own unique effects on consciousness? These are questions this book addresses.
TOP
Apollo's Lyre : Greek Music and Music Theory in Antiquity and the Middle Ages (Publications of the Center for the History of Music Theory and literature) / by Thomas J. Mathiesen

45. A Mithraic Ritual
The statement of nicomachus of gerasa the musician and mystic (second centuryAD), is still clearer; for he not only tells us about the vowels and consonants
http://www.hermetic.com/pgm/mithraic.html
A Mithraic Ritual
G.R.S. Mead Preamble The last little volume gave the reader a brief outline of what is known of the cult of Mithra and the spread of the Mithriac Mysteries in the Western world. We have now to deal with a Mithriac Ritual of the most instructive and intensely interesting character, which introduces us to the innermost rite of the carefully guarded secrets of the Mithriaca. The credit of unearthing it from the obscurity in which it was buried, and of conclusively demonstrating its parent-age, is due to Dieterich; for though Cumont in his great work quotes several passages from the unrevised text, he does so only to reject it as a genuine Mithriac document. It is dug out of the chaos of the great Paris Magic Papyrus 574 ( Supplement grec de la Bibliotheque nationale ), the date of which is fixed with every probability as the earliest years of the fourth century A.D.. The original text of the Ritual has, however, been plainly worked over by a school of Egyptian magicians, who inserted most of the now unintelligible words and names ( ashma ovomata, nomina barbara, nomina arcana

46. Summary Of Pythagorean Theology I: Introduction
summary. nicomachus of gerasa (fl. 130) is especially known for hisdevelopment of Pythagorean numerology. Numenius of Apamea (fl.
http://www.cs.utk.edu/~mclennan/OM/BA/ETP/I.html
A Summary of Pythagorean Theology
Part I: Introduction
May Hermes, the God of Eloquence, stand by my side to aid me, and the Muses also and Apollo, the Leader of the Muses..., and may They grant that I utter only what the Gods approve that people should say and believe about Them. Julian (Oration IV)
Contents
  • History Theogony Triadic Structure
  • History
    This document presents a summary and synthesis of the theology of Pythagoreanism, a spiritual tradition that has been practiced continuously, in one form or another, for at least twenty-six centuries. But first, a little history. (Note: I will refer to all of the following philosophers and theologians as Pythagoreans or Platonists, which is what they usually called themselves, for the terms "Neo-Pythagorean" and "Neo-Platonist" are modern inventions. This history is of necessity incomplete and superficial.) According to ancient Greek tradition, Pythagoras (572-497 BCE) studied with the Egyptians, Phoenicians, Chaldeans, Brahmans, and Zoroastrians, and was initiated into all their mysteries. He is supposed to have met with Zoroaster (Zarathustra), but, since scholars now believe that Zoroaster probably lived in the second millennium BCE, it is likely that the Greek tradition reflects a meeting between Pythagoras and Zoroastrian Magi. In any case, there are many traces of Zoroastrianism in Pythagorean doctrine. In particular, there are similarities between the central Duality of Pythagoreanism and the dual Gods of Zoroaster (Ahura-Mazda and Ahriman). However, there are also connections to

    47. Alib.ru - Ïðîäàæà áóêèíèñòè÷åñêèõ êíèã: Êàíîíè÷
    Euclid, _The Elements_, Archimedes, collected works, Apollonius of Perga,_Conics_, nicomachus of gerasa, _Introduction to Arithmetic_ 12.
    http://www.alib.ru/canon.phtml
    Alib.ru
    ÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍ Date: 08-18-92 (06:15) Number: 18175 Channel 1 (R) [HST 14, To: ALL Refer#: NONE From: MIKE MORRIS Read: YES Subj: SOME CANONICAL LISTS Conf: (1479) arts.books ú Newsgroup: rec.arts.books ú Message-ID: Mike Morris (msmorris@watsci.uwaterloo.ca) - * PCB/UseNet Gateway from Sparkware #3 ùHEADER:USENET Path: channel1!uupsi!psinntp!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!torn!watserv2.uwaterloo.ca!wats From: msmorris@watsci.waterloo.edu (Mike Morris) Newsgroups: rec.arts.books Subject: Some Canonical Lists Message-ID: Date: Sat, 15 Aug 1992 21:23:46 GMT @DATAPHONE@References: <9208141500.AA11548@cfdev1.shearso@DLFILES@ Sender: news@watserv1.uwaterloo.ca Organization: University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario Lines: 189 ÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍ Date: 08-18-92 (06:15) Number: 18179 Channel 1 (R) [HST 14, To: ALL Refer#: NONE From: MIKE MORRIS Read: YES Subj: SOME CANONICAL LISTS Conf: (1479) arts.books ú Newsgroup: rec.arts.books ú Message-ID: ú Subject: Some Canonical Lists - * PCB/UseNet Gateway from Sparkware #3 ÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍÍ Date: 08-18-92 (06:15) Number: 18181 Channel 1 (R) [HST 14, To: ALL Refer#: NONE From: MIKE MORRIS Read: YES Subj: SOME CANONICAL LISTS Conf: (1479) arts.books ú Newsgroup: rec.arts.books ú Message-ID:

    48. The Helenistic Period Of Greek Mathematics
    He also gives formulas for the area of regular polygons of n sides,each of length a nicomachus of gerasa (fl 100 AD). Nicomachus
    http://www.math.tamu.edu/~don.allen/history/helnistc/helnistc.html
    Next: About this document
    Aristarchus of Samos
    (ca. 310-230 BC) He was very knowledgeable in all sciences, especially astronomy and mathematics. He discovered an improved sundial, with a concave hemispherical circle. He was the first to formulate the Copernican hypotheses and is sometimes called the Ancient Copernican He countered the nonparallax objection by asserting that the stars to be so far distant that parallax was not measurable. Wrote On the Sizes and Distances of the Sun and Moon . In it he observed that when the moon is half full, the angle between the lines of sight to the sun and the moon is less than a right angle by 1/30 of a quadrant. From this he concluded that the distance from the earth to the sun is more than 18 but less than 20 times the distance from the earth to the moon. (Actual ). Without trigonometry he was aware of and used the fact that He also made other trigonometic estimates without trigonometry. ARCHIMEDES Apollonius of Perga
    (ca 262 BC - 190 BC) Apollonius was born in Perga in Pamphilia (now Turkey), but was possibly educated in Alexandria where he spent some time teaching. Very little is known of his life. He seems to have felt himself a rival of Archimedes. In any event he worked on similar problems. He was known as the ``great geometer" because of his work on conics.

    49. A Recommended Reading List - MasterWorks - Mason West
    nicomachus of gerasa (fl.c. 100 AD) Introduction to Arithmetic; Epictetus(c.60120) Discourses Encheiridion; Ptolemy (c.100-170; fl.
    http://mason-west.com/MasterWorks/adler.shtml
    AUTHORS Masterworks Melville Hemingway Eliot Housman Cummings Millay Hawthorne Catullus Beat Berryman Bishop Roethke Poe WRITINGS AUTHORS REVERBERATIONS The Masterworks of Western Civilization A hypertext-annotated compilation of lists of major works recommended by Drs. Adler and Eliot, Charles Van Doren, Anthony Burgess, Clifton Fadiman, the Easton Press, and many others The Ancients First through Fifth Centuries Eleventh through Fourteenth Centuries Fifteenth Century ... the fifty essential books the guardian's choices for the indispensable read, saturday, 1 june 2002 Mortimer Adler and Charles Van Doren How to Read a Book , A Recommended Reading List The Library of America Anthony Burgess 99 Novels: The Best in English Since 1939 Clifton Fadiman Lifetime Reading Plan Kenneth Rexroth Classics Revisited and More Classics Revisited The Lake Forest List Recommended Reading in Great Literature, Lake Forest Library, Lake Forest, Illinois UWM Bookstore Select 100 as of April 1989 Ovid An assortment of books by the great Roman poet and author of Metamorphoses to and from this page Site Search
    sitemap
    A Recommended Reading List
    from Appendix A of How to Read a Book by Mortimer Adler and Charles Van Doren The Liberal Studies Great Books Program at Malaspina University-College bases its program on the list of Drs. Adler and Van Doren.

    50. The Master Works Of Western Civilization - The Ancients - MasterWorks - Mason We
    Cicero (10643 BCE), Letters, Cicero Letters to Atticus (Loeb ClassicalLibrary , Vol 1), nicomachus of gerasa, Introduction to Arithmetic,
    http://mason-west.com/MasterWorks/mwwc0.shtml
    AUTHORS Masterworks Melville Hemingway Eliot Housman Cummings Millay Hawthorne Catullus Beat Berryman Bishop Roethke Poe WRITINGS AUTHORS REVERBERATIONS The Masterworks of Western Civilization A hypertext-annotated compilation of lists of major works recommended by Drs. Adler and Eliot, Charles Van Doren, Anthony Burgess, Clifton Fadiman, the Easton Press, and many others The Ancients First through Fifth Centuries Eleventh through Fourteenth Centuries Fifteenth Century ... the fifty essential books the guardian's choices for the indispensable read, saturday, 1 june 2002 Mortimer Adler and Charles Van Doren How to Read a Book , A Recommended Reading List The Library of America Anthony Burgess 99 Novels: The Best in English Since 1939 Clifton Fadiman Lifetime Reading Plan Kenneth Rexroth Classics Revisited and More Classics Revisited The Lake Forest List Recommended Reading in Great Literature, Lake Forest Library, Lake Forest, Illinois UWM Bookstore Select 100 as of April 1989 Ovid An assortment of books by the great Roman poet and author of Metamorphoses to and from this page Site Search
    sitemap
    The Master Works of Western Civilization
    The Ancients
    Author The Great Books of the Western World The Easton Press Dr. Eliot

    51. Greek Music. Plato. Pythagoras. Apollo. Borghese Plaques At Hammerwood. Partheno
    Ancient Greek music through the ages and its survival.Category Regional Europe Arts and Entertainment Music Ancient...... of mathematics as well as an art; this tradition of musical thought flourishedthroughout antiquity in such theorists as nicomachus of gerasa (2d century AD
    http://www.mistral.co.uk/hammerwood/gmusic.htm
    Greek music and the Greek Gods
    The musical culture of ancient Greece is known more through literary references than through preserved musical documents. About 20 fragments of music are extant written in a relatively late Greek notational system, but references to music performed at various rites and social occasions abound in the works of ancient Greek authors. Consequently, most modern discussions of Greek music either speculate about the sound of the music itself, or deal with the role and nature of music in that society. Dance, poetry, rite, and music seem inseparably associated in the early history of music in ancient Greece. Homer's Iliad and Odyssey report vintners' songs, dirges, and hymns of praise to Apollo (paeans). Music was described as an art exerting great power (ethos) over human beings, and certain musical styles came to be associated with particular peoples and deities. The KITHARA, a plucked string instrument, came to be linked with Apollo , the god of the Sun and reason, while the aulos, a loud double-reed instrument, came to be identified with

    52. Spring 2003 Sectional Meeting Of The Allegheny Mountain Section
    Millennial, Promiscuous, and Nyctaginaceous Abstract In the first century AD, theIntroduction to Arithmetic, by nicomachus of gerasa and Mathematics Useful
    http://mallard.ds.psu.edu/~ecb5/MAA-Spring-03/tattersall.html

    53. Roman Authors
    Congress). Ptolemy's Geography. nicomachus of gerasa. Mausoleum ofAugustus the Res Gestae. Res Gestae Divi Augusti (Lewis Stiles).
    http://pomoerium.com/links/textsl.htm
    Inscriptio "duenos" Inscriptio fibulae Praenestinae Tabella Lanuvina Texts of inscriptions (Univ. Frankfurt a.M.) Latin Inscriptions (LacusCurtius) Duodecim tabularum leges Twelve Tables (tr. G. Fatás) or alternate or alternate Twelve Tables (tr. E.H. Warmington) Roman law texts (Univ. Saarbrücken) Cato Maior Orationum M. Porci Catonis Fragmenta or alternate Monosticha or alternate Disticha de agri cultura Varro de agri cultura de lingua Latina or alternate Antiquitates T. Maccius Plautus Aulularia or alternate Aulularia - multimedial (Univ. of Richmond) Amphitryo Asinaria Bacchides Captivi ... Casina or alternate Cistellaria Curculio Epidicus ... Menaechmi or alternate Mercator Miles Gloriosus Mostellaria ... Livius Andronicus - Odissia or alternate Ennius - Annales Q. Ennii Fragmenta Polybius 6.11-18 (J. Porter) - constitution of the Roman Republic Cicero or alternate or alternate Marcus Tullius Cicero Homepage (Malaspina Univ.-College)

    54. The Classical Quarterly, Volume 48, Issue 1, Pp. 324-327: Abstract.
    The Classical Quarterly, Volume 48, Issue 1, pp. 324327 Abstract. Shorter note.The chronology of nicomachus of gerasa. AH Criddle. Great Barford, Bedford, UK.
    http://www3.oup.co.uk/clquaj/hdb/Volume_48/Issue_01/480324.sgm.abs.html
    Home Online Resources Table of Contents The Classical Quarterly, Volume 48, Issue 1, pp. 324-327: Abstract.
    Shorter note. The chronology of Nicomachus of Gerasa
    AH Criddle Great Barford, Bedford, UK Oxford University Press Oxford Journals

    55. Access The Great Books [001-075, Page 1 Of 4]
    Lives FTP Moralia. Tacitus (c. 55117) Online Works Histories 2Annals 2 Agricola Germania. nicomachus of gerasa (fl. c. 100 CE
    http://www.anova.org/gb1.html
    Access Foundation
    Home

    Hammurabi (18th c. BCE) to John Milton
    La Rochefoucauld to Emily Brontë
    Karl Marx to Arthur Miller
    Saul Bellow to Annie Dillard
    Suggestions, additions, and corrections pertaining to this site and its content should be directed to its compiler and site manager:
    Zaine Ridling, Ph.D.
    OTHER GREAT
    BOOKS LINKS REVIEWS
    REFERENCE

    ONLINE RESOURCES
    BOOKS ONLINE ... Revised Standard Version - E-text Center, UV Multiple Versions - Bible Gateway Hesiod fl. c. 700 B.C.E. Online Works Theogony ... The Catalogues of Women and the Eoiae (fragments) The Divination of Birds to Idaean Dactyls The Marriage of Ceyx to Doubtful (fragments) Aesop c. 520-460? B.C.E. Online Works Fables ... Fables (Illustrated) Aeschylus c. 525-456 B.C.E. Online Works Tragedies ... Sun-Tzu (c. 450-380 B.C.E.) Online Works The Art of War Aristophanes c. 448-380 B.C.E. ... The Republic [tr. Benjamin Jowett] Dialogues Aristotle 384-322 B.C.E.

    56. Fiction Links
    Tacitus (c. 55117) Histories Annals Germania. nicomachus of gerasa (fl. c.100 CE) Introduction to Arithmetic Gif of Greek Multiplication Table.
    http://www.the-manhattanite.com/links.htm

    Home
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    PUBLISHERS Bookwire Indices Cambridge University Penguin Putnam W.W. Norton ... Writers and Readers REVIEWS NY Times Books BookWire News BoldType E-zine Library of Congress REFERENCE Ency. Britannica Ency. Britannica NetGuide Encarta Abridged Ency. Stanford Ency. of Phil ... Virtual Reference Desk-2 RESOURCES ONLINE Annotated Reading List Biography.com Books in Chains C-SPAN-Booknotes ... Secular Web BOOKS ON-LINE 18th Century E-texts American Literary Classics Athena Book Links Bibliomania Page ... Virtual Library EDUCATIONAL 16th Cent. English Lit. 19th Cent. British Authors American Authors Online British Authors Online ... Tudor England Page The Manhattanite is Proud to present a great list of links for Fiction Lovers GREAT CLASSICS Homer c. 9th Century B.C.E. c. 9th Century B.C.E. Iliad ... Epic of Gilgamesh (c. 2000 B.C.E.) (c. 2000 B.C.E.) Summary The Hebrew Bible (Old Testament) (Old Testament) Revised Standard Version - Etext Center, UV

    57. A Second Summary Of Great Books
    Galen On the Natural Faculties Euclid The Elements Archimedes Collected worksApollonius of Perga Conic Sections nicomachus of gerasa Introduction to
    http://www.radix.net/~bobg/books/summary2.html
    ... and here's another summary of lists of great books. See also the first (to me, that is).
    Robert Grumbine
    bobg@radix.net
    Return to bobg books page
    Return to bobg main page

    bobg@radix.net

    58. Great Books Index: Ancient Western Literature
    Younger. 2nd C Middle East, Ancient Talmud (Babylonian). Greek Epictetus;nicomachus of gerasa; Ptolemy; Arrian; New Testament Apocrypha.
    http://www.interleaves.org/~rteeter/grttabl.html
    You are here:
    Robert Teeter's Home Page
    Books and Libraries What Books to Read Great Books Lists
    Great Books: Index by Period and Culture:
    Western Literature, Ancient (through 6th Century)
    Periods and Nationalities
    3000-1500 BCE

    59. Adler And Van Doren. How To Read A Book
    nicomachus of gerasa (fl.c. 100 AD) Introduction to Arithmetic; Epictetus(c.60120) Discourses Encheiridion (Handbook); Ptolemy (c.100-170; fl.
    http://www.interleaves.org/~rteeter/grtadler.html
    You are here:
    Robert Teeter's Home Page
    Books and Libraries What Books to Read Great Books Lists > Adler and Van Doren. How to Read a Book
    How to Read a Book
    by Mortimer J. Adler and Charles Van Doren
  • Homer (9th Century B.C.?)
    Iliad
    Odyssey
  • The Old Testament
  • Aeschylus (c.525-456 B.C.)
    Tragedies
  • Sophocles (c.495-406 B.C.)
    Tragedies
  • Herodotus (c.484-425 B.C.)
    History
  • Euripides (c.485-406 B.C.)
    Tragedies
    (esp. Medea Hippolytus The Bacchae
  • Thucydides (c.460-400 B.C.) History of the Peloponnesian War
  • Hippocrates (c.460-377? B.C.) Medical Writings
  • Aristophanes (c.448-380 B.C.) Comedies (esp. The Clouds The Birds The Frogs
  • Plato (c.427-347 B.C.) Dialogues (esp. The Republic Symposium Phaedo Meno Apology Phaedrus Protagoras Gorgias Sophist Theaetetus
  • Aristotle (384-322 B.C.) Works (esp. Organon Physics Metaphysics On the Soul The Nicomachean Ethics Politics Rhetoric Poetics
  • Epicurus (c.341-270 B.C.) Letter to Herodotus Letter to Menoeceus
  • Euclid (fl.c. 300 B.C.) Elements
  • Archimedes (c.287-212 B.C.) Works (esp.
  • 60. Henry Mendell
    Articles on Theodorus of Cyrene and Theaetetus of Athens, Aristarchus of Samos , nicomachus of gerasa in The Encyclopedia of Classical Philosophy (ed. D
    http://www.ceu.hu/sun/sun 2003 modmod/CV/henry_mendell_2003.htm
    Central European University A Program for University Teachers, Researchers and Professionals in the Social Sciences and Humanities Summer University you are visitor no. Henry Mendell Philosophy Department, California State University, Los Angeles5151 State U. Dr. Education 1977-85: Stanford University (Ph.D. Jan., 1986)
    1972-74: St. John's College, Cambridge, England (B.A. 1974, M.A. 1980in Philosophy)
    1968-72: Cornell University (A.B. 1971 in Classics (Magna cum laude) and Philosophy)
    Dissertation Topic: Aristotle and the Mathematicians: Some Cross-Currents in the Fourth Century
    Principal Thesis Adviser: Julius Moravcsik
    AOS: Ancient Philosophy, Early Greek Mathematics and Astronomy
    AOC: Philosophy of Science, Metaphysics Publications Book with Pat Suppesand Julius Moravcsik (eds.). Ancient and Medieval Traditions in the Exact Sciences: Essays in Memory of Wilbur Knorr. Stanford: CSLI (distr. University of Chicago Press), 2001. Articles "The Trouble withEudoxus". In Pat Suppes, Julius Moravcsik, and Henry Mendell (eds.), Ancient and Medieval Traditions in the Exact Sciences: Essays in Memory of Wilbur Knorr (Stanford: CSLI (distr. University of Chicago Press), 2001), 59-138 "Making Sense of Aristotelian Demonstration". Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy, 16 (1998), 160-225.

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