The intriguing similarity between the allegories of the soul chariot in Plato\u2019s Ph\ue6drus and in the Ka\u1e6dha Upani\u1e63ad has been pointed out \u2014 if not thoroughly investigated \u2014 by several scholars, accompanied with varying assessments, largely dependent on each individual scholar\u2019s assumptions concerning the bare possibility or the degree of likelihood of contacts and influences between early Greek and Indian thought, the significance (or otherwise) of the intercultural comparative endeavour, or, indeed, the methodological soundness of even positing the question, in the almost complete absence of pertinent historical documentation. Because assessments are to such a great extent influenced by theoretical assumptions...
In his recent study of the Mahābhārata, Fernando Wulff Alonso compares systematically Indian “epic” ...
Abstract!e article highlights the similarities between ancient Greek philosophy and Indian Upaniƕadi...
The NeoPlatonist Olympiodorus claims that “Plato borrows everywhere from Orpheus”, but many of the a...
The intriguing similarity between the allegories of the soul chariot in Plato’s Phædrus and in the K...
The intriguing similarity between the allegory of the chariot in Plato’s Phædrus and in the Kaṭha Up...
Parmenides' philosophy is unique in the history of ideas in Europe, but it has a striking parallel i...
From the sixth century BCE onwards there occurred a revolution in thought, with novel ideas such as ...
The paper is a reconsideration of the second part of the chariot allegory (Phdr. 253e5–255a1). After...
This investigation examines the question of whether the similar theories of the origins of monarchy ...
The relationship between Plato's conception of the existence of a soul as compared to the Vedan...
M.A. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban 2015.The objective of this dissertation is to demonstrate t...
The three parts of the soul in the Myth of the Chariot are most often understood to correspond to th...
According to the many thinkers that the ancient philosophy is start from Greek but this is not the r...
The presentation will start by unfolding the various layers of chariot imagery in early Indian sourc...
International audienceWe summarize the contributions to Indology of the author’s father (S. Kichenas...
In his recent study of the Mahābhārata, Fernando Wulff Alonso compares systematically Indian “epic” ...
Abstract!e article highlights the similarities between ancient Greek philosophy and Indian Upaniƕadi...
The NeoPlatonist Olympiodorus claims that “Plato borrows everywhere from Orpheus”, but many of the a...
The intriguing similarity between the allegories of the soul chariot in Plato’s Phædrus and in the K...
The intriguing similarity between the allegory of the chariot in Plato’s Phædrus and in the Kaṭha Up...
Parmenides' philosophy is unique in the history of ideas in Europe, but it has a striking parallel i...
From the sixth century BCE onwards there occurred a revolution in thought, with novel ideas such as ...
The paper is a reconsideration of the second part of the chariot allegory (Phdr. 253e5–255a1). After...
This investigation examines the question of whether the similar theories of the origins of monarchy ...
The relationship between Plato's conception of the existence of a soul as compared to the Vedan...
M.A. University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban 2015.The objective of this dissertation is to demonstrate t...
The three parts of the soul in the Myth of the Chariot are most often understood to correspond to th...
According to the many thinkers that the ancient philosophy is start from Greek but this is not the r...
The presentation will start by unfolding the various layers of chariot imagery in early Indian sourc...
International audienceWe summarize the contributions to Indology of the author’s father (S. Kichenas...
In his recent study of the Mahābhārata, Fernando Wulff Alonso compares systematically Indian “epic” ...
Abstract!e article highlights the similarities between ancient Greek philosophy and Indian Upaniƕadi...
The NeoPlatonist Olympiodorus claims that “Plato borrows everywhere from Orpheus”, but many of the a...