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Robin Waterfield is an independent scholar and translator, living in southern Greece. In addition to more than twenty-five translations of works of Greek literature, he is the author of numerous books, including Dividing the Spoils and Taken at the Flood.

Beinhaltet die Namen: Robin Waterfield, ed. Robin Waterfield

Werke von Robin Waterfield

Oliver Twist: Abridged Edition (Puffin Classics) (1994) — Retold by — 185 Exemplare
Der Stern der Schmuggler (1986) — Autor — 135 Exemplare
Die Masken von Mayhem (1986) — Autor — 92 Exemplare
Phantoms of Fear (1987) — Autor; Autor — 65 Exemplare
Jacob Boehme (Western Esoteric Masters) (2001) — Herausgeber — 49 Exemplare
Misery (Penguin Readers, Level 6) (1994) — Adapter — 45 Exemplare
The Voice of Kahlil Gibran: An Anthology (Arkana) (1995) — Herausgeber — 40 Exemplare
Deathmoor (1994) — Autor — 26 Exemplare
White Fang [adapted ∙ Penguin readers Level 4] (1993) — Adaptor — 20 Exemplare
The Money Spider (1988) — Autor — 5 Exemplare
Little Women: Junior Novelization (1995) — Adaptor — 2 Exemplare
The Water Spider (Plus) (1988) — Autor — 2 Exemplare
Theaetetus 1 Exemplar
Essays 1 Exemplar
A Catskill Eagle (1998) 1 Exemplar

Zugehörige Werke

Der Staat (0380) — Übersetzer, einige Ausgaben21,965 Exemplare
Historien (0420) — Übersetzer, einige Ausgaben10,100 Exemplare
Der Geheimagent (1907)einige Ausgaben6,580 Exemplare
Das Gastmahl. (0360) — Übersetzer, einige Ausgaben6,535 Exemplare
Anabasis (0370) — Übersetzer, einige Ausgaben2,385 Exemplare
The Firm {Penguin Readers, Level 5} (1999) — Adapter — 2,080 Exemplare
Historien (0150) — Übersetzer, einige Ausgaben1,546 Exemplare
Theätet [Griechisch/Deutsch] (0360) — Übersetzer, einige Ausgaben985 Exemplare
Roman Lives: A Selection of Eight Lives (Oxford World's Classics) (0002) — Übersetzer, einige Ausgaben427 Exemplare
The Body (Penguin Readers ∙ Level 5) (1982) — Adapter — 425 Exemplare
Essays (1992) — Übersetzer — 253 Exemplare
Meditations [Penguin 60s - abridged] (1995) — Abridged by — 130 Exemplare
Selected Myths (Oxford World's Classics) (2004) — Übersetzer, einige Ausgaben65 Exemplare
Jacob Boehme: Essential Readings (1989) — Herausgeber — 21 Exemplare
The Bloomsbury Companion to Socrates (Bloomsbury Companions) (2012) — Mitwirkender — 8 Exemplare
Fighting Fantazine 12 (2013) — Mitwirkender — 1 Exemplar

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This volume contains translations of all the most important fragments of the Presocratics and Sophists, and of the most informative testimonia from ancients sources, supplemented by lucid commentary.
 
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PendleHillLibrary | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Jan 14, 2024 |
Despite the set up feeling rushed and some of the encounters feeling even more railroady than usual this is a fun book that i have yet to complete, but which doesn't appear to be almost impossible. I defeated the big bad at the end, which was a naughty lady for a change, but got stabbed in the back before I could do anything else. Obviously missed some vital information along the way! Some great Russ Nicholson art as well.
 
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elahrairah | 1 weitere Rezension | Dec 30, 2023 |
Plato was so devoted to the memory of his teacher Socrates, who in his view had been unjustly executed by his fellow Athenians, that he spent much of his life writing and disseminating his thoughts through Socrates’ voice rather than his own. Just as Christianity might have looked very different had it not been for St Paul’s writings and teachings, the nature of Greek (and subsequent Western) philosophy would have looked very different had it not been for Plato’s advocacy of what he presented, at least initially, as the thoughts and methods of his teacher. From Plato’s extensive writings, along with those of Xenophon and a few other contemporary and later sources, we can construct a reasonably full biography of Socrates, culminating with his trial and execution. We also get a strong sense of Socrates’ personality, as a challenging and ironic interlocutor and a tough, courageous soldier. But what of Plato himself? Did Socrates’ most adept pupil also live a life worth recording and describing?

The idea of subjecting Plato to biographical treatment seems unpromising. Evidence for his life is scarce or uncertain. He passed most of his later years ‘in the groves of Academe’ – the Academy that he founded as a school of philosophy. As Robin Waterfield tells us in this well-researched and attractively written book, ‘the last dedicated biography in English of any length was published in 1839’. There are grounds for renewing the attempt, especially if one argues (as Waterfield does) that at least some of the 13 letters attributed to Plato that have survived are from the philosopher’s own hand.

Plato’s long Seventh Letter in particular has been considered spurious, but there is a growing consensus that it is a genuine and crucial document of Plato’s experiences. In it, Plato describes how he attempted to put his political theories into practice by travelling to Sicily to educate Dionysius II, the tyrant of Syracuse, about how a just and harmonious city-state should be run. The attempt was a failure, with Plato suffering the disillusionment of learning that his ideas could not compensate for the capricious nature of a tyrant. The episode, however, in addition to testimonies about Plato’s earlier foray to Sicily (during which he was allegedly captured and ransomed by pirates), supports Plato’s assertion that he was for many years intent on a career of political action rather than philosophical investigation.

That proposition underpins a biography of Plato that was published in 1919 by the eminent Prussian philologist Ulrich von Wilamowitz-Moellendorff (which, surprisingly, is not mentioned in this book). Wilamowitz’s imaginative depiction of Plato and his world raised scholarly eyebrows at the time; but the Oxford Hellenist E.R. Dodds noted that ‘the enduring importance of Wilamowitz’s “biographical novel” or “Plato for housemaids” (as the stuffier sort of critics called it) is that it has compelled subsequent writers to think of Plato as a man and not as a self-generating system of metaphysics’. The latter impression tends to make an appearance from time to time in Waterfield’s account. While he discusses the Sicilian adventures, he is more comfortable talking about the corpus of philosophical dialogues (28 of which he considers genuine) than about Plato as a person. While we learn about Plato’s close friendship with the mathematician-inventor Archytas of Tarentum, it’s a shame that no mention is made of his most sensational invention – a mechanical bird that flew using steam power – presumably because Plato nowhere mentions it himself.

Read the rest of the review at HistoryToday.com

Armand D’Angour is Professor of Classics at Jesus College, Oxford.
… (mehr)
 
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HistoryToday | Aug 30, 2023 |
boring, not that original, annoying and with some unfortunate narrative choices (for example the insertion of chapters from the pseudo-novel inside the novel - it was terrible).
Definitely not the SK I love, but an atypical one (I prefer his more story driven ones, with mysteries to solve).
Rather a study in sadism (which I did not enjoy).
 
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milosdumbraci | 1 weitere Rezension | May 5, 2023 |

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