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Death and Immortality in Ancient Philosophy

Death and Immortality in Ancient Philosophy

Death and Immortality in Ancient Philosophy

A. G. Long, University of St Andrews, Scotland
April 2023
Paperback
9781107451568

    Death and immortality played a central role in Greek and Roman thought, from Homer and early Greek philosophy to Marcus Aurelius. In this book A. G. Long explains the significance of death and immortality in ancient ethics, particularly Plato's dialogues, Stoicism and Epicureanism; he also shows how philosophical cosmology and theology caused immortality to be re-imagined. Ancient arguments and theories are related both to the original literary and theological contexts and to contemporary debates on the philosophy of death. The book will be of major interest to scholars and students working on Greek and Roman philosophy, and to those wishing to explore ancient precursors of contemporary debates about death and its outcomes.

    • Explores the varied and often subtle conceptions of immortality in Greek and Roman philosophy, from Homer to Stoicism
    • Provides an original account of death in Epicureanism and of immortality in the thought of Plato
    • The book is accessible and of great interest to upper-level students of ancient philosophy as well as those interested in contemporary debates on death

    Product details

    April 2023
    Paperback
    9781107451568
    240 pages
    229 × 152 × 13 mm
    0.356kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction
    • Part I. Immortality:
    • 1. Immortality in early Greek poetry and philosophy
    • 2. Platonic immortalities
    • 3. Immortality and the ethics of a finite lifespan: Aristotle, early Stoics and Epicureanism
    • Part II. Death:
    • 4. Death, doubts and scepticism
    • 5. Epicurean evaluations of death
    • 6. Stoic agnosticism and symmetry arguments
    • 7. Suicide, religion and the city
    • Conclusion.
      Author
    • A. G. Long , University of St Andrews, Scotland

      A. G. Long is Senior Lecturer in Classics at the University of St Andrews, Scotland. He has translated (with David Sedley) Plato's Meno and Phaedo (Cambridge, 2010) and is the author of Conversation and Self-Sufficiency in Plato (2013) as well as the editor of Plato and the Stoics (Cambridge, 2013).