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  1. Stoic Caricature in Lucian’s De astrologia: Verisimilitude As Comedy.Charles McNamara - 2013 - Peitho 4 (1):235-253.
    The inclusion of De astrologia in the Lucianic corpus has been disputed for centuries since it appears to defend astrological practices that Lucian elsewhere undercuts. This paper argues for Lucian’s authorship by illustrating its masterful subversion of a captatio benevolentiae and subtle rejection of Stoic astrological practices. The narrator begins the text by blaming phony astrologers and their erroneous predictions for inciting others to “denounce the stars and hate astrology” (ἄστρων τε κατηγοροῦσιν καὶ αὐτὴν ἀστρολογίην μισέουσιν, 2). The narrator assures (...)
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  • Having a Knack for the Non-Intuitive: Aristarchus's Heliocentrism through Archimedes's Geocentrism.Jean Christianidis, Dimitris Dialetis & Kostas Gavroglu - 2002 - History of Science 40 (2):147-168.
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  • 'It Makes No Difference': Optics and Natural Philosophy in Late Antiquity.Sylvia Berryman - 2012 - Apeiron 45 (3):201-220.
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  • Parmenides and the Origins of the Heavenly Sphere in Ancient Greek Cosmology.Radim Kočandrle - forthcoming - Apeiron.
    Aristotle presented an influential conception of the universe consisting of a sphere of fixed stars with a spherical Earth at its centre. A spherical conception of heaven and Earth appears also in Plato’s writings. In presocratic cosmology, the idea of a spherical universe appears provably first in the thoughts of the Pythagoreans and Parmenides. But while there is no surviving evidence for the cosmology of early Pythagoreans, various sources mention in relation to Parmenides a solid surrounding part and a spherical (...)
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  • Edited by Alan C. Bowen | Francesca Rochberg. Hellenistic astronomy: The science in its contexts Brill's Companions to Classical Studies, Leiden: Brill, 2020, xxxii + 751 pp. ISBN: 9789004400566; 9789004243361. [REVIEW]Victor Gysembergh - 2021 - Centaurus 63 (2):421-422.
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  • Commentary 01 on Goldstein 1980.Bernard R. Goldstein - 2008 - Centaurus 50 (1-2):184-188.
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  • Aspects of Aristotelian statics in Galileo's dynamics.J. De Groot - 2000 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 31 (4):645-664.
    This paper examines geometrical arguments from Galileo's Mechanics and Two New Sciences to discern the influence of the Aristotelian Mechanical Problems on Galileo's dynamics. A common scientific procedure is found in the Aristotelian author's treatment of the balance and lever and in Galileo's rules concerning motion along inclined planes. This scientific procedure is understood as a development of Eudoxan proportional reasoning, as it was used in Eudoxan astronomy rather than simply as it appears in Euclid's Elements. Topics treated include the (...)
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  • The introduction of dated observations and precise measurement in Greek astronomy.Bernard R. Goldstein & Alan C. Bowen - 1991 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 43 (2):93-132.
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