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         Proclus:     more books (100)
  1. Proclus' Commentary on Plato's "Parmenides" by Proclus, 1992-10-01
  2. Proclus: Neo-Platonic Philosophy and Science by Lucas Siorvanes, 1997-01-31
  3. The Six Books of Proclus, the Platonic Successor, On the Theology of Plato, Tr. from the Greek: To Which a Seventh Book Is Added, in Order to Supply the ... by Proclus, But Since Lost. Also, a Tran by Proclus, 2010-02-16
  4. The Philosophy of Proclus: The Final Phase of Ancient Thought by Laurence Jay Rosan, 2008-12-01
  5. On the Existence of Evils (Ancient Commentators on Aristotle) by Proclus, 2003-05
  6. Studies on the 5th and 6th Essays of Proclus' Commentary on the "Republic" (Hypomnemata) by Anne D. Sheppard, 1980-12
  7. The Six Books of Proclus, the Platonic Successor, On the Theology of Plato, Volume 1 by Thomas Taylor, Proclus, 2010-03-16
  8. The Six Books of Proclus, the Platonic Successor, on the Theology of Plato (v. 2) by Proclus, 2009-08-13
  9. The Commentaries of Proclus on the Timaeus of Plato V2 by Thomas Taylor, 2010-05-23
  10. The Fragments That Remain Of The Lost Writings Of Proclus, Surnamed The Platonic Successor (1825) by Proclus, 2010-09-10
  11. On the Eternity of the World (de Aeternitate Mundi) by Proclus, 2001-10-01
  12. Order From Disorder. Proclus' Doctrine of Evil and its Roots in Ancient Platonism (Studies in Platonism, Neoplatonism, and the Platonic Tradition) by Phillips, 2007-07-30
  13. Against Proclus' on the Eternity of the World 6-8: Against Proclus' On the Eternity of the World 6-8 (Ancient Commentators on Aristotle) by Philoponus, 2005-07-05
  14. Proclus' Commentary on the Timaeus of Plato (v. 1) by Proclus, 1998-05

21. Proclus
Translate this page proclus de Lycie grec, vers 410-485. Philosophe et historien néo-platonicien.Originaire de Xanthos en Lycie (au sud de l'Asie Mineure
http://www.sciences-en-ligne.com/momo/chronomath/chrono1/Proclus.html
PROCLUS de Lycie
grec, vers 410-485
Alexandrie . On lui doit de nombreux "Commentaires" sur les dialogues de Platon Euclide Son oeuvre, poursuivie par Eutocius d'Ascalon Eudoxe de Cnide exhaustion pour le calcul d'aires et de volumes. d'Aristote Eutocius : Hypatie Aryabhata

22. Proclus
Translate this page proclus (412-486). proclus est le plus célèbre des philosophes de l'écolenéoplatonicienne. L'unité est, selon proclus, l'objet le plus simple.
http://perso.wanadoo.fr/jm.nicolle/cusa/sources/proclus.htm
Proclus (412-486)
Proclus est le plus célèbre des philosophes de l'école néoplatonicienne. Presque toutes ses oeuvres nous sont parvenues, dont le Commentaire sur le premier livre des Eléments d' Euclide , son chef d'oeuvre. Grâce à cet ouvrage qui commente notamment les définitions géométriques d'Euclide, on peut se faire une idée précise de la définition métaphysique que Proclus donne aux objets mathématiques. Proclus compare la pensée à un miroir-plan : "Il faut entendre le plan pour ainsi dire comme préétabli et placé devant les yeux, la pensée comme y décrivant toutes choses, et l'imagination assimilée en quelque sorte à un miroir plan sur lequel les concepts de la pensée renvoient leurs propres images." (PROCLUS, Commentaire sur le premier livres des Eléments d'Euclide , p. 109). On retrouve la même image chez N. de Cues : "l'âme regardant en elle-même, produit à la fois les concepts mathématiques et les sciences qui les étudient." ( De Mente , Herder, III, 554, et De Ludo Globi , Herder, III, 322).

23. Proclus
proclus, 410 485. proclus, a Neoplatonist, was an influence on AmosBronson Alcott, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Margaret Fuller, as well
http://www.alcott.net/alcott/home/champions/Proclus.html
Proclus, 410 - 485
Proclus, a Neoplatonist, was an influence on Amos Bronson Alcott Ralph Waldo Emerson Margaret Fuller , as well as other New England Transcendentalists. As the last major Greek philosopher, and elaborated upon by Damascius , Proclus codified later Platonism, offering not only a coherent metaphysical system but a complete pagan theology. By combining his own views with those of his teachers Plutarch , Syrianus, Porphyry , and Iamblichus

24. Proclus
Translate this page Presentiamo una prima selezione di contributi. proclus (16.1N 46.8E)Autore / Note, Immagine. C. Ebdon (London, UK) (27 3 99) Newton 250,
http://www.uai.it/sez_lun/proclus.htm
IMMAGINI RICEVUTE
Presentiamo una prima selezione di contributi Proclus

Autore / Note Immagine C. Ebdon (London, UK)
Newton 250 Paola Battaglia
Rifr 60 f11.7
Si notano distintamente 2 raggi dipartirsi da Proclus: uno in direzione N.O., l'altro in direzione S. Osservando con maggiore attenzione si notano 2 deboli raggi nel M.Crisium e uno in direzione N. F. Badalotti
SC 250 f10 + telecamera Immagine negativa, per meglio evidenziare le raggiere Davide Zompatori
New 200 f6 Davide Zompatori
New 200 f6 Torna alla pagina principale del programma raggi

25. Proclus
proclus was one of the last in line in the golden chain of Platonic succession. proclus, the successor of Syrianus, at the Athenian school, wrote a
http://www.brown.edu/Students/OHJC/hm4/proclus.htm
Proclus was one of the last in line in the "golden chain of Platonic succession." "Proclus, the successor of Syrianus, at the Athenian school, wrote a commentary on Euclid's Elements. We possess only that on the first book, which is valuable for the information it contains on the history of geometry" (Cajori 61).

26. Proclus - Wikipedia
proclus. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. proclus Lycaeus surnamed The successor (oo? o d?ado?o?). Greek
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proclus
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Proclus
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Proclus Neoplatonist Philosopher ( February 8 April 17 Born to a rich family in Constantinople , he studied rhetoric, philosophy and mathematics in Alexandria of Egypt. He came back to Constantinopole and was a successful lawyer for a short time. However as he preferred philosophy, he went to Athens in to study at the famous School of Philosophy which was founded 800 years before by Plato . He lived in Athens until the end of his life, except for a one year exile due to his political-philosophical activity which was not tolerated by the Christian regime. He became head master of Athens' School of Philosophy. His work can be divided in two parts. In the first part are his

27. Proclus Diadochus
Early Geometry. proclus Diadochus, AD 410485. (From his book Commentaryon Euclid's Elements I). We must next speak of the origin
http://galileoandeinstein.physics.virginia.edu/lectures/proclus.html
Early Geometry
Proclus Diadochus, AD 410-485.
(From his book: Commentary on Euclid's Elements I
It was Thales, who, after a visit to Egypt, first brought this study to Greece. Not only did he make numerous discoveries himself, but laid the foundation for many other discoveries on the part of his successors, attacking some problems with greater generality and others more empirically. After him Mamercus the brother of the poet Stesichorus, is said to have embraced the study of geometry, and in fact Hippias of Elis writes that he achieved fame in that study.
After these Pythagoras changed the study of geometry, giving it the form of a liberal discipline, seeking its first principles in ultimate ideas, and investigating its theorems abstractly and in a purely intellectual way.
[He then mentions several who developed this abstract approach further: Anaxagoras, Hippocrates, Theodorus, etc.]
Plato, who lived after Hippocrates and Theodorus, stimulated to a very high degree the study of mathematics and of geometry in particular because of his zealous interest in these subjects. For he filled his works with mathematical discussions, as is well known, and everywhere sought to awaken admiration for mathematics in students of philosophy.
[He then lists several mathematicians, including Eudoxus and Theatetus, who discovered many new geometric theorems, and began to arrange them in logical sequences-this process culminated in the work of Euclid, called his

28. Proclus
proclus 410?485, Neoplatonic philosopher, b. Constantinople. A synthesizer of Neoplatonicdoctrines, proclus gave the philosophy its most systematic form.
http://www.slider.com/enc/43000/Proclus.htm
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    Proclus 410?-485, Neoplatonic philosopher, b. Constantinople. He studied at Alexandria and at Athens, where he was a pupil of the Platonist Syrianus, whom he succeeded as a teacher. As a partisan of paganism he was forced to leave Athens, but he returned at the end of a year. A synthesizer of Neoplatonic doctrines, Proclus gave the philosophy its most systematic form. He kept the elements of Plotinus, but introduced a principle of triadic development in the series of emanations; the three stages are an original, an emergence from the original, and a return in a lower form to the original. Proclus differed from Plotinus in regard to the origin of matter, which he held to emerge from the first emanation rather than from the plastic forces. Among his writings are commentaries on several Platonic dialogues and two treatises, On Plato's Theology and Institutes of Theology. See Neoplatonism See Fragments of the Lost Writings of Proclus (ed. by Robert Navon, tr. by Thomas Taylor, 1987).
  • 29. Proclus Diadochus 1560
    proclus Diadochus 1560, First edition in Latin and a very fresh copy ofthis handsome book; this is one of proclus' most important writings.
    http://www.mysunrise.ch/users/geissbuehler/pic_of_the_month_042002_02.htm
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    Proclus Diadochus 1560 Proclus Diadochus In Primum Euclidis Elementorum librum Commentariorum ad Universam Mathematicam Disciplinam Principium Eruditionis Tradentium Libri IIII. Folio, Holzschnittportrait auf der Rückseite des Titels mit vielen Holzschnittdiagrammen. Die Extrakte von Euclid sind mit gestochenen Rahmen eingefasst. Neuer Pergamenteinband. Padua, Gratiosus Perchacinus, 1560 First edition in Latin and a very fresh copy of this handsome book; this is one of Proclus' most important writings. "A Venetian patrician, Barocius [Barozzi] received a humanistic education and achieved an admirable command of Greek and Latin. He studied at the University of Padua and according to his own account, lectured there about 1559 on the Sphere of Sacrobosco. Barocius' edition of Proclus' commentary on the first book of Euclid 's Elements was the first important translation of this work, for it was based on better manuscripts than previous efforts had been. The translation, published at Venice in 1560, was completed by Barocius at the age of twenty-two."D.S.B., I, p. 468.

    30. Proclus
    Name proclus. Occupation Philosopher. From Byzantium = Constantinople.Son of Patricius and Marcella, citizens of Lycia. Occupation
    http://www.swan.ac.uk/classics/staff/ter/grst/People/Proclus.htm
    Name Proclus Occupation: Philosopher From : Byzantium = Constantinople Son of: Patricius and Marcella, citizens of Lycia Occupation: Advocate in courts of Byzantium Dates c. AD 410-485 Brief biography Educated at Xanthus and Alexandria, learnt Latin intending to become lawyer like father. Back in Byz. turned to philosophy; went back to Alexandria and studied Aristotle with Olympiodoros the elder and maths with a Heron. Before 20 years old, went to Athens, to study at the Academy under Plutarch of Athens. Member of academy from then till death; as student, then teacher, then scholarch. Last great Neoplatonist. Most writings lost. Contemporaries Works Comm on 1 st book of Euclid’s Elements survives. Also Hypotyposis (outline) of the hypotheses of the Astronomers ; and other writings on astronomy. Attributed are Sphaera ; paraphrase of Ptolemy's Tetrabiblos Eclipses Elements of Physics (summary of Aristotle Phy. 6 and 7 + bk 1 of De caelo). Elements of Theology, Platonic Theology; and commentaries on Platonic dialogues. Also lots of literature, e.g. 7 surviving hymns to the gods. References G Morrow DSB
    T E Rihll
    Last modified: 11 March 2003

    31. Siorvanes/PROCLUS
    proclus NeoPlatonic Philosophy and Science Lucas Siorvanes Siorvanes's extensiveoriginal research presents proclus as much more than just a metaphysician.
    http://www.yale.edu/yup/books/068069.htm
    PROCLUS
    Neo-Platonic Philosophy and Science
    Lucas Siorvanes 1997 Philosophy
    356 pp. 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
    Cloth ISBN 0-300-06806-9
    Proclus, head of the Philosophy School at Athens for fifty years, was one of the leading philosophical figures in Late Antiquity. Lucas Siorvanes here introduces Proclus to English-language readers, discussing his metaphysics and theory of knowledge and focusing in particular on his Neo-Platonism. Proclus lived in the turbulent fifth century A.D., a time of struggles among Christians, Jews, and pagans, the invasion of Attila the Hun, the fall of the Western Roman Empire, and the rise of the Eastern Roman Empire in Byzantium. While Late Antiquity has been regarded as a time of superstition and forbiddingly complex philosophies, recent scholarship has shown it to be full of cultural and intellectual vigor. During Proclus's tenure as head of the Philosophy School, he systematized Neo-Platonism as the summit of ancient Greek thought, brought it to its peak of influence, and became responsible for the form in which it was transmitted to the Byzantine, Western European, and Islamic civilizations. Siorvanes's extensive original research presents Proclus as much more than just a metaphysician. He surveys all of Proclus's philosophical interestsincluding religion, physics, astronomy, mathematics, and poetryrevealing the philosopher's central concern with the problems of being and knowledge and relating the ideas of Proclus to those of such other major thinkers as Plato, Aristotle, and Ptolemy. To help the newcomer, Siorvanes supplies more than 200 quotations from Proclus's works. He also traces the impact of Proclus's Neo-Platonism across cultures, religions, and centuries, in such diverse areas as Christian and Islamic theologies, Renaissance art, Kepler's astronomy, Romantic poetry, Emerson's thought, modern philosophy and science, and current popular phrases.

    32. Mot Clé: Proclus
    Translate this page page d'accueil sommaire, recherche. proclus Liste des unités de rechercheet des chercheurs ayant déclarés ce mot clé. unités de recherche,
    http://www.ulb.ac.be/rech/inventaire/motscles/9/MO7839.html
    page d'accueil sommaire
    recherche Proclus
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    33. Proclus
    proclus This small, polygonal crater is conspicuous for its remarkablelightreflecting properties. Its interior is partly dark
    http://www.inconstantmoon.com/img_proc2_ac.htm
    proclus This small, polygonal crater is conspicuous for its remarkable light-reflecting properties. Its interior is partly dark and partly bright, its walls have an extremely high albedo of 0.16, and a brilliant ray system fans out from the north-west clockwise to the south-south-east. Photo: António Cidadão . His Home Page of Astrophotography includes stereograms, animations, and "Seven Craters a Week" from his forthcoming photographic lunar atlas. Inconstant Moon

    34. PROCLUS DIADOCHUS
    proclus Diadochus was the head of the Academy and a follower of Neoplatonismknown for his Commentary on Euclid's Geometry. P proclus Diadochus. (8 Feb.
    http://ancienthistory.about.com/library/bl/bl_proclus.htm
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    Proclus Diadochus (8 Feb. 411-17 Apr. 485) Related Resources Proclus Links Plutarch Greece: Astronomy Greek Math ... Ancient History Glossary Proclus, who was born in Constantinople, studied at Plato's Academy under Plutarch and Syrianus (a pupil of Plutarch). After studying, Proclus became a teacher, and at the death of Syrianus, became head of the Academy. He was then called by the title Diadochus, meaning successor. He remained at the head of the Academy until his death. His philosophy was the neoplatonism of Plotinus, Porphyry and Iamblichus. Seven of his hymns have been preserved. His

    35. Proclus Diadochus Was A Neoplatonist And The Head Of Plato's Academy Who Wrote A
    proclus Diadochus was a neoplatonist and the head of Plato's Academywho wrote a commentary on Euclid's geometry. proclus Diadochus.
    http://ancienthistory.about.com/cs/proclusdiadochus/
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    Proclus Diadochus Proclus Diadochus was a neoplatonist and the head of Plato's Academy who wrote a commentary on Euclid's geometry. Proclus Diadochus
    Glossary entry on Proclus explaining origin of his name and his philosophical career. Philosophers Timeline Chronological list of Greek and Roman philosophers and mathematicians with dates. Early Geometry Section of Proclus' Commentary on Euclid's Geometry. Proclus Biography of Proclus, with a look at his contributions to geometry, astronomy, physics and theology. Proclus Encyclopedia Britannica article on Proclus calls him the last major Greek philosopher. As a neoplatonist he taught that thoughts are reality, and concrete "things" are merely appearances

    36. Proclus; Morrow, G.R., Trans.: Proclus: A Commentary On The First Book Of Euclid
    of the book proclus A Commentary on the First Book of Euclid's Elementsby proclus; Morrow, GR, trans., published by Princeton University Press.......
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    Proclus:
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    Proclus
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    37. Proclus; Morrow, G.R. And Dillon, J.M., Trans.: Proclus' Commentary On Plato's
    of the book proclus' Commentary on Plato's I Parmenides /I by proclus;Morrow, GR and Dillon, JM, trans., published by Princeton University Press.......
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    Translated by Glenn R. Morrow and John M. Dillon
    406 pp.
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    38. Proclus
    proclus. proclus was reared at Xanthus in Lycia, and he studied philosophyunder Olympiodorus the Elder at Alexandria. At Athens
    http://www.geocities.com/leucretia/icinfo/library/books/proclus.html
    Proclus
    Proclus was reared at Xanthus in Lycia, and he studied philosophy under Olympiodorus the Elder at Alexandria. At Athens he studied under the Greek philosophers Plutarch and Syrianus, whom he followed as diadochos (Greek: "successor"), or head of the Academy founded by Plato c. 387 BC. Remaining there until his death, he helped refine and systematize the Neoplatonic views of the 3rd-century Greek philosopher Iamblichus, whose school stressed elaborate metaphysical speculation. Like Iamblichus, Proclus opposed Christianity and passionately defended paganism. As a Neoplatonic Idealist, he emphasized that thoughts comprise reality, while concrete "things" are mere appearances. Ultimate reality, the "One," is both God and the Good and unifies his ethical and theological systems. His attitudes significantly influenced subsequent Christian theology, in both East and West, through their adaptation by Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite, a 5th-century writer whose forgeries were long thought to be works by a 1st-century convert of the Apostle Paul, Dionysius the Areopagite. The Elements is a concise exposition of Neoplatonic metaphysics in 211 propositions. His Elements of Physics distilled the essence of Aristotle's views, and his In Platonis theologiam (Platonic Theology) explicated Plato's metaphysics. His commentaries on Plato, extant in their entirety, include those on The Republic, Parmenides, Timaeus, and Alcibiades I.

    39. Grand Midi: Proclus Et Son Influence
    Translate this page ÉDITIONS DU GRAND MIDI. proclus et son Influence. Ce recueil comprendles textes de quatorze spécialistes de proclus Werner Beierwaltes
    http://www.grandmidi.com/l107.htm
    ÉDITIONS DU GRAND MIDI
    Proclus et son Influence Ce recueil comprend les textes de quatorze spécialistes de Proclus: Werner Beierwaltes, Linos Benakis, Stanislas Breton, Joseph Combès, Michael Erler, Pierre Hadot, Antony C. Lloyd, H.-D. Saffrey, H.-R. Schwyzer, A. P. Segonds, Carlos Steel, Loris Sturlese, L. G. Westerink et Laura Westra Recensions Table des matières Auteurs et éditeurs Sommaire ... Nouveautés

    40. Proclus.com Search Page
    proclus.com For information about this site or for advertising, email us . FreeNew Car Quote, Free Instant Insurance Quotes Auto, Health, Home, Life.
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