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  1. (1 other version)Plotinus : the Road to Reality.J. M. Rist - 1967 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 30 (2):401-402.
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  • (1 other version)The Philosophy of Plotinus.Kenneth Sylvan Guthrie & William Ralph Inge - 1919 - Philosophical Review 28 (5):527.
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  • (1 other version)Neoplatonism.Richard T. Wallis - 1995 - Indianapolis: Hackett. Edited by Lloyd P. Gerson.
    "This is an excellent textbook on Neoplatonism which gives the reader a very concise and lucid overview of the basic doctrines and leading thinkers of the last great philosophy to emerge before the Christianization of the Roman Empire. I’ve no doubt that my students next semester will benefit from the analyses contained in the book. The contents of the chapters are very informative and adequately place developments in their socio-cultural context." --Michael B. Simmons, Auburn University at Montgomery.
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  • Platonopolis: Platonic political philosophy in late antiquity.Dominic J. O'Meara - 2003 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Conventional wisdom suggests that the Platonist philosophers of Late Antiquity, from Plotinus (third century) to the sixth-century schools in Athens and Alexandria, neglected the political dimension of their Platonic heritage in their concentration on an otherworldly life. Dominic O'Meara presents a revelatory reappraisal of these thinkers, arguing that their otherworldliness involved rather than excluded political ideas, and he reconstructs for the first time a coherent political philosophy of Late Platonism.
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  • Dual Selfhood and Self-Perfection in the Enneads.Suzanne Stern-Gillet - 2009 - Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 13 (2):331-345.
    Plotinus’s theory of dual selfhood has ethical norms built into it, all of which derive from the ontological superiority of the higher (or undescended) soul in us overthe body-soul compound. The moral life, as it is presented in the Enneads, is a life of self-perfection, devoted to the care of the higher self. Such a conception of morality is prone to strike modern readers as either ‘egoistic’ or unduly austere. If there is no doubt that Plotinus’s ethics is exceptionally austere, (...)
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  • Lexicon plotinianum.J. H. Sleeman - 1980 - Leuven, Belgium: Leuven University Press. Edited by Gilbert Pollet.
    Α Ν 0 Ι Ε Ν Τ Α Ν ϋ Μ Ε Ο Ι Ε V Α Ι, ΡΗΙΙ,ΟδΟΡΗΥ ΠΕ \ν III, Ρ - Μ Α Ν 5 Ι Ο Ν ΟΕΝΤΒΕ 5βΠ88 1 II ιηεΐ (1ε δίβυη νβη Ιιοί Βοΐβίδοΐι λ'αΐίοηααΐ ΌΟΟΓ ...
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  • The Cambridge Companion to Plotinus.Lloyd P. Gerson - 1996 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 61 (1):159-160.
    Each volume of this series of companions to major philosophers contains specially commissioned essays by an international team of scholars, together with a substantial bibliography, and will serve as a reference work for students and non-specialists. One aim of the series is to dispel the intimidation such readers often feel when faced with the work of a difficult and challenging thinker. Plotinus was the greatest philosopher in the 700-year period between Aristotle and Augustine. He thought of himself as a disciple (...)
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  • Plotinus and the Stoics: A Preliminary Study.Andreas Graeser - 1972 - Leiden: Brill.
    Among those in question, Aristotle 6 and the Peripatetics, the Stoics and also the Epicureans,7 were the main opponents 8 to For a good account of the...
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