Reading list for philosophy

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{{Book reviews|topic=Philosophy}}
 
  
==Introduction to Philosophy==
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Philosophy 101 by Socrates: An Introduction to Philosophy Via Plato's Apology
 
| author=Peter Kreeft
 
| date=2002
 
| publisher=Ignatius Press
 
| ISBN=0898709253 
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=A delightful introduction to philosophy that has been popular with college students required to take an Introduction to Philosophy course and were pleasantly surprised with this text. In addition, it is an introduction to philosophy via classic Platonic dialogues and Socrates.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=LEISURE THE BASIS OF CULTURE
 
| author=Josef Pieper
 
| date=1999
 
| publisher=Liberty Fund, Inc. (reprint)
 
| ISBN=90865972109
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=This book is on the spirit of the liberal arts, including philosophy, in ancient and medieval culture. It argues that leisure, properly understood as the ancients understood it, is the basis of culture and that culture is the cultivation of the virtues of the human spirit. In the second part of this book, philosophy is covered. It is shown in the ancient view to be a quest of the human spirit, animated by Eros, that arises out of wonder (thaumazein) and develops into contemplation (theoria, a word related to thaumazein in the Greek).
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=In Defense of Philosophy
 
| author=Josef Pieper
 
| date=1992
 
| publisher=Ignatius Press
 
| ISBN=0898703972 
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=This book builds on the book by Pieper above. Here it shows that the ancient philosophical quest was a spiritually transformative quest that involved the whole person but also involved the use, cultivation, and perfection of the logical and reasoning powers as well as Eros as the animating spirit of the philosophical quest.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Philosophy: An Introduction to the Art of Wondering
 
| author=James L. Christian
 
| date=2008
 
| publisher=Wadsworth
 
| ISBN=0495505048 
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=A fun introduction to philosophy as an intellectual adventure in terms of our common human questions about "the big picture".
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Apology for Wonder
 
| author=Sam Keen
 
| date=various
 
| publisher=Harper
 
| ISBN=
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=This book is an unusual introduction to philosophy by examining and contrasting ancient with modern views of the world. Do we look upon the world with wonder and as sacred or do we see it as raw material for our growing technological power over it? This book nicely supplements the Pieper book on Leisure above.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
 
==Introduction to Ancient Philosophy==
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=What Is Ancient Philosophy?
 
| author=Pierre Hadot
 
| date=2004
 
| publisher= Harvard Belknap Press
 
| ISBN=978-0674013735
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=Pierre Hadot, an internationally prominent French historian of ancient philosophy, describes the history of ancient philosophy as a way of life similar to eastern spiritual disciplines or western monastic orders. This book continues the themes of his Philosophy as a Way of Life. Hadot is Professor of Ancient Philosophy at the College de France.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Retrieving the Ancients: An Introduction to Greek Philosophy
 
| author= David Roochnik
 
| date=2004
 
| publisher=Wiley-Blackwell
 
| ISBN=1405108622 
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=Widely reviewed as one of the best introductions to ancient philosophy and its continued importance.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Roman Philosophers
 
| author=Mark Morford
 
| date=2002
 
| publisher=Routledge
 
| ISBN=0415188520 
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=The most accessible single volume introductory survey on specifically Roman philosophy.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Being a Man: The Roman Virtus As a Contribution to Moral Philosophy (European Studies in the History of Science and Ideas)
 
| author=Juhani Sarsila
 
| date=2006
 
| publisher=Peter Lang Publishing
 
| ISBN=0820498947
 
| ISSN=978-0820498942
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=This is a philosophical study of the Roman view of manliness, virtus, as a virtue. As a contribution to the our understanding of ancient Roman moral concepts and ideals, the book proceeds to a broader perspective of how the Roman concept of virtus as a virtue fitted in with the other cardinal virtues esteemed in the ancient world.
 
| name=[[User:Gnaeus Equitius Marinus|Gnaeus Equitius Marinus]]
 
}}
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Roman Manliness: "Virtus" and the Roman Republic
 
| author=Myles McDonnell
 
| date=2006
 
| publisher=Cambridge University Press
 
| ISBN=0521827884
 
| ISSN=978-0521827881
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=Myles McDonnell shows how Roman manliness was expressed and displayed by contest in the religion, culture, and politics of the late Republic.
 
| name=[[User:Gnaeus Equitius Marinus|Gnaeus Equitius Marinus]]
 
}}
 
 
 
==Introduction to Ancient Logic==
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Socratic Logic 3e: A Logic Text Using Socratic Method, Platonic Questions, and Aristotelian Principles
 
| author=Peter Kreeft
 
| date=2008
 
| publisher=St. Augustine Press
 
| ISBN=1587318059 
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=This is one of two good introductions in training one how to reason in ancient logic. Modern logic books deal with logic from the standpoint of boolean logic.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
}}
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=An Introduction To Traditional Logic: Classical Reasoning For Contemporary Minds
 
| author=Scott Sullivan
 
| date=2005
 
| publisher=BookSurge
 
| ISBN=1419616714
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=This is the other good introduction to ancient logic that also shows how it is the logic natural to how the human mind works. It includes a great introduction to ancient theories of the mind and cognition as part of its discussion of logic.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
}}
 
 
==History of Philosophy (General)==
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=History of Philosophy: Greece and Rome, Volume One
 
| author=Frederick Copleston
 
| date=1993
 
| publisher=Image
 
| ISBN=0385468431
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=This volume and the eight volumes after it comprise what is widely regarded as the best history of philosophy in English. It was originally written for Catholic seminary students but has been elevated to a much higher status of acclaim in academia. Copleston is at Oxford.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=History of Philosophy: Medieval Philosophy, Volume Two
 
| author=Frederick Copleston
 
| date=1993
 
| publisher=Image
 
| ISBN=038546844X
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=History of Philosophy: Late Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy, Volume Three
 
| author=Frederick Copleston
 
| date=1993
 
| publisher=Image
 
| ISBN=0385468458
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=History of Philosophy: Modern Philosophy, From Descartes to Leibnitz, Volume Four
 
| author=Frederick Copleston
 
| date=1993
 
| publisher=Image
 
| ISBN=038547041X
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=History of Philosophy: Modern Philosophy, The British Philosophers From Hobbes to Hume, Volume Five
 
| author=Frederick Copleston
 
| date=1993
 
| publisher=Image
 
| ISBN=0385470428
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=History of Philosophy: Modern Philosophy, From the French Enlightenment to Kant, Volume Six
 
| author=Frederick Copleston
 
| date=1993
 
| publisher=Image
 
| ISBN=0385470436
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=History of Philosophy: Modern Philosophy, From the Post-Kantian Idealists to Marx, Kierkegaard, and Nietzsche, Volume Seven
 
| author=Frederick Copleston
 
| date=1993
 
| publisher=Image
 
| ISBN=0385470444
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=History of Philosophy: Modern Philosophy, Empiricism, Idealism And Pragmatism in Britain and America, Volume Eight
 
| author=Frederick Copleston
 
| date=1994
 
| publisher=Image
 
| ISBN=0385470452
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=History of Philosophy: Modern Philosophy, From the French Revolution to Sartre, Camus, and Levi Strauss, Volume Nine
 
| author=Frederick Copleston
 
| date=1994
 
| publisher=Image
 
| ISBN=0385470460
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
 
 
==History of Ancient Philosophy==
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Ancient Philosophy: A New History of Western Philosophy
 
| author=Sir Anthony Kenny
 
| date=2007
 
| publisher=Oxford University Press
 
| ISBN=0198752725 
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=This highly acclaimed history of ancient philosophy is unique in that it has two main sections. The first section is a history of the different schools of ancient philosophy. The second section puts them into a dialogue, as it were, in terms of key themes and issues in the philosophical conversation.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=From the Origins to Socrates: A History of Ancient Philosophy (SUNY Series in Philosophy), Volume One.
 
| author=Giovanni Reale
 
| date=1986
 
| publisher=SUNY
 
| ISBN=978-0887062902
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=One of the standard multi-volume histories of ancient philosophy.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=A History of Ancient Philosophy: Plato and Aristotle (SUNY Series in Philosophy), Volume Two
 
| author=Giovanni Reale
 
| date=1990
 
| publisher=SUNY
 
| ISBN=978-0791405178
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=Volume Two of the series mentioned above.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=The Systems of the Hellenistic Age: History of Ancient Philosophy (SUNY Series in Philosophy), Volume Three
 
| author=Giovanni Reale
 
| date=1985
 
| publisher=SUNY
 
| ISBN=978-0887060083
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=A History of Ancient Philosophy: The Schools of the Imperial Age (SUNY Series in Philosophy), Volume Four
 
| author=Giovanni Reale
 
| date=1990
 
| publisher=SUNY
 
| ISBN=978-0791401293
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=The final volume in Reale's four volume history of ancient philosophy. This mult-volume history incorporates a lot of new research. Giovanni Reale is Professor and Chair of History of Ancient Philosophy at the Catholic University of Milan, italy.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
== Cross-Cultural Interactions ==
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Studien zum antiken Synkretismus aus Iran und Griechenland
 
| author=R. Reitzenstein, H. H. Schaeder, Fr. Saxl
 
| date=1929
 
| publisher=
 
| ISBN= 
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=In German, the argument of this work is that Zoroastrianism and Zoroastrian philosophy had a significant influence on Greek philosophy and Roman philosophy. It investigates and examines the several lines of influence as even recorded by classical writers. For example, Eudoxus of Cnidus and Pliny the Elder praised Zoroastrian philosophy. Eudoxus taught principles of Zoroastrian philosophy to Plato who incorporated much of it into his own Platonic theory of the forms. Colotes notes in the 3rd century B.C.E. that Plato's Republic incorporates parts of a lost Zoroastrian work titled On Nature.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Zoroaster's Influence on Greek Thought
 
| author=Ruhi Afnan
 
| date=1965
 
| publisher=Philosophical Library
 
| ISBN=
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=This work not only examines the Zoroastrian influence on Greek philosophy, but also, incorporates a comparison and contrast component in how the two cultures dealt with similar philosophical issues and interacted with each other. An example of a contrast discussed is that the Greek sense of life as tragic motivated their philosophical views of the divine and eternity. The gods were a-thanatoi (alpha negation of thanatos, death) and eternity was timeless. By contrast, Zoroastrian thought elevated time into being a divine predicate. Eternity was infinite and everlasting time. An example of a similarity discussed is that both Greek philosophy in its southern Italian and Sicilian Eleatic and Pythagorean traditions as well as the Platonic philosophy took the Good as the supreme metaphysical principle by which the cosmos was to be understood. In this, Greek thinkers took their cue from Zarathustra.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Semites, Iranians, Greeks, and Romans : studies in their interactions
 
| author=Goldstein, Jonathan A.
 
| date=1990
 
| publisher=Scholar's Press [publisher for the American Academy of Religion]
 
| ISBN=
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=This book includes as part of its overall discussion the interaction of Zoroastrianism, Greek philosophy, and Judaism in the ancient world after Alexander the Great.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
== Pre-Socratic Italian Schools ==
 
===Pythagoreanism===
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=The Pythagorean Sourcebook and Library: An Anthology of Ancient Writings Which Relate to Pythagoras and Pythagorean Philosophy
 
| author=Kenneth Sylvan Guthrie
 
| date=1987
 
| publisher=Weiser
 
| ISBN=0933999518 
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=This is a useful one volume compilation of all the original source material that would require searching in multiple classical sources - some very obscure and hard to find.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Pythagoras: His Life, Teaching, and Influence
 
| author=Christoph Riedweg
 
| date=2008
 
| publisher=Cornell University Press
 
| ISBN=0801474523
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=Outstanding book in the history of the Pythagorean school.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Lore and Science in Ancient Pythagoreanism
 
| author=Walter Burkert
 
| date=1972
 
| publisher=Harvard University Press
 
| ISBN=0674539184 
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=One of the indispensible studies of ancient Pythagorean philosophy and science.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Pythagoras and the Pythagoreans: A Brief History
 
| author= Charles H. Kahn
 
| date=2000
 
| publisher=hackett Publishing
 
| ISBN=0872205754 
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=A very accurate and clear survey of the history of the Pythagorean tradition.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=The Manual of Harmonics of Nicomachus the Pythagorean
 
| author=Flora Levin
 
| date=1998
 
| publisher=Phanes Press
 
| ISBN=0933999437
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=This is the only complete English translation of the Pythagorean philosopher and engineer, Nicomachus of Gerasa.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Diogenes Laertius: Lives of Eminent Philosophers,
 
| author=Diogenes Laertius, R.D. Hicks trans.
 
| date=1925
 
| publisher=Loeb Classical Library
 
| ISBN=0674992032
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=
 
}}
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=The Pythagorean golden verses : with introduction and commentary
 
| author=Hierocles,Johan Carl Thom
 
| date=1995
 
| publisher=Brill
 
| ISBN=9004101055
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=
 
}}
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=On the Pythagorean way of life
 
| author=Iamblichus,John Dillon,Jackson Hershbell eds.
 
| date=1991
 
| publisher=Scholars Press
 
| ISBN=1555405223
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=
 
}}
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Ancient philosophy, mystery, and magic : Empedocles and Pythagorean tradition
 
| author=Peter Kingsley
 
| date=1995
 
| publisher=Oxford University Press
 
| ISBN=0198149883
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=
 
}}
 
=== The School of Elea: Parmenides ===
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=In the Dark Places of Wisdom
 
| author=Peter Kingsley
 
| date=2008
 
| publisher=The Golden Sufi Center Publishing
 
| ISBN=189035001X
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=After his widely acclaimed book on Ancient Philosophy, Empedocles and Pythagoras, where he argued that ancient philosophy was something more like a spiritual path resembling ancient shamanism or yoga, Kingsley moved on to argue in this book that the school of Parmenides was also such a tradition. It was also a medical tradition that survived in the Islamic world and influenced Sufism. Unlike his first book, this one is geared towards a general readership with all academic devices confined to the back.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Reality
 
| author=Peter Kingsley
 
| date=2008
 
| publisher=The Golden Sufi Center Publishing
 
| ISBN=1890350087
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=A continuation of In the Dark Places of Wisdom, Kingsley (while having impeccable academic credentials and has won many academic honors) almost becomes an ancient philosophy "reconstructionist" in attempting to revive it as a living spiritual path. This book is widely reviewed and highly acclaimed by such as Huston Smith (expert on world religions), Sayyid Hossein Nasr (expert on Islamic Philosophy and Sufism), Jacob Needleman (philosopher), and David Appelbaum (philosopher and editor of Parabola Magazine).
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
== Socratic Schools ==
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=The Religion of Socrates
 
| author= Mark L. McPherran
 
| date=1999
 
| publisher=Pennsylvania State University Press
 
| ISBN=0271018291
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=A careful study of Socrates' religious views and commitments as the perspective to understand his criticisms of traditional Greek paganism. Outstanding!
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Reason and Religion in Socratic Philosophy
 
| author= Nicholas D. Smith (Editor), Paul Woodruff (Editor)
 
| date=2000
 
| publisher=Oxford University Press
 
| ISBN=0195133226
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=An outstanding follow up to Socrates's Religion. This volume elevates the level of argument and analysis as well as breaks new ground. It is also widely acclaimed for adding much to our understanding of Greek paganism in the process.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=The Foundations of Socratic Ethics
 
| author= Alfonso Gomez-Lobo
 
| date=1994
 
| publisher=Hackett Publishing Co.
 
| ISBN=0872201740
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=Professor Gomez-Lobo, a philosopher at Georgetown, develops a carefully researched argument that there is a clear moral vision behind Socrates' apparent skepticism and "not knowing".
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
 
===Academic Philosophy (Platonist Schools following Socrates and Plato, including Middle Platonism and Neo-Platonism)===
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Plato Complete Works
 
| author=Plato, John M. Cooper (Editor), D. S. Hutchinson (Editor)
 
| date=1997
 
| publisher=Hackett Publishing Company
 
| ISBN=0872203492
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=This is a new and COMPLETE translation of the dialogues of Plato with the latest scholarly research incorporated both into the translation and notes. I emphasize complete because this volume includes the Minos, Epinomis, Demodocus, Eryxias, and Axiochus which are often left out because some consider them to be not authentic.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Plato's Ethics
 
| author=Terence Irwin
 
| date=1997
 
| publisher=Oxford University Press
 
| ISBN=0195086457
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=This work is now considered the best and most important work on Plato's ethical philosophy.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Being and Logos
 
| author=John Sallis
 
| date=1996
 
| publisher=Indiana University Press
 
| ISBN=0253210712
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=Philosophy is about seeing with the mind's eye. This book studies the dialogues of Plato from that perspective. The dialogues allusively suggest and point beyond themselves to evoke and awaken that inner vision.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=The Cambridge Companion to Plato (Cambridge Companions to Philosophy)
 
| author=Richard Kraut (Editor)
 
| date=1992
 
| publisher=Cambridge University Press
 
| ISBN=0521436109
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
 
 
===Cynicism (another Socratic school independent of Academic Philosophy)===
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Cynics (Ancient Philosophies)
 
| author=William Desmond
 
| date=2008
 
| publisher=University of California Press
 
| ISBN=0520258614
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=One of the new outstanding introdcutions to Cynic philosophy as a religious and socially radical continuation of Socrates's legacy. It clearly explains how ancient cycnicism meant something radically different that the meaning that the term "cynicism" has today. One might describe Cynicism as almost a Socratic Stoicism that incorporated a social activism in contrast to Stoicism. Some New Testament scholars believe there is sufficient evidence to infer that the apocalyptic prophet, Jesus of Nazareth, was trained or influenced in Cynic philosophy in the Cynic school at Gedara which was six kilometers from Nazareth. Their main philosophical and socially activist rhetorical "weapon" was the parable.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=The Cynics: The Cynic Movement in Antiquity and Its Legacy (Hellenistic Culture and Society, 23)
 
| author=R. Bracht Branham (Editor), Marie-Odile Goulet-Cazé (Editor)
 
| date=2000
 
| publisher=University of California Press
 
| ISBN=0520216458
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Diogenes The Cynic: The War Against The World
 
| author= Luis E. Navia
 
| date=2005
 
| publisher=Humanity Books
 
| ISBN=1591023203
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
 
==Peripatetic (Aristotle and Aristotelian Philosophy)==
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Complete Works of Aristotle, Vol. 1.
 
| author=Aristotle, J. Barnes (Editor)
 
| date=1971
 
| publisher=Princeton University Press
 
| ISBN=069101650X
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Complete Works of Aristotle, Vol. 2.
 
| author=Aristotle, J. Barnes (Editor)
 
| date=1984
 
| publisher=Princeton University Press
 
| ISBN=0691016518
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=The Cambridge Companion to Aristotle (Cambridge Companions to Philosophy)
 
| author=J. Barnes (Editor)
 
| date=1995
 
| publisher=Cambridge University Press
 
| ISBN=0521422949
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Aristotle's First Principles (Clarendon Aristotle Series)
 
| author= Terence Irwin
 
| date=1990
 
| publisher=Oxford University Press
 
| ISBN=0198242905
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=The most systematic and comprehensive work on Aristotle's metaphysics and epistemology introducting a new standard of analytical and argumentative rigor.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
 
==Stoicism==
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Stoicism (Ancient Philosophies)
 
| author=John Sellars
 
| date=2006
 
| publisher=University of California Press
 
| ISBN=0520249089
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=The most comprehensive and up to date introduction.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=The Stoics: A Guide for the Perplexed (Guides for the Perplexed)
 
| author= M. Andrew Holowchak
 
| date=2008
 
| publisher=Continuum
 
| ISBN=1847060455
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Epictetus: A Stoic and Socratic Guide to Life
 
| author=A. A. Long
 
| date=2004
 
| publisher=Oxford University Press
 
| ISBN=0199268851
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=This work by one of the greatest authorities on Stoicism is regarded as an intellectual tour de force that vividly depicts how Stoicism is a way of life and not just an ancient intellectual system.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=The Cambridge Companion to the Stoics (Cambridge Companions to Philosophy)
 
| author= Brad Inwood
 
| date=2003
 
| publisher=Cambridge University Press
 
| ISBN=0521779855
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=A Guide to the Good Life: The Ancient Art of Stoic Joy
 
| author= William B Irvine
 
| date=2008
 
| publisher=Oxford University Press
 
| ISBN=0195374614
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=A well-researched book intended for nonphilosophers that provides a guide to actually living the Stoic way of life.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Musonius Rufus and Education in the Good Life: A Model of Teaching and Living Virtue
 
| author= J.T. Dillon
 
| date=2004
 
| publisher=University Press of America
 
| ISBN=0761829024
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=Musonius Rufus was a first century Roman Stoic philosopher mostly noted for teaching young Romans and teaching that virtue is the highest happiness. He has been neglected because he has not been seen as an "original philosopher". His new importance is that he was widely acclaimed as a teacher of the values of character and virtue in a time of growing corruption as the regime of imperial Rome consolidated its longevity.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
 
 
==Epicureanism==
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=The Epicurus Reader
 
| author=Epicurus, Brad Inwood,Lloyd P. Gerson
 
| date=1994
 
| publisher=Hackett Publishing
 
| ISBN=0872202410
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=
 
}}
 
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Lucretius; On the Nature of things
 
| author=Lucretius, W.H.D Rouse
 
| date=1924
 
| publisher=Loeb Classical Library
 
| ISBN= 0674992008
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=
 
}}
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Lucretius and Epicurus
 
| author=Diskin Clay
 
| date=1983
 
| publisher=Cornell University Press
 
| ISBN=0801415594
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=
 
}}
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Paradosis and survival : three chapters in the history of Epicurean philosophy
 
| author=Diskin Clay
 
| date=1998
 
| publisher=University of Michigan Press
 
| ISBN=0472108964
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=
 
}}
 
 
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title= Prosopography of Roman Epicureans from the second century B.C. to the second century A.D. 
 
| author=Catherine J. Castner
 
| date=1988
 
| publisher=Peter Lang
 
| ISBN=3820499334
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=
 
}}
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=The sculpted word : Epicureanism and philosophical recruitment in ancient Greece
 
| author=Bernard Frischer
 
| date=1982
 
| publisher=University of California Press
 
| ISBN= 0520041909
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=
 
}}
 
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Live unnoticed = (Lathe biōsas) : on the vicissitudes of an Epicurean doctrine
 
| author=Geert Roskam
 
| date=2007
 
| publisher=Brill
 
| ISBN=9004161716
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=
 
}}
 
 
==Pagan Philosophers On Christianity==
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=On the True Doctrine: A Discourse Against the Christians
 
| author=Celsus (R. Joseph Hoffman, editor, translator)
 
| date=1987
 
| publisher=Oxford University Press
 
| ISBN=0195041518 
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=A highly acclaimed new translation and critical restoration of this pagan philosophical response to the rise of Christianity by R. Joseph Hoffman who adds a very fine critical introduction, places the material in historical context, and has very illuminating
 
footnotes.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Porphyry's Against the Christians: The Literary Remains
 
| author=Porphyry (R. Joseph Hoffman, editor, translator)
 
| date=1994
 
| publisher=Prometheus Books
 
| ISBN=0879758899 
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=Another work, among three, of R. Joseph Hoffman's critical restoration and new translation of historical works by pagans on Christianity.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Julian's Against the Galileans
 
| author=Flavius Claudius Julianus, Emperor of Rome (R. Joseph Hoffman, editor, translator)
 
| date=2004
 
| publisher=Prometheus Books
 
| ISBN=1591021987 
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
==Romano-Byzantine Philosophy (n.b. the Eastern Roman Empire did not fall until C.E. 1453.)==
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Byzantine Philosophy
 
| author=Basil Tatakis
 
| date=2003
 
| publisher=Hackett Publishing Company
 
| ISBN=0872205630
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Byzantine Philosophy and Its Ancient Sources
 
| author=(Editor) Katerina Ierodiakonou
 
| date=2002
 
| publisher=Oxford University Press
 
| ISBN=0199246130
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 
{{Bookinfo
 
| title=Byzantine Magic
 
| author=(Editor) Henry Maquire
 
| date=1995
 
| publisher=Dumbarton Oaks Research Library, Harvard University Press
 
| ISBN=0884022307
 
| ISSN=
 
| worldcat=
 
| comment=This might seem to be a strange title to add to a philosophy reading list. Among other things, this book covers the continuation of Pythagorean, Hermetic, and Neoplatonic magical practices that were passed on to the Russians and the northern Italian Renaissance after the fall of New Rome (Constantinople is a nickname meaning "Constantine's city") in C.E. 1453.
 
| name=A. Sempronius Regulus
 
| format=compact (optional)[[User:Aulus Sempronius Regulus|Aulus Sempronius Regulus]]
 
}}
 

Revision as of 01:12, 14 March 2011

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