The accident of determinism: Alexander of Aphrodisias in his historical context

被引:0
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作者
Sharples, Robert W.
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来源
ETUDES PHILOSOPHIQUES | 2008年 / 03期
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中图分类号
B [哲学、宗教];
学科分类号
01 ; 0101 ;
摘要
Alexander of Aphrodisias has been studied more intensively in continental Europe than in the English-speaking world. This paper examines the cultural reasons for this. One factor in the study of ancient philosophy generally in the English-speaking world is the pressure to show that it relates to, and can be of service in, contemporary philosophical debates. One such case is the debate concerning free-will and determinism. Susanne Bobzien has argued (in her "The inadvertent conception and late birth of the free-will problem", Phronesis, 43 [1998], 133-175) that while the terms of the contemporary debate can be recognised in the second century AD, and in particular in Alexander's treatise On Fate, it is anachronistic to read them back into the Hellenistic period. The latter part of the present paper examines her account of the origin of the new approach to the question in the development from a number of Aristotelian texts of a new account of contingency, reflected in a range of texts commonly described as Middle Platonist, and asks what relation we should suppose between this development and changes in the formulation and conception of Stoic determinism.
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页码:285 / +
页数:21
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