Explorations in Ancient and Modern Philosophy
Myles Burnyeat (1939–2019) was a major figure in the study of ancient Greek philosophy during the last decades of the twentieth century and the first of this. After teaching positions in London and Cambridge, where he became Laurence Professor, in 1996 he took up a Senior Research Fellowship at All Souls College, Oxford, from which he retired in 2006. In 2012 he published two volumes collecting essays dating from before the move to Oxford. Two new posthumously published volumes bring together essays from his years at All Souls and his retirement. The main body of Volume 3 presents studies written for a wide readership, first on Plato's Republic and then on the reading and interpretation of Plato in subsequent periods, particularly in nineteenth-century Britain. The volume also includes hitherto unpublished lectures, 'The Archaeology of Feeling', on the ancient origins of some key modern philosophical and psychological concepts.
- Collects significant papers published in the later period of Myles Burnyeat's distinguished career
- Volume 3 includes essays providing authoritative and accessible introductions to Plato's Republic, his mathematics, and his subsequent reception in nineteenth-century Britain
- Includes the previously unpublished lecture series, 'The Archaeology of Feeling', which demonstrates the relevance of ancient philosophical approaches to contemporary problems
Product details
December 2023Paperback
9781009048668
458 pages
229 × 152 × 24 mm
0.66kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Part I. The Republic
- 1. Plato on why mathematics is good for the soul
- 2. Long walk to wisdom
- 3. The truth of tripartition
- 4. Plato and the dairy-maids: the distribution of happiness inside and outside the ideal city of the Republic
- 5. Justice writ large and small in Republic IV
- 6. Fathers and sons in Plato's Republic and Philebus
- 7. By the Dog
- 8. Culture and society in Plato's Republic
- Part II. The Past in the Present
- 9. Plato
- 10. James Mill on Thomas Taylor's Plato
- 11. What was 'the common arrangement'? An inquiry into John Stuart Mill's boyhood reading of Plato
- 12. The past in the present: Plato as educator of nineteenth-century Britain
- Appendix: The Archaeology of Feeling.