Gökyüzü

Gökyüzü
@___Joker___
Hayatı travmatize etmeyi bırak; rolünü fazla büyütüyorsun.
"Theophrastus locates his characters in a specific time and place. The time is the late fourth century. The place is Athens. And it is an Athens whose daily life he recreates for us in dozens of dramatic pictures. If we look elsewhere for such scenes and such people, we shall not find them (until we come to the Mimes of Herodas) except on the comic stage."
Sayfa 8 - Cambridge University Press, Editors: J. Diggle, N. Hopkinson, J. G. F. Powell, M. D. Reeve, Cambridge University Press, First Published 2004.·Kitabı okudu
Reklam
"The Characters, in conception and design, is a novel work: nothing like it, so far as we know, had been attempted before."
Sayfa 5 - Cambridge University Press, Editors: J. Diggle, N. Hopkinson, J. G. F. Powell, M. D. Reeve, Cambridge University Press, First Published 2004.·Kitabı okudu
Theophrasti (Theophrastus)
"His association with Aristotle will have begin at Athens, if we accept that he studied with Plato. Otherwise it will have begun at Assos the coast of Asia Minor opposite Lesbos), where Hermias, ruler of Atarneus, former fellow-student of Aristotle in the Academy, gathered together a group of philosophers after the death of Plato in 348/7."
Sayfa 2 - Cambridge University Press, Editors: J. Diggle, N. Hopkinson, J. G. F. Powell, M. D. Reeve, Cambridge University Press, First Published 2004.·Kitabı okudu
Theophrastus
"He is reputed to have had some 2,000 students. He bequeatled his books to his pupil Neleus of Scepsis. The narrative of their subsequent history should be treated with reserve: together with the books of Aristotle, which Theophrastus had inherited, they were stored underground, suffered damage, and were sold to Apellicon of Teos, who issued unreliable copies; the library of Apellicon was carried off to Tome when Sulla captured Athens, and acquired by Tyrannion the grammarian, who, with Andronicus of Rhode, put further unsatisfactory copies into circulation."
Sayfa 3 - Cambridge University Press, Editors: J. Diggle, N. Hopkinson, J. G. F. Powell, M. D. Reeve, Cambridge University Press, First Published 2004.·Kitabı okudu
"Theophrastus was born at Eresos on Lesbon in 372 or 371. His name, Tuptauoc, was changed by Aristotle to Oeopactoc, in recognition (so later writers believed) of his diven eloquence."
Sayfa 1 - Cambridge University Press, Editors: J. Diggle, N. Hopkinson, J. G. F. Powell, M. D. Reeve, Cambridge University Press, First Published 2004.·Kitabı okudu
Reklam