ABSTRACT

This seventh edition of Philosophic Classics, Volume I: Ancient Philosophy includes essential writings of the most important Greek philosophers, along with selections from some of their Roman followers. In updating this edition, editor Forrest E. Baird has continued to follow the same criteria established by the late Walter Kaufmann when the Philosophic Classics series was first established: (1) to use complete works or, where more appropriate, complete sections of works (2) in clear translations (3) of texts central to the thinker’s philosophy or widely accepted as part of the "canon." To make the works more accessible to students, most footnotes treating textual matters (variant readings, etc.) have been omitted and important Greek words have been transliterated and put in angle brackets. In addition, each thinker is introduced by a brief essay composed of three sections: (1) biographical (a glimpse of the life), (2) philosophical (a résumé of the philosopher’s thought), and (3) bibliographical (suggestions for further reading). 


New to this seventh edition:

Changes in translations:


New translations of Plato’s Apology and Phaedo and Aristotle’s Nichomachean Ethics and Politics from the acclaimed Focus Philosophical Library Series.


New translations of Plato’s Euthyphro and Crito.


New translations of Epicurus’s Letter to Herodotus, Letter to Menoeceus, and Principal Doctrines.


New translation of the Parmenides fragments.

Additional material:


Gorgias’s model oration, Encomium on Helen, which gives a defense of Helen of Troy.


A selection from Plato’s Gorgias on nature <physis> versus convention or law <nomos>.


Additional material from the opening of Plato’s Symposium to contextualize the dialogue.


Additional material from Plato’s Republic (Book IX) on the tri-partite soul.


Additional material from Aristotle’s Metaphysics (Book IV, 1-4, 7) on the nature of being and the so-called "three rules of thought."


A brief selection from Porphyry’s Life of Plotinus, giving a sense of the person.

Updated and reorganized bibliographies.
To allow for all these changes, a section of Book V from Plato’s Republic has been dropped.

Those who use this first volume in a one-term course in ancient philosophy will find more material here than can easily fit a normal semester. But this embarrassment of riches gives teachers some choice and, for those who offer the same course year after year, an opportunity to change the menu.

part |49 pages

Before Socrates

chapter |6 pages

The Milesians

chapter |8 pages

Three Solitary Figures

chapter |9 pages

The Monists

chapter |12 pages

The Pluralists

chapter |7 pages

Three Sophists

part |12 pages

Epilogue I: Two Views of Athens

chapter |11 pages

Thucydides

Ca. 460–ca. 400 b.c.

part |4 pages

Epilogue II: Aspasia

part |250 pages

Socrates 470–399 B.C. Plato 428/7–348/7 B.C.

part |154 pages

Aristotle

part |96 pages

Hellenistic and Roman Philosophy

chapter |20 pages

Epicurus

341–270 b.c.

chapter |14 pages

Lucretius

Ca. 99–55 b.c.

chapter |13 pages

The Early Stoa

chapter |13 pages

Epictetus

Ca. a.d. 50–ca. a.d. 130

chapter |9 pages

Marcus Aurelius

A.d. 121–180

chapter |6 pages

Pyrrho and Sextus Empiricus

Ca. 360–ca. 270 b.c.: a.d. third century

chapter |17 pages

Plotinus and Porphyry

Ca. a.d. 204–270: ca. a.d. 234–ca. 305