SYMPOSIUM PHILOSOPHIAE ANTIQUAE QUARTUM ATHENIENSE
Physis and Nomos: Power, Justice and the Agonistical Ideal of Life in High Classicism
PROGRAMME OF SESSIONS
Robert Wallace
“Listening to” the Nomoi in Democratic Athens.
Edward Cohen
Wealthy Slaves and Dominant Prostitutes: a Study of Juridical, Sexual and Economic Power at Athens.
Carl Joachim Classen
Aretē and Aretai in Thucydides’ Histories.
Mark Munn
From Science to Sophistry: The Path of the Sun, the Shape of the World, and the Place of Athens in the Cosmos.
Harold Tarrant
Agonistic Contexts for Appeals to Nomos and Physis: Are “Rites of Passage” Significant?
Apostolos Pierris
The Order of Existence: physis, moira, anankē, thesmos, nomos, nous, psēphisma, boulē.
Ian Mueller
Physis Anthrōpeia.
Gerard Pendrick
Naturrecht: Normative Conceptions of Nature in Preplatonic Ethics?
Aryeh Kosman
Nature’s Law and Second Nature: Philosophers at Work on the Physis – Nomos Distinction.
Thomas Buchheim
Nomos on Physis.
Joerg Hardy
Kallikles and Socrates on Justice, Power and Moral Motivation in Plato’s Gorgias.
Roslyn Weiss
Why Isn’t Antiphon in the Gorgias?
Michael Gagarin
Nomos and Physis in Antiphon
Michel Narcy
Three Versions of Nomos – Physis Antithesis: Protagoras, Antiphon, Socrates
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