<p>This volume is a welcome contribution to the study of Arius Didymusâ challenging compendium of Hellenistic ethics and only the second study to focus on this work since 1981. It offers a new edition of âsection Câ on Peripatetic ethics, a discussion of the authorâs identity, and a well-selected set of aspects examined by experts in the field, exploring various themes and connections with Aristotleâs works, ethical concepts such as virtue, the worth of others, external goods and types of life. The volume closes with a masterful essay in which Senecaâs <i>Letter</i> 85 is used as indirect evidence for Peripatetic ethics in the first century. While not all questions on this work can be resolved, this volume certainly assists in a more detailed understanding of the complexities, questions and transmission of Peripatetic ethics in the early Empire.</p><p>- Han Baltussen, University of Adelaide, Australia</p>
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
William W. Fortenbaugh is Emeritus Professor of Classics at Rutgers University, USA.