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The Paper
Reading
General Books
Plato
Texts
Collections
Single Authored Collections
Individual Platonic Dialogues
Euthyphro
Meno
Phaedo
Republic
Parmenides
Theatetus
Sophist
Topics
Socratic Method, Socratic Ignorance
Recollection
Theory of Forms
The Soul
Plato's Epistemology
Falsehood
Aristotle
Texts
Translations
General Books and Collections
On Individual Works
Physics
Metaphysics
De Anima
On Individual Topics
The Four Causes
Matter and Form; Nature
Chance and Teleology
Sea Battle
The Infinite
Change
Time
Soul, Mind and Body
Perception
Imagination and Thinking
Epistemology
Categories
The Problem of a Science of Being
Substance
God
The Presocratics
General
Books and Collections of Articles
Individual Philosopers
Heraclitus
Parmenides
Zeno
Empedocles
Anaxagoras
The Atomists
1. The Paper
This course is designed to make you familiar with the thought and the ways of
thinking of the major classical philosophers: the pre-Socratics, Plato and
Aristotle. It is focused on metaphysics and epistemology; ancient ethics, politics
and aesthetics are covered in the Ethics or Politics or Aesthetics courses. You
will be encouraged to analyse and criticise the arguments of the ancients and to
think both constructively and critically about ancient theories. To this end, there
is no substitute for reading the texts themselves (in translation, or even in
Greek! Courses are available to help you to learn Greek).
The Lectures
The intercollegiate lectures in this course are divided into two levels:
Level 1: two survey courses, one on Plato and the other on Aristotle: these
lectures include material on the pre-Socratics.
Level 2: sets of lectures on Plato and Aristotle, and sometimes also on the pre-
Socratics. sometimes organized around particular works; sometimes around particular
topics; sometimes comparative between the two philosophers.
Lectures at Birkbeck offer the same mixture of survey, text and topic.
The Exam
The examination paper requires you to answer three questions, at least two of which
must be on Plato and/or Aristotle; a third question may be on the pre-Socratics.
However, you are not required to answer a question on the pre-Socratics. All three
of your answers may be on Plato and/or Aristotle. Credit is given both for careful
and critical analysis of the ancient arguments and for wider scrutiny of the topics
in question.
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2. Reading
The reading lists below offer some general books and collections of papers on
ancient philosophy; detailed advice on reading on texts and topics for Plato; then
likewise for Aristotle; and lastly for the pre-Socratics.
Frede, M., and G. Striker, eds. 1996. Rationality in Greek Thought. Oxford
Hankinson, R.J. 1998 Cause and Explanation in Ancient Greek Thought. Oxford
Owen, G. E. L. 1985. Logic, Science and Dialectic: Collected Papers in Greek
Philosophy. Ithaca, N. Y.
Taylor, C.C.W. 1998 Routledge History of Philosophy Vol. I: >From the beginnnings
to Plato. London
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Plato
Texts
The dialogues are translated in
Edith Hamilton, and Huntington Cairns, eds., The Collected Dialogues of Plato,
including the Letters, (Princeton, N. J.: Princeton University Press, 1961).
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Collections
Allen, R. E. ed. 1965. Studies in Plato's Metaphysics. London
Gill C. and McCabe M.M. eds. Form and Argument in Late Plato. Oxford
McCabe M.M., 2000 Plato and his Predecessors: The dramatisation of reason.
Cambridge
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Euthyphro
Geach, P.T. 1966 ?Plato's Euthyphro : Analysis and commentary', The Monist : 369-82
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Meno
This dialogue considers virtue and knowledge, and contains Plato's first extended
epistemology.
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Phaedo
Socrates' death and the conversation about the immortality of the soul that
preceded it.
Wiggins, D. 1986. ?Teleology and the good in Plato's Phaedo ', Oxford Studies in
Ancient Philosophy, 1-18.
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Republic
This is usually considered Plato's masterpiece; it repays careful study.
Kraut, R. 1997. Plato's Republic: Critical Essays. Oxford: Rowman & Littlefield.
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Parmenides
This dialogue falls into two parts; the first (126-136) is an extended critique of
the theory of Forms, the second (137-end) an intricate dialectical exercise. Most
modern attention has been paid to the first part, and therein to the notorious
Third Man Argument. Try to consider all the arguments of the first part, even if
you find the second part uncongenial.
Vlastos, G. 1965. ?The Third Man argument in the Parmenides'. In R. E. Allen ed.,
Studies in Plato's Metaphysics. London: Routledge.
Strang, C. 1972. ?Plato and the Third Man'. In G. Vlastos, ed., Plato: a Collection
of Critical Essays, Vol.1, Metaphysics and Epistemology. London: Macmillan.
Mignucci, M. 1990. ?Plato's Third Man Argument in the Parmenides'. Archiv fur
Geschichte der Philosophie.
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Theaetetus
Here Plato reconsiders the problems of epistemology in a manner which is readily
accessible to modern readers.
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Sophist
Here Plato tackles the problems of not-being and falsehood, and offers his own
philosophical logic.
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Topics
You should cross refer to the suggested reading for individual dialogues above.
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Recollection
Meno 80-98; Phaedo 72-78; Phaedrus 244-57
Fine, G. 1992. ?Inquiry in the Meno ', in Kraut, ed., The Cambridge Companion to
Plato. Cambridge: 200-26
Scott, D. 1995. Recollection and Experience: Plato's Theory of Learning and its
Successors. Cambridge Chs 1 & 2.
Vlastos, G. 1965 ?Anamnesis in the Meno,. Dialogue ; also in J. Day (ed.) Plato's
Meno in Focus
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Fine G. 1986 ?Forms as Causes: Plato and Aristotle' in Fine, Plato on Knowledge and
Forms, Oxford: 350-396
Nehamas, A. 1975 'Plato on the imperfection of the sensible world' A. Ph. Q. and in
Nehamas, Virtues of Authenticity.
Vlastos, G. 1981 'Degrees of Reality' and 'Reasons and Causes in the Phaedo' in
Vlastos Platonic Studies
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The Soul
Republic book IV; Phaedo 78-95; 102-107; Phaedrus
Frede, D. 1978 ?The final proof of the immortality of the soul in the Phaedo ',
Phronesis 27-41
Williams, B. 1973 ?The analogy of city and soul in Plato's Republic ', in E. Lee,
A. Mourelatos and R.Rorty, eds. Exegesis and Argument : Phronesis supplement.
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Plato's Epistemology
Meno 96-9; Republic 475-535; Theaetetus 200-210; Sophist 251-3
Burnyeat, M. 1982 ?Idealism and Greek Philosophy: What Descartes saw and Berkeley
missed', Phil.Rev. 3-40
Fine, G. 2003 ?Knowledge and logos in the Theaetetus ', in Fine, Plato on Knowledge
and Forms, Oxford: 225-251
Nehamas, A., ? Episteme and Logos in Plato's later thought', in Nehamas, Virtues of
Authenticity. Princeton: 224-248
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Falsehood
Theaetetus 187-201; Sophist 236-263; Euthydemus 283-8; Cratylus 383-391; 428-36;
Philebus 36-41
Denyer, N. 1991 Language, Thought and Falsehood in Ancient Greek Philosophy. London
Aristotle
Texts
The following are central works of Aristotle, as examined under this paper, i.e.
excluding ethics, political philosophy and aesthetics.
There are very useful summaries, in the commentaries by W. D. Ross, of the Physics,
Metaphysics, Posterior Analytics and de Anima.
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Translations
The best translations are in The Complete Works of Aristotle: the revised Oxford
translation, edited by Jonathan Barnes, 2 Vols., (Princeton N. J.: Princeton
University Press, 1984). J. L. Ackrill, A New Aristotle Reader, (Oxford: Clarendon
Press, 1987) covers some, but unfortunately not all, of what you need. The
Clarendon Aristotle translations from the Oxford University Press of particular
works are designed for Philosophy students: you will find many of these interesting
and challenging.
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Gotthelf, A. ed. 1985. Aristotle on Nature and Living Things: Philosophical and
Historical Studies. Bristol
Matthen, Mohan, ed. 1987. Aristotle Today: Essays on Aristotle's Ideal of Science.
Edmonton, Alberta.
?. 1983. Time, Creation and the Continuum: Theories in Antiquity and the Early
Middle Ages.
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On Individual Works
Physics
Judson, L. ed. 1991. Aristotle's Physics: a Collection of Essays. Oxford
Metaphysics
Frede, M, and Charles, D. 2000 Aristotle's Metaphysics Lambda Oxford
Scaltsas, T., D. Charles, and M. L. Gill, eds. 1994. Unity, Identity and
Explanation in Aristotle's Metaphysics. Oxford
De Anima
Nussbaum, M., and A. O. Rorty, eds. 1992. Essays on Aristotle's De Anima. Oxford
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On Individual Topics
The Four Causes
Physics II.3 (194b16-195a26), 4-6, 8-9; 259a10-12; On the Parts of Animals I.1;
Politics 1256b10-22; On Sense and the Sensible 436b17-437a3; Protrepticus B11-16
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Waterlow, S. 1982 Nature Change and Agency in Aristotle's Physics Oxford: ch.2
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Judson, L. 1991 'Chance and 'Always or for the most part' in Aristotle', in L.
Judson, ed., Aristotle's Physics
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Sea Battle
De Interpretatione 9 . Rhetoric 1359a15-19, 1392b25-27, 1418a2-4. Metaphysics
996b26-30, 1005b19-23, 1011b23-24, 1051a34-b17; Physics 264a9-21; On Generation and
Corruption 337a34-b9
Anscombe, G.E.M. 'Aristotle and the sea battle' revised version in From Parmenides
to Wittgenstein. Collected Papers vol 1.
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The Infinite
Physics III.
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Change
Kosman, L.A. 1969 ?Aristotle's definition of motion' Phronesis 40-62.
Loux, M.J. 1995 ?Understanding Process: reflections on Physics III.1' in Sim, M The
Crossroads of Norm and Nature.
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Time
Inwood, B. 1991 ?Aristotle on the reality of time' in Judson Aristotle's Physics.
Owen, G.E.L. 1985 ?Aristotle on time' reprinted in G. E. L. Owen, Logic Science and
Dialectic.
Coope, U. 2001 ?Why does Aristotle say that there is no time without change? '
Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society.
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Soul, Mind and Body
On the Soul (De Anima) I.1., I.2, 403b20-404b6 ; 1.3, 405b31-406b25, 407b12-26 ;
1.4, 408a29-b29, 409a1-3 ; I.5, 411a24-b30 ; II. 1-7, 12 ; III. 4-5 ; Metaphysics
IX. 6 ; Nicomachean Ethics 1128b11-15; X.4 ; Physics 234b10-20
Ackrill, J.L. 1979 ?Aristotle's definitions of psuche' in Barnes, Schofield and
Sorabji, Articles on Aristotle 4 ? Psychology and Aesthetics. (And in Proceedings
of the Aristotelian Society, 1972-3, 119-33.)
Frede, M. 1993 ?On Aristotle's conception of the soul' in R.W. Sharples (ed)
Ancient Thinkers and Modern Thinkers, London, 1993. (And in M.C. Nussbaum and A.O.
Rorty (ed.) Essays on Aristotle's De Anima, Oxford, 1992.)
Menn, S 2002 'Aristotle's definition of soul and the programme of the de anima'
Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy.
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Perception
De anima II, III.
Langton, R. 2000 ?The musical, the magical and the mathematical soul' in T Crane
and S Patterson History of the Mind-Body Problem . London : 13-33.
Sorabji R., 1975 ?Body and soul in Aristotle' Philosophy, 63-89. Reprinted in J.
Barnes, M. Schofield and R. Sorabji Articles on Aristotle iv (1979), 42-64.
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Imagination and Thinking
De anima III
L. Kosman, 'What does the maker mind make?' in M.Nussbaum and A Rorty, Essays on
Aristotle's de Anima .
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Epistemology
Barnes, J. 1994 Aristotle's Posterior Analytics, translated with notes. Oxford.
Berti, E. ed., 1981 Aristotle on Science (esp. the paper by Burnyeat, ?Aristotle on
understanding knowledge') Padua.
Hankinson, R.J. 1998 Cause and Explanation in Ancient Greek Thought. Oxford.
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Categories
Categories; Topics I.9.
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Owen, G.E.L. ?Logic and Metaphysics in Some Earlier Works of Aristotle,? in G.E.L.
Owen and I. During (eds.) Aristotle and Plato in the Mid-Fourth Century ; also in
J. Barnes, M.Schofield and R. Sorabji (eds.) Articles on Aristotle 3. Metaphysics ;
also in G.E.L. Owen, Logic, Science and Dialectic.
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Substance
Metaphysics VII (Zeta).
Lear, J. 1988 Aristotle, the desire to understand (esp. the chapter on Met. Z).
Fine, G. ?Plato and Aristotle on Form and Substance,' in Plato on Knowledge and
Forms.
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God
Metaphysics XII (Lambda), Physics VIII.
Frede, M. and Charles, D. eds. 2000 Aristotle's Metaphysics Lambda Oxford
Kosman, L.A. 1994 ?Aristotle's Prime Mover', in M.L.Gill and J. Lennox, eds. Self-
Motion Princeton.
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The Presocratics
General
The work of the Presocratics survives in fragments. This means that their work
needs considerable interpretation; it also means that everything they said is
easily accessible to you. There is a full account of the evidence for the
Presocratics, with a Greek text and translations in G. S. Kirk, J. E. Raven, and M.
Schofield, The Presocratic Philosophers: a Critical History with a Selection of
Texts, (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press). In translation, there is R.
McKirahan, Philosophy before Socrates. You can find translations of the fragments
in J. Barnes, Early Greek Philosophy, and with a large and vigorous philosophical
commentary in J. Barnes, The Presocratic Philosophers, (rev. ed., London: Routledge
and Kegan Paul, 1982). All of these are available in paperback; you should own at
least one of them if you are planning to work on these philosophers.
Furley, D.1989. Cosmic Problems: Essays on Greek and Roman Philosophy of Nature.
Cambridge.
Long, A. A. ed. 1999. The Cambridge Companion to Early Greek Philosophy. Cambridge.
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Individual philosophers
Heraclitus
Kahn, Charles H. 1979. The Art and Thought of Heraclitus: an Edition of the
Fragments. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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Parmenides
Gallop, D. 1984. Parmenides of Elea: Fragments. Toronto: University of Toronto
Press.
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Zeno
When you think about Zeno, consider both the paradoxes described and criticised by
Aristotle and the fragments quoted in Simplicius.
Sorabji, R. 1983. Time, Creation and the Continuum: Theories in Antiquity and the
Early Middle Ages. London Ch.21
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Empedocles
Long, A. A. 1966. ?Thinking and Sense-perception in Empedocles'. Classical
Quarterly.
Sorabji, R. 1993. Animal Minds and Human Morals: the Origins of the Western Debate.
Ithaca
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Anaxagoras
Schofield, M. 1980. An essay on Anaxagoras. Cambridge
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The Atomists
Furley, D. 1967. Two Studies in the Greek Atomists: Study 1?Indivisible
magnitudes.; Study 2?Aristotle and Epicurus on Voluntary Action. Princeton
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