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Proclus Ten Problems Concerning Providence Carlos Steel Jan Opsomer

  • SKU: BELL-38068400
Proclus Ten Problems Concerning Providence Carlos Steel Jan Opsomer
$ 35.00 $ 45.00 (-22%)

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Proclus Ten Problems Concerning Providence Carlos Steel Jan Opsomer instant download after payment.

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.44 MB
Pages: 192
Author: Carlos Steel, Jan Opsomer
ISBN: 9780715639245, 9781472557940, 9781472501783, 0715639242, 1472557948, 1472501780
Language: English
Year: 2014

Product desciption

Proclus Ten Problems Concerning Providence Carlos Steel Jan Opsomer by Carlos Steel, Jan Opsomer 9780715639245, 9781472557940, 9781472501783, 0715639242, 1472557948, 1472501780 instant download after payment.

'The universe is, as it were, one machine, wherein the celestial spheres are analogous to the interlocking wheels and the particular beings are like the things moved by the wheels, and all events are determined by an inescapable necessity. To speak of free choice or self determination is only an illusion we human beings cherish.' Thus writes Theodore the engineer to his old friend Proclus, one of the last major Classical philosophers. Proclus' reply is one of the most remarkable discussions on fate, providence and free choice in Late Antiquity. It continues a long debate that had started with the first polemics of the Platonists against the Stoic doctrine of determinism. How can there be a place for free choice and moral responsibility in a world governed by an unalterable fate? Proclus discusses ten problems on providence and fate, foreknowledge of the future, human responsibility, evil and punishment (or seemingly absence of punishment), social and individual responsibility for evil, and the unequal fate of different animals. Until now, despite its great interest, Proclus' treatise has not received the attention it deserves, probably because its text is not very accessible to the modern reader. It has survived only in a Latin medieval translation and in some extensive Byzantine Greek extracts. This first English translation, based on a retro-conversion that works out what the original Greek must have been, brings the arguments he formulates again to the fore.

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