Music and Philosophy in the Roman Empire
- Editor: Pelosi, Francesco
- Editor: Petrucci, Federico M.
Book
$135.00Printed on demand
Contents
- Introduction Francesco Pelosi and Federico Maria Petrucci;
- 1. Scala nature and music: two models in Philo's thought Carlos Levy;
- 2. Music and Plutarch's Platonic cosmos Bram Demulder;
- 3. The harmoniser god: harmony as a cosmological model in middle Platonist theology Federico M. Petrucci;
- 4. Alexander of Aphrodisias and musical models for ontological enquiries Laura M. Castelli;
- 5. How to resist musical dogmatism: the aim and methods of Pyrrhonian inquiry in Sextus Empiricus' 'Against the Musicologists' (Math. VI) Mate Veres;
- 6. Shifting epistemological perspectives in Ptolemy's 'Harmonics': from the science of sound to the study of music Andrew Barker;
- 7. Musical imagery in Clement of Alexandria and Origen: the Greek musical world revised and accepted Francesco Pelosi;
- 8. Plotinus on music, rhythm, and harmony Alexandra Michalewski;
- 9. Porphyry's 'Commentary on Ptolemy's Harmonics': questions of philosophic and scientific identity Harold Tarrant;
- 10. The music of the virtues in late ancient Platonism Dominic O'Meara;
- 11. Harmonics as theological paradigm in Proclus Stephen Gersh;
- 12. Calcidius on cosmic harmony Christina Hoenig;
- 13. Harmonia in Philoponus' 'Commentary on Nicomachus' introduction to arithmetic' Giovanna R. Giardina.