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Examples

  • How many such as Chrysippus, how many such as Socrates, how many such as Epictetus, hath the age of the world long since swallowed up and devoured?

    Meditations Emperor of Rome Marcus Aurelius

  • "Chrysippus" (42): C. refers to a passage of Plutarch De

    Meditations Emperor of Rome Marcus Aurelius

  • 15, "Chrysippus" (of Tarsus,/- c. 212 b.c.) ... "ipsum mundum Deum dicit esse."

    NPNF2-08. Basil: Letters and Select Works 1895

  • "As Aristotle makes Plato, Pythagoras, Zeno, Democritus, Chrysippus, Parmenides and Heraclitus the basis and substance of his learning and teaching, so does he use Epicurus," who is extolled with "wonderful praises as the best and holiest of men" by Seneca, Lucretius, and Laertius.

    Architecture and Memory: The Renaissance Studioli of Federico da Montefeltro 2008

  • Thus Chrysippus can accept, at least for the souls of the wise, Socrates 'claim in the Phaedo that the soul is “altogether indissoluble, or nearly so”

    Ancient Theories of Soul Lorenz, Hendrik 2009

  • Many of the relevant works were lost (e.g., the works of Chrysippus), while others were never translated into Latin and so were effectively unavailable to the Latin Middle Ages, though things may be different for the Arabic and Byzantine traditions, which are only starting to be studied.

    Insolubles Spade, Paul Vincent 2009

  • In the same way, the mereological essentialist will endorse the earlier arguments from Epicharmus and Chrysippus: the debtor cannot gain new matter and Dion cannot survive the loss of his right foot.

    Material Constitution Wasserman, Ryan 2009

  • The Stoic philosopher Chrysippus invites us to consider the case of Dion and Theon, where Dion is a normal human being and Theon is a large part of Dion consisting of everything but Dion's right foot.

    Material Constitution Wasserman, Ryan 2009

  • “Zeno's arrow, divisible infinitesimals, and Chrysippus.”

    Zeno of Elea Palmer, John 2008

  • Chrysippus in particular was convinced that bivalence and the law of excluded middle apply even to contingent statements about particular future events or states of affairs.

    Stoicism Baltzly, Dirk 2008

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  • "Diogenes Laërtius gives two different accounts of his death. In the first account, Chrysippus was seized with dizziness having drunk undiluted wine at a feast, and died soon after. In the second account, he was watching a donkey eat some figs and cried out: "Now give the donkey a drink of pure wine to wash down the figs", whereupon he died in a fit of laughter."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Chrysippus&oldid=776089952

    April 26, 2017