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دانلود کتاب The Routledge handbook of the Stoic tradition

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The Routledge handbook of the Stoic tradition

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The Routledge handbook of the Stoic tradition

ویرایش: [First issued in paperback] 
نویسندگان:   
سری: Routledge Handbooks in Philosophy 
ISBN (شابک) : 9780415660754, 9781138574106 
ناشر: Routledge Taylor & Francis Group 
سال نشر: 2017 
تعداد صفحات: XX, 407 stron ; 25 cm
[429] 
زبان: English 
فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود) 
حجم فایل: 6 Mb 

قیمت کتاب (تومان) : 86,000



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فهرست مطالب

Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
List of contributors
Introduction
Part I: Antiquity and the Middle Ages
	1. Stoicism in Rome
		Seneca
		Musonius Rufus
		Epictetus
		Marcus Aurelius
		Hierocles
		Coda
		References
	2. Stoicism in early Christianity: The Apostle Paul and the Evangelist John as Stoics
		Paul on how to overcome akrasia: two questions for Romans 7:7–8:13
		John on how to overcome Jesus’ death: John 13:31–17:26
		Answering the philosophical question
		Jesus and the Paraclete: the immediate and the distant future
		Conclusion on Paul and John as Stoics
		Stoicism in early Christianity beyond the New Testament
		Notes
		Further reading
		References
	3. Plotinus and the Platonic response to Stoicism
		Introduction
		Materialism and mechanism
		Epistemology
		Free will, determinism, and moral responsibility
		Happiness
		Conclusion
		Notes
		References
	4. Augustine’s debt to Stoicism in the Confessions
		Self-affiliation
		Maturation of self-affiliation: social bonds
		Augustine’s self-critiques: distorted impulses, social immaturity, failures in “proper functions”
		Conclusions
		Notes
		Further reading
		References
	5. Boethius and Stoicism
		Boethius’s criticism of Stoicism in his logical commentaries
		The presence of Stoicism in the Consolation
		“Canine spiritedness”: a psychological foundation for Stoicism
		Stoicism: anesthetic to apparent goods and evils
		Stoicism: thinking within the horizon of “a rational, mortal
animal, and nothing more”
		Notes
		References
	6. Stoic themes in Peter Abelard and John of Salisbury
		Abelard
		John of Salisbury
		Notes
		Further reading
		References
	7. Stoic influences in the later Middle Ages
		Stoicism was “everywhere and nowhere”
		Ethics: a history of texts and translators
		Receiving Aristotle: William of Auxerre, prudence as discretio
		Interpreting Aristotle: Albert the Great and phronêsis
		Integrating Aristotle: Thomas Aquinas and recta ratio agibilium
		Conclusions
		Notes
		Further reading
		References
Part II: Renaissance and Reformation
	8. The recovery of Stoicism in the Renaissance
		Spuria and forgeries
		Syncretism and conflation
		Foremost on the virtues
		Chronology of textual multiplication
		Notes
		Further reading
		References
	9. Stoicism in the philosophy of the Italian Renaissance
		The early fifteenth century
		The mid-fifteenth century
		The late fifteenth century
		The early sixteenth century
		Notes
		Further reading
		References
	10. Erasmus, Calvin, and the faces of Stoicism in Renaissance and Reformation thought
		Contexts for Erasmus’s and Calvin’s conceptions of Stoicism
		Erasmus’s and Calvin’s editions of Seneca
		Erasmus
		Calvin
		Conclusion
		Notes
		Further reading
		References
	11. Justus Lipsius and Neostoicism
		Lipsius’s life
		Physics, metaphysics, and natural theology
		Anthropology and morality
		Politics and history
		Conclusion
		Notes
		References
	12. Shakespeare and early modern English literature
		Notes
		References
Part III: Early modern Europe
	13. Medicine of the mind in early modern philosophy
		Introduction: a Baconian legacy
		Francis Bacon: a cure for intellectual self-delusion
		Descartes: the self-healing power of the mind
		Spinoza: from machina intellectus to automa spirituale
		Conclusion
		Acknowledgement
		Notes
		References
	14. Stoic themes in early modern French thought
		Guillaume du Vair
		Montaigne
		Charron
		Descartes
		Stoicism outside moral philosophy
		Anti-Stoicism
		Malebranche
		Antoine Le Grand
		Notes
		Further reading
		References
	15. Spinoza and the Stoics
		The similarities between Stoicism and Spinozism
		Spinoza’s interest in Stoicism
		How Spinoza formulated a Stoic system
		Acknowledgements
		Notes
		Further reading
		References
	16. Leibniz and the Stoics: fate, freedom, and providence
		Against “the sect of the new Stoics”
		Metaphysical rationalism: the identity of indiscernibles
and the “Stoic connectedness”
		Against indeterminist freedom
		The idle argument
		Future contingents
		Spontaneity
		Intelligence as the “soul of freedom” and the freedom of the sage
		Providence and evil
		Notes
		Further reading
		References
	17. The Epicurean Stoicism of the French Enlightenment
		Montesquieu
		Diderot and La Mettrie
		Diderot and Rousseau
		Diderot’s Seneca
		Conclusion
		Note
		References
	18. Stoicism and the Scottish Enlightenment
		Christianity and Stoicism in Scotland before the Enlightenment
		At the dawn of the Enlightenment: Stoicism and Christianity in Hutcheson’s ethics of benevolence
		The Skeptic Hume on the Stoics and religion
		Smith and Christian Stoicism: conscience, self-command, and humanity
		Concluding remarks
		Acknowledgements
		Notes
		Further reading
		References
	19. Kant and Stoic ethics
		Introduction
		What is good? The internal determination the will as the source of value
		Nature, reason, and normativity
		Moral development: virtue, apathy, and inner attitude in struggle
		The highest good: virtue and happiness as the complete object of the faculty of desire
		Cicero, Garve, and Kant on perfect and imperfect duties
		Conclusion
		Acknowledgements
		Notes
		Further reading
		References
Part IV: The modern world
	20. Stoicism in nineteenth-century German philosophy
		Hegel
		Schopenhauer
		Nietzsche
		Notes
		References
	21. Stoicism and Romantic literature
		Eighteenth-century legacies: the rise of “literature”
		Revolution and radicalism
		Wordsworth and Coleridge
		Beyond
		Note
		References
	22. Stoicism in Victorian culture
		Stoicism in Victorian scholarship
		Stoicism and Christianity
		Marcus Aurelius and the Meditations
		Stoicism in popular discourse
		The limitations of “social Stoicism”
		Notes
		References
	23. Stoicism in America
		Stoicism in early America
		Nineteenth-century Stoicism
		Twentieth-century Stoicism
		Conclusion
		Acknowledgements
		Notes
		Further reading
		References
	24. Stoic themes in contemporary Anglo-American ethics
		Ethical theory
		Practical ethics
		Note
		References
	25. Stoicism and twentieth-century French philosophy
		Alain: the Stoic discovery of the will
		Sartre: is Stoicism compatible with existentialism?
		Canguilhem against Sartre: ethics as logic
		Stoicism as a logic of events and a system: Brochard, Bréhier, Goldschmidt, Vuillemin
		Deleuze: the Stoic ontology of sense as event
		Foucault: Stoicism as part of the Hellenistic and Roman “culture of the self”
		Foucault, Deleuze and philosophy as a Stoic art of events
		Acknowledgements
		Notes
		Further reading
		References
	26. The Stoic influence on modern psychotherapy
		Introduction
		Early psychotherapy and the Serenity Prayer
		Rational-emotive behavior therapy
		Rational emotions, “preference,” and the “reserve clause”
		Rational-emotive imagery and praemeditatio malorum
		Cognitive-behavioral therapy
		“Mindfulness” and “third-wave” CBT
		Conclusion
		Note
		Further reading
		References
Index




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