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  1. Euclid and the Sceptic: A Paper on Vision, Doubt, Geometry, Light and Drunkenness.Sylvia Berryman - 1998 - Phronesis 43 (2):176-196.
    Philosophy in the period immediately after Aristotle is sometimes thought to be marked by the decline of natural philosophy and philosophical disinterest in contemporary achievements in the sciences. But in one area at least, the early third century B.C.E. was a time of productive interaction between such disparate fields as epistemology, physics and geometry. Debates between the sceptics and the dogmatic philosophical schools focus on epistemological problems about the possibility of self-evident appearances, but there is evidence from Euclid's day of (...)
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  • A Somewhat Disorderly Nature: Unity in Aristotle's Meteorologica I-III.Malcolm Wilson - 2009 - Apeiron 42 (1):63-88.
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  • (1 other version)A New View of Early Greek Astronomy.Bernard R. Goldstein & Alan C. Bowen - 1983 - Isis 74 (3):330-340.
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