Reveals monstrosity to be a central conceptual challenge in every ancient Greek and Roman philosophical system Amazons and giants, snakes and gorgons, centaurs and gryphons: monsters abounded in ancient culture. 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. Each chapter explores the emergence of monstrosity in a set of authors and theories. In chapter 1, monsters rise as the challenging adversaries...
In the Homeric thought the relationships among men and the monstrosity alteriry is seen as a king of...
International audienceIntroduction xiCharles T. WolfeThe Riddle of the Sphinx: Aristotle, Penelope, ...
Table of contents for MONSTERS AND PHILOSOPHY, List of Contributors iii Acknowledgments vii L...
This is a research in the field of ancient philosophy, carried on by developing a continental approa...
Amazons and giants, snakes and gorgons, centaurs and gryphons: monsters abounded in the ancient worl...
Focussing on humaniod monsters, this thesis uses insights from Foucault\u27s theory about the "archa...
Alterity and Otherness have often been the privileged field of contemplation within Western philosop...
For Descartes, nature must be interpreted through the formulation of a limited number of simple laws...
<p>For Descartes, nature must be interpreted through a limited number of simple laws used to describ...
Abstract Since earliest times monsters have awed, terrified and enthralled us, and they have figured...
Although mythological monsters have rarely been examined in any collective and comprehensive manner,...
This article explores the concept of monstrosity in the archaic and mythological genealogy of the id...
How can we talk about the beginnings of philosophy today? How can we avoid the conventional oppositi...
Monsters as a category seem omnipresent in early modern natural philosophy, in what one might call a...
This thesis is the first serious examination of the significance of wonder and the marvellous as a c...
In the Homeric thought the relationships among men and the monstrosity alteriry is seen as a king of...
International audienceIntroduction xiCharles T. WolfeThe Riddle of the Sphinx: Aristotle, Penelope, ...
Table of contents for MONSTERS AND PHILOSOPHY, List of Contributors iii Acknowledgments vii L...
This is a research in the field of ancient philosophy, carried on by developing a continental approa...
Amazons and giants, snakes and gorgons, centaurs and gryphons: monsters abounded in the ancient worl...
Focussing on humaniod monsters, this thesis uses insights from Foucault\u27s theory about the "archa...
Alterity and Otherness have often been the privileged field of contemplation within Western philosop...
For Descartes, nature must be interpreted through the formulation of a limited number of simple laws...
<p>For Descartes, nature must be interpreted through a limited number of simple laws used to describ...
Abstract Since earliest times monsters have awed, terrified and enthralled us, and they have figured...
Although mythological monsters have rarely been examined in any collective and comprehensive manner,...
This article explores the concept of monstrosity in the archaic and mythological genealogy of the id...
How can we talk about the beginnings of philosophy today? How can we avoid the conventional oppositi...
Monsters as a category seem omnipresent in early modern natural philosophy, in what one might call a...
This thesis is the first serious examination of the significance of wonder and the marvellous as a c...
In the Homeric thought the relationships among men and the monstrosity alteriry is seen as a king of...
International audienceIntroduction xiCharles T. WolfeThe Riddle of the Sphinx: Aristotle, Penelope, ...
Table of contents for MONSTERS AND PHILOSOPHY, List of Contributors iii Acknowledgments vii L...