view from ah exegetical phase 5
Vohnirc 25011
features 34, JS
wi11dom
Index
309
love of 265
Xenocrates 266
nature of 57, 58, 1 03, 228, 261
Xenophon I I 7n
Wittgenstein, Ludwig Josef Johann 1 7,
flight of the soul 240
1 8, 280, 285
on Socrates 23, 1 55, 1 58, 1 67
worry, Epicureans' attitudes 88
Xylander IO
writing, therapeutic values 209-1 1
Antony 135, 209, 2 1 1
Zeno l l3n
Foucault 209-1 0
Zopyrus 148
Marcus Aurelius 1 95
9 111
780631
I
180333
Document Outline
Contents
Translator's Note
Abbreviations
Introduction: Pierre Hadot and the Spiritual Phenomenon of Ancient Philosophy by Arnold I. Davidson
1 Method and Practices of Interpretation in the History of Ancient Philosophy and Theology
2 Spiritual Exercises
Notes
Part I: Method
1. Forms of Life and Forms of Discourse in Ancient Philosophy
Notes
2. Philosophy, Exegesis, and Creative Mistakes
Notes
Part II: Spiritual Exercises
3. Spiritual Exercises
1 Learning to Live
2 Learning to Dialogue
3 Learning to Die
4 Leaming How to Read
Notes
4. Ancient Spiritual Exercises and "Christian Philosophy"
Notes
Part III: Figures
5. The Figure of Socrates
1 Silenus
2 Eros
3 Dionysos
Notes
6. Marcus Aurelius
1 The Meditations as a Spiritual Exercise
2 Epictetus
3 Marcus Aurelius and Epictetus
Notes
7. Reflections on the Idea of the "Cultivation of the Self"
Notes
Part IV: Themes
8. "Only the Present is our Happiness": The Value of the Present Instant in Goethe and in Ancient Philosophy
Notes
9. The View from Above
Notes
10. The Sage and the World
1 Definition of the Problem
2 The World of Science and the World of Everyday Perception
3 Aesthetic Perception
4 Spectator Novus
S The Instant
6 The Sage and the World
Notes
11. Philosophy as a Way of Life
Notes
Postscript: An Interview with Pierre Hadot
Notes
Select Bibliography
ANTHOLOGIES
ANCIENT AUTHORS
MODERN AUTHORS
Index