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  1. La sagesse et les pouvoirs du mystérieux??? du fragment 129 d'Empédocle.Constantinos Macris & Pénélope Skarsouli - 2012 - Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 75 (3):357.
    Le fragment 129 d'Empédocle fait état du savoir prodigieux et du pouvoir des prapides d'un Super-Sage du passé en qui les sources citatrices et les interprètes modernes reconnaissent trop facilement Pythagore de Samos. Le but de la présente étude est de reprendre à nouveaux frais l'examen de ces six vers afin d'ouvrir le débat autour de la sagesse et des pouvoirs attribués à la figure anonyme du Super-Sage. Interprétant « Empédocle à partir d'Empédocle », mais aussi à l'aide des références (...)
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  • Daedala Imago and the Image of the World in Lucretius’ Proem (1.5–8).Alexandre Hasegawa - 2023 - Classical Quarterly 73 (2):670-681.
    This article aims to discuss how Lucretius arranges the four ‘roots’ at the end of successive lines of verse in the De rerum natura (henceforth, DRN) (1.5–8). In this passage Lucretius, alluding to Empedocles, puts the words in such an order that one can see the layers of the world by a vertical reading. In the same passage, Lucretius imitates the very beginning of Homer's ecphrasis (Il. 18.478–85), which the allegorical tradition will explain as an image of the world, related (...)
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  • Crafting chaos: Intelligent design in ovid, metamorphoses book 1 and Plato's timaeus.Peter Kelly - 2020 - Classical Quarterly 70 (2):734-748.
    Many attempts have been made to define the precise philosophical outlook of Ovid's account of cosmogony from the beginning of the Metamorphoses, while numerous different and interconnected influences have been identified including Homer, Hesiod, Empedocles, Apollonius Rhodius, Lucretius and Virgil. This has led some scholars to conclude that Ovid's cosmogony is simply eclectic, a magpie collection of various poetic and philosophical snippets haphazardly jumbled together, and with no significant philosophical dimension whatsoever. A more constructive approach could see Ovid's synthesis of (...)
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  • The Wax and the River Metaphors in Ovid’s Speech of Pythagoras and Plato’s Theaetetus.Peter Kelly - 2019 - Philologus: Zeitschrift für Antike Literatur Und Ihre Rezeption 163 (2):274-297.
    In the Speech of Pythagoras fromMetamorphoses15, Ovid uses a metaphor of how wax can be stamped with new images to illustrate how theanimacan remain substantially the same while altering in shape when undergoing transmigration. Shortly after he describes how all things are in a state of flux, and compares the flow of time to the movement of a river. In Plato’sTheaetetus, Socrates, in an extended analogy, tells us to imagine that the ψυχή contains a block of wax, upon which are (...)
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  • What is Pythagorean in the Pseudo-Pythagorean Literature?Leonid Zhmud - 2019 - Philologus: Zeitschrift für Antike Literatur Und Ihre Rezeption 163 (1):72-94.
    This paper discusses continuity between ancient Pythagoreanism and the pseudo-Pythagorean writings, which began to appear after the end of the Pythagorean school ca. 350 BC. Relying on a combination of temporal, formal and substantial criteria, I divide Pseudopythagorica into three categories: 1) early Hellenistic writings ascribed to Pythagoras and his family members; 2) philosophical treatises written mostly, yet not exclusively, in pseudo-Doric from the turn of the first century BC under the names of real or fictional Pythagoreans; 3) writings attributed (...)
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  • Citing Empedocles: A Bilingual Pun at Ovid, Met. 15.58.Paul Roche - 2018 - Classical Quarterly 68 (2):552-556.
    Ovid completes his narrative of the origin of Croton with the following lines (Met. 15.58–9):talia constabat certa primordia famaesse loci positaeque Italis in finibus urbis.It was agreed by sure fame that such were the beginningsof the place and of the city established within Italian borders.
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  • Untarnished Books and Vanished Kings: Numa, Ovid and Ennius.Ludovico Pontiggia - 2023 - Classical Quarterly 73 (1):127-137.
    This article argues that the discovery of Pythagorean volumes in Numa's tomb in 181 b.c. may have played a significant role in the conception of the meeting between Numa and Pythagoras in the last book of Ovid's Metamorphoses, since several features of this event integrate very well into the discourse at the heart of Book 15 on the Greek origins of Roman culture and literature, on the immortality of poetry, and on the relationship between poetry and power. The article further (...)
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  • Of Gods, Men and Stout Fellows: Cicero on sallustius' Empedoclea( Q. Fr. 2.10[9].3).Robert Cowan - 2013 - Classical Quarterly 63 (2):764-771.
    Cicero's letter to his brother Quintus from February 54 is best known for containing the sole explicit contemporary reference to Lucretius’De rerum natura, but it is also notable as the source of the only extant reference of any kind to another (presumably) philosophical didactic poem, Sallustius’Empedoclea(Q. fr.2.10(9).3= SB 14):Lucretii poemata, ut scribis, ita sunt: multis luminibus ingenii, multae tamen artis. sed, cum ueneris. uirum te putabo, si Sallusti Empedoclea legeris; hominem non putabo.Lucretius’ poems are just as you write: they show (...)
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