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OverviewAmazons and giants, snakes and gorgons, centaurs and gryphons: monsters abounded in the ancient world. They raise enduring philosophical questions: about chaos and order; about divinity and perversion; about meaning and purpose; about the hierarchy of nature or its absence. Del Lucchese grapples with the concept of monstrosity, showing how ancient philosophers explored metaphysics, ontology, theology and politics to respond to the challenge of radical otherness in nature and in thought. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Filippo Del Lucchese (Professor in History of Political Thought, Alma Mater Studiorum – Università di Bologna)Publisher: Edinburgh University Press Imprint: Edinburgh University Press Weight: 0.800kg ISBN: 9781474456203ISBN 10: 1474456200 Pages: 432 Publication Date: 16 October 2019 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsIntroduction 1. The Myth and the Logos 1.1 Order and Chaos 1.2 Mythical Battlefields: Monstrosity as a Weapon 1.3 Causality and Monstrosity: Challenging Zeus 2. The Pre-Platonic philosophers 2.1 Anaxagoras: A Material Origin for Life and Monstrosity 2.2 Empedocles: Wonders to Behold 2.3 Democritus: Agonism within Matter 3. Plato 4. Aristotle 5. Epicurus and Lucretius 5.1 An Immanent Causality for an Infinite Universe 5.2 Zoogony, Monstrosity, and Nature’s Normativity 5.3 Concourses of Nature 5.4 Lucretius’s Impact on the Augustan Age 6. Stoicism 6.1 Nominalism 6.2 Good and Evil, Beauty and Ugliness 6.3 Providence, God and Teleology 7. Scepticism 7.1 The Tropes and the Critique of Essentialism 7.2 To What Purpose? 8. Middle and Neoplatonism 8.1 The Material World and the Rediscovery of Transcendence 8.2 Demons 8.3 The World Order Bibliography Index Locorum Index Verborum Index Rerum Index NominumReviews"Filippo Del Lucchese not only offers a thorough historical inquiry into ancient Greek and Roman teratologies, he explores the fascinating hypothesis that theories of monstrosity are a key topic in the basic philosophical debate about Nature, its mechanisms and its norms. This book should appeal to anyone interested in ancient thought and its relations to modern debates about biological norms.--Alain Gigandet, Universit� Paris-Est Cr�teil A real masterpiece for all those who intend to understand the wide range of philosophical approaches to defining the Monstrous, Otherness and Evil in the classical world. The text is well written and clearly organised to allow readers to follow the exposition of the author. Multidisciplinary scholars can benefit from Monstrosity and Philosophy; literary critics, classicists, philosophers, and scholars in religious studies can appreciate the diversity of the scholarship and the author's superb grasp of the subject matter.--Andrea Di Carlo, University College Cork ""Journal of Gods and Monsters"" By studying ancient thought through the lens of monstrosity, Filippo Del Lucchese projects a radically new light on a philosophical period we thought we knew. It is not too much to say that Monstrosity and Philosophy offers a whole new history of the long span from mythological materials and ancient tragedy to the birth of Christian thought and does so in a fascinating and scholarly way. Its original perspective will be a milestone in the study of the history of ideas.--Laurent Bove, Emeritus Professor, Universit� de Picardie 'Jules Verne' Filippo Del Lucchese's study of the history of the concept of monstrosity from its origins in early Greek thought to early Christianity and Neo-Platonism is an enormously valuable work. His book offers a carefully ordered panoramic view of this history based on an always attentive reading of the works of which it is composed. Del Lucchese shows us nothing less than a history of philosophy on the basis of its monsters, those it created as well as those it discovered, the things that regularly escape the government of providence and the supervision of logos or ratio. In doing so, he invites us to read the Pre-Socratics, Plato, Aristotle, the Epicureans, Stoics and Neoplatonists as responses to what most threatens them: the inassimilable and the irreducibly other. Monstrosity and Philosophy: Radical Otherness in Greek and Latin Culture is a work of immense erudition that surprises the reader at every turn with the interpretations it offers and the connections it reveals. It is destined to become a classic.--Warren Montag, Occidental Colleg, Los Angeles" Author InformationFilippo Del Lucchese is Associate Professor of Political Philosophy at the University of Bologna and a Senior Research Associate at the University of Johannesburg. His research interests are in the early modern period and the history of political thought and Marxism. He has been a Marie Curie fellow and holds degrees from the universities of Pisa and Paris IV (Sorbonne). He is the author of Conflict, Power and Multitude in Machiavelli and Spinoza (Continuum, 2009), The Political Philosophy of Niccolò Machiavelli (EUP, 2015), and Monstrosity and Philosophy: Radical Otherness in Greek and Latin Culture (EUP, 2019). He has published articles in journals such as History of Political Thought, European Journal of Political Theory, Dialogue, International Studies in Philosophy, and Differences. He has taught in France, Lebanon, the United States and in the UK. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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