Plutarch's Moralia
15 v. in 16 : 17 cm Greek and English on opposite pages Translators vary Includes bibliographies and indexes v. 1. The education of children -- How the young man should study poetry -- On listening to lectures -- How to tell a flatterer from a friend -- How a man may become aware of his progress in virtue -- v. 2. How to profit by one's enemies -- On having many friends -- Chance -- Virtue and vice -- A letter of condolence to Apollonius -- Advice about keeping well -- Advice to bride and groom -- The dinner of the seven wise men -- Superstition -- v. 3. Sayings of kings and commanders -- Sayings of Romans -- Sayings of Spartans -- The ancient custom of the Spartans -- Sayings of Spartan women -- Bravery of women -- v. 4. The Roman questions -- The Greek questions -- Greek and Roman parallel stories -- On the fortune of the Romans -- On the fortune of Alexander -- Were the Athenians more famous in war or in wisdom? -- v. 5. Isis and Osiris -- The E at Delphi -- The oracles at Delphi no longer given in verse -- The obsolescence of oracles -- v. 6. Can virtue be taught? -- On moral virtue -- On the control of anger -- On tranquillity of mind -- On brotherly love -- On affection for offspring -- Whether vice be sufficient to cause unhappiness -- Whether the affections of the soul are worse than those of the body -- Concerning talkativeness -- On being a busybody -- v. 7. On the love of wealth -- On compliancy -- On envy and hate -- On praising oneself inoffensively -- On the delays of the divine vengeance -- On fate -- On the sign of Socrates -- On exile -- Consolation to his wife -- v. 8. Table-talk : Books I-III -- Table-talk : Books IV-VI -- v. 9. Table-talk : Book VII -- Table-talk : Book VIII -- Table-talk : Book IX -- The dialogue on love -- v. 10. Love stories -- That a philosopher ought to converse especially with men in power -- To an uneducated ruler -- Whether an old man should engage in public affairs -- Precepts of statecraft -- On monarchy, democracy, and oligarchy -- That we ought not to borrow -- Lives of the ten orators -- Summary of a comparison between Aristophanes and Menander -- v. 11. On the malice of Herodotus -- Causes of natural phenomena -- v. 12. Concerning the face which appears in the orb of the moon -- On the principle of cold -- Whether fire or water is more useful -- Whether land or sea animals are cleverer -- Beasts are rational -- On the eating of flesh -- v. 13, pt. 1. Platonic questions -- On the generation of the soul in the Timaeus -- Epitome of the treatise "On the generation of the soul in the Timaeus -- v. 13, pt. 2. On stoic self-contradictions -- Conspectus of the essay, "The stoics talk more paradoxically than the poets" -- Against the stoics on common conceptions -- v. 14. That Epicurus actually makes a pleasant life impossible -- Reply to Colotes in defence of the other philosophers -- Is "life unknown" a wise precept? -- On music -- v. 15. Works by Plutarch : ancient lives -- Tyrwhitt's fragments -- Fragments from lost lives -- Fragments from other named works -- Other fragments
Basılı kopya
Diğer Kitaplar
The Theory of the Four Movements by Charles Fourier
This Remarkable book, written soon after the French revolution, has traditionally been considered one of the founding documents of socialism. It introduces the best-known and most extraordinary utopia written in the l...
Psychology and Life
38 41
100 Best Selling Self Help Books in PDF format.
100 Best Selling Self Help Books in PDF format. Download for Free!
Istanbul Kütüphaneleri: Tarih - Coğrafya Yazmaları Katalogları, I - Türkçe Tarih Yazmaları
Istanbul Kütüphaneleri: Tarih - Coğrafya Yazmaları Katalogları, I - Türkçe Tarih Yazmaları — None provided
Logic: Or, the Right Use of Reason in the Inquiry After Truth. ... By Isaac ...
Book digitized by Google from the library of Oxford University and uploaded to the Internet Archive by user tpb.
CHAM WEIZMANN A BIOGRAPHY BY SEVERAL HANDS
CHAM WEIZMANN A BIOGRAPHY BY SEVERAL HANDS — MEYER W. WEISGAL, JOEL CARMICHAEL