In his Panathenaic speech, Isocrates contrasts his own teaching program with traditional models of Greek education, both the earlier one and the more scientific one that is favoured in his times: his aim is to form the minds of students in such a manner that they can seize any opportunity that comes along, that in the social intercourse they always remain indulgent and patient, and – what seems the most important here – that they become able to endure both luck and misfortune with courage and appreciate not the things obtained merely by chance, but the ones gained by their toil and effort (Panath. 30–32). And Isocrates’ respect to steadily working mind becomes even greater with time: the result of such a labour must be some prudence ...
Isocrate et Confucius entreprennent d’abord l’éducation de la vertu puis préparent à une vie harmoni...
The relation between medical practice and the use of speech in its rhetorical, political and philoso...
In fragments of the lost Protrepticus, preserved in Iamblichus, Aristotle responds to Isocrates’ wor...
Athens in the fourth century was socially chaotic, suffering from the consequences of the Peloponnes...
Isocrates began to write the Panathenaicus in the year 342 b.C. When he had reached paragraph 199, i...
Isocrates has been neglected as one of the principal figures of the main political thought. This ess...
In his work, Isocrates the rhetorician gives vent to an exalted praise of his own intellectual and l...
This paper attempts to elucidate how Isocrates’ self-fashioning as an apragmôn serves as a means of ...
Both Isocrates and Confucius attached first importance to ethics education and then to harmony educa...
O presente texto trata do Panatenaico, de autoria do ateniense Isócrates. O discurso, inicialmente a...
The Greek Philosopher Isocrates (300 B.C.) identified the characteristics of a good teacher as one w...
In the praise of λόγος, that Isocrates delivers in Nicocles, 5-8, he acknowledges that it has a chie...
The principle of the Greek culture is not individualism but humanism consisting in bringing up a hum...
Book Description:In this volume, ten leading scholars of Classics, rhetoric, and philosophy offer a ...
International audienceThe Panathenaicus is used to be regarded as a complicated discourse and hard t...
Isocrate et Confucius entreprennent d’abord l’éducation de la vertu puis préparent à une vie harmoni...
The relation between medical practice and the use of speech in its rhetorical, political and philoso...
In fragments of the lost Protrepticus, preserved in Iamblichus, Aristotle responds to Isocrates’ wor...
Athens in the fourth century was socially chaotic, suffering from the consequences of the Peloponnes...
Isocrates began to write the Panathenaicus in the year 342 b.C. When he had reached paragraph 199, i...
Isocrates has been neglected as one of the principal figures of the main political thought. This ess...
In his work, Isocrates the rhetorician gives vent to an exalted praise of his own intellectual and l...
This paper attempts to elucidate how Isocrates’ self-fashioning as an apragmôn serves as a means of ...
Both Isocrates and Confucius attached first importance to ethics education and then to harmony educa...
O presente texto trata do Panatenaico, de autoria do ateniense Isócrates. O discurso, inicialmente a...
The Greek Philosopher Isocrates (300 B.C.) identified the characteristics of a good teacher as one w...
In the praise of λόγος, that Isocrates delivers in Nicocles, 5-8, he acknowledges that it has a chie...
The principle of the Greek culture is not individualism but humanism consisting in bringing up a hum...
Book Description:In this volume, ten leading scholars of Classics, rhetoric, and philosophy offer a ...
International audienceThe Panathenaicus is used to be regarded as a complicated discourse and hard t...
Isocrate et Confucius entreprennent d’abord l’éducation de la vertu puis préparent à une vie harmoni...
The relation between medical practice and the use of speech in its rhetorical, political and philoso...
In fragments of the lost Protrepticus, preserved in Iamblichus, Aristotle responds to Isocrates’ wor...