1st Edition

Praxiphanes of Mytilene and Chamaeleon of Heraclea Text, Translation, and Discussion

Edited By Andrea Martano, Elisabetta Matelli, David Mirhady Copyright 2012
    604 Pages
    by Routledge

    606 Pages
    by Routledge

    This installment of the distinguished RUSCH series focuses on two Peripatetic philosophers of the fourth and third centuries BCE: namely, Chamaeleon and Praxiphanes, both of whom were associated with Theophrastus, Aristotle's successor as head of the Peripatetic School. Chamaeleon and Praxiphanes were intellectuals active in the political and civic life of the Hellenistic Period. Their scholarly interests included inter alia ethics, biography, textual criticism, and linguistics.

    The work presents new editions of the ancient source texts for Chamaeleon and Praxiphanes. Each is accompanied by an apparatus of textual variants and a second apparatus of parallel texts. In addition, there is a facing translation in English as well as notes to the translation. There follow ten essays that clarify material presented in the text translation. The volume closes with an index listing the ancient sources that are referred to the preceding essays.

    This volume continues over thirty years of tradition in the RUSCH series, edited by William W. Fortenbaugh, the finest series available in Aristotelian studies.

    1: Praxiphanes of Mytilene (called ‘of Rhodes’): The Sources, Text and Translation; 2: Chamaeleon of Heraclea Pontica The Sources, Text and Translation; 3: The Peripats on Literature Interpretation, Use and Abuse 1; 4: Chamaeleon on Pleasure and Drunkenness; 5: Something to Do with Dionysus:Chamaeleon on the Origins of Tragedy; 6: Chamaeleon: Biography and Literature Peri tou deina?; 7: Aspects of the Epigraphical and Papyrological Tradition of Praxiphanes; 8: “Praxiphanes of Rhodes held the same opinions as Theophrastus” (Epiphanius, De fide 9.38); 9: The of Praxiphanes in the testimony of Diogenes Laertius *; 10: Thucydides adoxos and Praxiphanes; 11: Praxiphanes, Who Is He?

    Biography

    Andrea Martano