03671nam 2200625Ia 450 991081718950332120200520144314.01-282-45676-897866124567633-11-022081-410.1515/9783110220810(CKB)2550000000001832(EBL)476063(OCoLC)609852882(SSID)ssj0000366802(PQKBManifestationID)11273075(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000366802(PQKBWorkID)10417833(PQKB)10129178(MiAaPQ)EBC476063(DE-B1597)36962(OCoLC)647843543(OCoLC)774092805(DE-B1597)9783110220810(PPN)202061248(EXLCZ)99255000000000183220090707d2009 uy 0engur||#||||||||txtccrTimon of Phlius Pyrrhonism into poetry /by Dee L. ClaymanBerlin ;New York Walter de Gruyterc20091 online resource (272 p.)Untersuchungen zur antiken Literatur und Geschichte ;98Includes a new reconstruction of Timon's poem, Silloi, with English translation.3-11-022080-6 Includes bibliographical references and index.Frontmatter --Contents --Chapter 1 - The Lives of Timon and Pyrrho --Chapter 2 - Timon and Pyrrho: The Pytho and the Indalmoi --Chapter 3 - Timon's Silloi: Organization and Principle Fragments --Chapter 4 - The Silloi in its Literary Context --Chapter 5 - Timon's Reception in Hellenistic Literature --Chapter 6 - Skepticism in Hellenistic Literature --Conclusion - An Aesthetics of Skepticism --BackmatterEarly Skepticism and its founder, Pyrrho of Elis, were introduced to the world in the third century BCE by the poet and philosopher Timon of Phlius. This is the first book-length study in English of the fragments of Timon's works. Of his more than 100 titles, four fragments remain of a catalogue elegy, the Indalmoi, and 133 verses of the Silloi, a hexameter parody in three books in which Timon ridicules philosophers of all periods whom he observes on a trip to Hades. Dee L. Clayman reconstructs the books of the Silloi starting from an outline in Diogenes Laertius and the book numbers assigned to a few fragments by their sources. This has not been attempted since Wachsmuth's edition of 1885, and carries his approach further by careful observation of syntactic and contextual clues in the text. Using the Greek text of Lloyd-Jones and Parsons of 1983, all of the extant fragments are translated into English and discussed as literature, rather than as source material for the history of philosophy. Separate chapters demonstrate that the principle Hellenistic poets, Callimachus, Theocritus and Apollonius of Rhodes, were aware of Timon's work specifically, and of Skepticism generally. The book concludes with a definition of "Skeptical aesthetics" that places many of the characteristic features of Hellenistic literature in a skeptical milieu.Untersuchungen zur antiken Literatur und Geschichte ;98.Skeptics (Greek philosophy)Skeptics (Greek philosophy)186/.1FH 39853rvkClayman Dee L183622Timonof Phlius,ca. 320-ca. 230 B.C.525503MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910817189503321Timon of Phlius3970027UNINA