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  1. Did Aristotle have some knowledge of the grammar advocated by the Cyrenaics? Reflections on a new Cyrenaic testimony.Deyvis Deniz Machín - 2022 - In Claudia Marsico, Socrates and the Socratic Philosophies: Selected Papers from Socratica IV. Baden-Baden: Academia Verlag. pp. 311-328.
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  2. La Indeterminación Metafísica Como Determinabilidad: El Caso de Los Cirenaicos.Bruno Borge & Giovanna De Paoli - 2024 - Cuadernos de Filosofía: Universidad de Concepción 42:187-204.
    This work applies Jessica Wilson’s metaphysical indeterminacy approach, ba-sed on the determinable-determinate distinction, to ancient ontologies, focu-sing on the Cyrenaic school. It argues that this conceptual framework elucida-tes the nature of indeterminacy in Cyrenaic metaphysics, complementing and resolving tensions in Ugo Zillioli’s interpretation. The study reviews the con-temporary debate on metaphysical indeterminacy, presents Wilson’s approach and its applications, and applies it to ancient ontologies, particularly the Cyre-naic school. It discusses the conceptual and interpretative advantages of this application, contributing to a (...)
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  3. Conclusion: The Birth of Hedonism.Kurt Lampe - 2014 - In The Birth of Hedonism: The Cyrenaic Philosophers and Pleasure as a Way of Life. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 193-197.
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  4. The “New Cyrenaicism” of Walter Pater.Kurt Lampe - 2014 - In The Birth of Hedonism: The Cyrenaic Philosophers and Pleasure as a Way of Life. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 168-192.
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  5. Theodorus’s Innovations.Kurt Lampe - 2014 - In The Birth of Hedonism: The Cyrenaic Philosophers and Pleasure as a Way of Life. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 147-167.
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  6. Hegesias’s Pessimism.Kurt Lampe - 2014 - In The Birth of Hedonism: The Cyrenaic Philosophers and Pleasure as a Way of Life. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 120-146.
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  7. Virtue and Living Pleasantly.Kurt Lampe - 2014 - In The Birth of Hedonism: The Cyrenaic Philosophers and Pleasure as a Way of Life. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 56-91.
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  8. Knowledge and Pleasure.Kurt Lampe - 2014 - In The Birth of Hedonism: The Cyrenaic Philosophers and Pleasure as a Way of Life. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 26-55.
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  9. Introduction.Kurt Lampe - 2014 - In The Birth of Hedonism: The Cyrenaic Philosophers and Pleasure as a Way of Life. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 1-11.
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  10. Eliminativism in ancient philosophy: Greek and Buddhist philosophers on material objects.Ugo Zilioli - 2024 - London; New York; Dublin: Bloomsbury Academic.
    A comparative investigation in the metaphysics of material objects and persons in ancient philosophy, this book provides radically new insights into key themes and areas of ancient thought by drawing on Greek and Buddhist philosophies. Ugo Zilioli explicates the neglected tradition of philosophers who in different ways made material objects either redundant or ontologically dispensable in the ancient world. At the same time, while eliminating objects from the material apparatus of the world, some of those philosophers conceived of selves and (...)
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  11. Socrate et la connaissance de soi.Voula Tsouna - 2001 - Philosophie Antique 1 (1):37-64.
    Self-knowledge occupies a central place in the thought of the Socratics. As he makes it the characteristic feature of the figure of Socrates and of his search for the good life, Plato develops in his own right Socrates’ views on self-knowledge in a variety of ways, all of which incorporate the intuition that proper awareness of ourselves is determined, at least partly, by factors external to the individual. The aim of the pre­sent paper is to substantiate precisely this claim.The first (...)
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  12. The Routledge Handbook of Women and Ancient Greek Philosophy.Sara Brill & Catherine McKeen (eds.) - 2024 - Routledge.
    The Routledge Handbook of Women and Ancient Greek Philosophy is an essential reference source for cutting-edge scholarship on women, gender, and philosophy in Greek antiquity. The volume features original research that crosses disciplines, offering readers an accessible guide to new methods, new sources, and new questions in the study of ancient Greek philosophy and its multiple afterlives. Comprising 40 chapters from a diverse international group of experts, the Handbook considers questions about women and gender in sources from Greek antiquity spanning (...)
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  13. The Cyrenaics on the Premeditation of Future Evils.Isabelle Chouinard - 2023 - Phronesis 68 (4):410-437.
    In Book 3 of the Tusculans, Cicero reports that the Cyrenaics practised the premeditation of future evils. This article focuses on the philosophical consistency of this exercise with other Cyrenaic testimonies. It argues for the authenticity of Cicero’s report and provides a critical survey of previous attempts to reconstruct the theory underlying Cyrenaic premeditation, which addresses crucial questions about the management of future pleasures and pains, and the duration of affections. New evidence from Diogenes Laertius 2.94 is then used to (...)
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  14. al-Muʻīn fī tārīkh al-falsafah al-akhlāqīyah al-Kīrīnīyah, al-Qūrīnīyah =.Miftāḥ ʻAbd Allāh Masūrī - 2012 - Ṭarābuls, Lībyā: Dār al-Rūwād.
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  15. The (Un)bearable Lightness of Being. The Cyrenaics on Residual Solipsism.Ugo Zilioli - 2023 - Peitho 13 (1):65-82.
    The aim of this paper is to assess the evidence on Cyrenaic solipsism and show how and why some views endorsed by the Cyrenaics appear to be committing them to solipsism. After evaluating the fascinating case for Cyrenaic solipsism, the paper shall deal with an (often) underestimated argument on language attributed to the Cyrenaics, whose logic – if I reconstruct it well – implies that after all the Cyrenaics cannot have endorsed a radical solipsism. Yet, by drawing an illuminating parallel (...)
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  16. Aurora Corti, L’Adversus Colotem di Plutarco. Storia di una polemica filosofica.James Warren - 2015 - Philosophie Antique 15:283-286.
    Recent years have seen the publication of a number of significant studies of Plutarch’s Adversus Colotem. The Adv. Col. has always been of interest, of course, as a source for Presocratic philosophers and also the philosophy of the Hellenistic Epicureans, Cyrenaics, and Academics. But in these recent studies it has also been considered as a whole work in its own right, with critics and interpreters becoming increasingly interested not just in looking through Plutarch to access a Hellenistic o...
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  17. Philosophy in the Hellenistic and Roman worlds.Peter Adamson - 2015 - Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press.
    Peter Adamson offers an accessible, humorous tour through a period of eight hundred years when some of the most influential of all schools of thought were formed: from the third century BC to the sixth century AD. He introduces us to Cynics and Skeptics, Epicureans and Stoics, emperors and slaves, and traces the development of Christian and Jewish philosophy and of ancient science. Chapters are devoted to such major figures as Epicurus, Lucretius, Cicero, Seneca, Plotinus, and Augustine. But in keeping (...)
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  18. Epicurean versus Cyrenaic Happiness.David Sedley - 2016 - In Richard Seaford, John Wilkins & Matthew Wright, Selfhood and the Soul: Essays on Ancient Thought and Literature in Honour of Christopher Gill. New York, New York: Oxford University Press UK. pp. 89-106.
    Eudaimonia, happiness, is a property of a whole life, not of some portion of it. What can this mean for hedonists? For Epicurus, it is made possible by the mind’s capacity to enjoy one’s whole life from any temporal viewpoint: to relive past pleasures and enjoy future ones in anticipation, importantly including confidence in a serene closure. Enjoying your life is like enjoying a day as a whole, not least its sunset. Although pleasure is increased by greater duration (contrary to (...)
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  19. People in a Siege: On the Relationship between Ethics and Epistemology in Cyrenaic Philosophy.Antonio Pedro Mesquita - 2020 - Ancient Philosophy 40 (2):307-328.
  20. Epicureans, Earlier Atomists, and Cyrenaics.Stefano Maso - 2020 - In Kelly Arenson, The Routledge Handbook of Hellenistic Philosophy. pp. 58-70.
    The theory developed by Leucippus (5th cent. BCE), Democritus (470/460-380 BCE), and later Epicurus (341-271/270 BCE) and his school is commonly defined as atomistic materialism. According to this theory, matter is the fundamental principle of existent and ever-evolving reality, and it is constituted of atoms. But whereas for the first atomists atoms were not so much a substance (ousia) as an ideal form (idea) through which they could explain sensible bodies and their movement, with Epicurus atoms effectively turned into a (...)
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  21. Physical Theories of the Soul: Democritus, Epicurus, Lucretius.Archontissa Kokotsaki - 2018 - Proceedings of the XXIII World Congress of Philosophy 2 (3):37-41.
    The Epicurean philosophy is based upon the theory of Democritus, who believed that everything is composed of ‘atoms’, physically but not geometrically indivisible, and lie in a void. Democritus paid a great deal of attention to the structure of the human body, the noblest part of which is considered to be the soul. These all-pervading souls - atoms perform in different functions. In this case, Epicurus and his followers believed that the soul, just like the body, was somehow material, consisting (...)
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  22. Cicero Reading the Cyrenaics on the Anticipation of Future Harms.Katharine R. O'Reilly - 2019 - Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 23 (2):431-443.
    A common reading of the Cyrenaics is that they are a school of extreme hedonist presentists, recognising only the pleasure of the present moment, and advising against turning our attention to past or future pleasure or pain. Yet they have some strange advice which tells followers to anticipate future harms in order to lessen the unexpectedness of them when they occur. It’s a puzzle, then, how they can consistently hold the attitude they do to our concern with our present selves, (...)
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  23. I pathe di Epicuro tra epistemologia ed etica.Francesco Verde - 2018 - Elenchos: Rivista di Studi Sul Pensiero Antico 39 (2):205-230.
    The focus of this paper is the analysis of the epistemological and practical role played bypathe/affections in Epicurus’ philosophy. Epicurus firstly considered the affections not as emotional/passional conditions, but as firm criteria of truth and more specifically as the third criterion of the canonic (i.e. the epistemological part of his philosophical system). In this article the critical reactions (in particular by the Peripatetic side: Aristocles of Messene) against the Epicurean position about the function of the affections will be investigated too. (...)
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  24. ‘Review of K. Lampe (2015) The Birth of Hedonism: The Cyrenaic Philosophers and Pleasure as a Way of Life (Princeton University Press)’. Classical Journal 2015.09.02. [REVIEW]Sean McConnell - 2015 - Classical Journal 9:02.
  25. Warren, The Pleasures of Reason in Plato, Aristotle, and the Hellenistic Hedonists. [REVIEW]Tim O'Keefe - 2015 - Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 1.
  26. The Birth of Hedonism: The Cyrenaic Philosophers and Pleasure as a Way of Life. [REVIEW]Tim O’Keefe - 2017 - Ancient Philosophy 37 (1):185-192.
  27. The Epistemology of the Cyrenaic School. [REVIEW]R. J. Hankinson - 2001 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 63 (3):720-723.
    This is not a long book—but it is surprising that it is as long as it is. The Cyrenaics are one of a number of more or less shadowy philosophical schools which emerged in the Greek world in the 4th century BC and later. Well known are Plato’s Academy and Aristotle’s Lyceum; and relatively well served by the tradition are the Stoics and the Epicureans, as well as the various later varieties of sceptic; while the Cynics are remembered at least (...)
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  28. The Epistemology of the Cyrenaic School. [REVIEW]Richard Bett - 1999 - Ancient Philosophy 19 (2):404-407.
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  29. Bruno Gentili (ed.): Cirene: Storia, mito, letteratura. Atti del Convegno della S.I.S.A.C. (Urbino 3 luglio 1988). (SISAC Atti di Convegni, 4.) Pp. iii + 151; 7 drawn plans and 9 plates. Urbino: Quattro Venti, 1990. Paper, L. 20,000.J. M. Reynolds - 1992 - The Classical Review 42 (1):215-216.
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  30. Die Nominalbildung in den Dichtungen des Kallimachos von Kyrene. [REVIEW]David A. Campbell - 1972 - The Classical Review 22 (3):407-408.
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  31. Could the Cyrenaics Live an Ethical Life? Jules Vuillemin’s Answer (and a Further Suggestion).Ugo Zilioli - 2016 - Philosophia Scientiae 20-3 (20-3):29-48.
    The paper aims to first understand whether the Cyrenaics were actually susceptible to the charge of apraxia; secondly, if they were, to see how they might have responded to this and what sort of ethical outlook they might have tried to defend. In dealing with these issues, I will inevitably assess the legitimacy of Vuillemin’s interpretation of Cyrenaic scepticism. In so doing, I shall confirm the scholarly plausibility of his interpretation while, at the same time, providing material for further exploration (...)
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  32. The Annicerean Cyrenaics on Friendship and Habitual Good Will.Tim O’Keefe - 2017 - Phronesis: A Journal for Ancient Philosophy 62 (3):305-318.
    Unlike mainstream Cyrenaics, the Annicereans deny that friendship is chosen only because of its usefulness. Instead, the wise person cares for her friend and endures pains for him because of her goodwill and love. Nonetheless, the Annicereans maintain that your own pleasure is the telos and that a friend’s happiness isn’t intrinsically choiceworthy. Their position appears internally inconsistent or to attribute doublethink to the wise person. But we can avoid these problems. We have good textual grounds to attribute to the (...)
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  33. Cyrenaics and Epicureans on Pleasure and the Good Life: The Original Debate and Its Later Revivals.Voula Tsouna - 2016 - In Sharon Weisser & Naly Thaler, Strategies of Polemics in Greek and Roman Philosophy. Boston: Brill. pp. 113-149.
  34. APPENDIX 1. The Sources.Kurt Lampe - 2014 - In The Birth of Hedonism: The Cyrenaic Philosophers and Pleasure as a Way of Life. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 198-210.
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  35. Bibliography.Kurt Lampe - 2014 - In The Birth of Hedonism: The Cyrenaic Philosophers and Pleasure as a Way of Life. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 263-274.
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  36. CHAPTER 10. Conclusion: The Birth of Hedonism.Kurt Lampe - 2014 - In The Birth of Hedonism: The Cyrenaic Philosophers and Pleasure as a Way of Life. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 193-197.
  37. (8 other versions)Index.Kurt Lampe - 2014 - In The Birth of Hedonism: The Cyrenaic Philosophers and Pleasure as a Way of Life. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 275-277.
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  38. Notes.Kurt Lampe - 2014 - In The Birth of Hedonism: The Cyrenaic Philosophers and Pleasure as a Way of Life. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 223-262.
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  39. Acknowledgments.Kurt Lampe - 2014 - In The Birth of Hedonism: The Cyrenaic Philosophers and Pleasure as a Way of Life. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
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  40. Abbreviations.Kurt Lampe - 2014 - In The Birth of Hedonism: The Cyrenaic Philosophers and Pleasure as a Way of Life. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
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  41. CHAPTER 2. Cyrene and the Cyrenaics: A Historical and Biographical Overview.Kurt Lampe - 2014 - In The Birth of Hedonism: The Cyrenaic Philosophers and Pleasure as a Way of Life. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 12-25.
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  42. CHAPTER 5. Eudaimonism and Anti-Eudaimonism.Kurt Lampe - 2014 - In The Birth of Hedonism: The Cyrenaic Philosophers and Pleasure as a Way of Life. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 92-100.
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  43. CHAPTER 7. Hegesias’s Pessimism.Kurt Lampe - 2014 - In The Birth of Hedonism: The Cyrenaic Philosophers and Pleasure as a Way of Life. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 120-146.
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  44. CHAPTER 1. Introduction.Kurt Lampe - 2014 - In The Birth of Hedonism: The Cyrenaic Philosophers and Pleasure as a Way of Life. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 1-11.
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  45. CHAPTER 3. Knowledge and Pleasure.Kurt Lampe - 2014 - In The Birth of Hedonism: The Cyrenaic Philosophers and Pleasure as a Way of Life. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 26-55.
  46. CHAPTER 6. Personal and Political Relationships.Kurt Lampe - 2014 - In The Birth of Hedonism: The Cyrenaic Philosophers and Pleasure as a Way of Life. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 101-119.
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  47. CHAPTER 4. Virtue and Living Pleasantly.Kurt Lampe - 2014 - In The Birth of Hedonism: The Cyrenaic Philosophers and Pleasure as a Way of Life. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 56-91.
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  48. Finding Room for Other‐Concern.Julia Annas - 1993 - In The Morality of Happiness. New York:
    The Cyrenaics are hedonists who have difficulty finding a stable place in their theory either for one's life as a whole or for other‐concern. Epicurus tries to avoid their problems by his theories of friendship and of justice, with incomplete success. The Sceptics face problems in trying to claim that the Sceptic will be benevolent to others despite achieving tranquility as his final end.
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  49. Issues in Selfhood: Subjectivity and Objectivity.Christopher Gill - 2006 - In The structured self in Hellenistic and Roman thought. New York: Oxford University Press.
    This chapter challenges the rather common view that Hellenistic-Roman thought shows a shift towards a more subjective and individualistic conception of self. It argues that this period expresses an ‘objective-participant’ conception, like that of Classical Greece. The account of self-knowledge in Plato’s Alcibiades is offered as an illustration of Classical Greek objective-participant thinking about the self. The chapter contests the idea, maintained by some scholars, that we find a shift towards a more subjective conception of self in the Stoic theory (...)
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  50. The Epistemology of the Cyrenaic School.Voula Tsouna - 1998 - New York, NY, USA:
    The Cyrenaic school was a fourth-century BC philosophical movement, related both to the Socratic tradition and to Greek Scepticism. In ethics, Cyrenaic hedonism can be seen as one of many attempts made by the associates of Socrates and their followers to endorse his ethical outlook and to explore the implications of his method. In epistemology, there are close philosophical links between the Cyrenaics and the Sceptics, both Pyrrhonists and Academics. There are further links with modern philosophy as well, for the (...)
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