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Was Rapid Scientific and Technical Progress Possible in Antiquity?
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J.J. Hall,
Published/Copyright:
March 4, 2011
Published Online: 2011-03-04
Published in Print: 1983-06
©2011 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co.
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Articles in the same Issue
- CONTENTS
- Was Rapid Scientific and Technical Progress Possible in Antiquity?
- Plato and the Irrationals — Part 2
- Euthyphro 6D-9B and its Misinterpretations
- The Concept of Παπάδειγμα in Plato's Theory of Forms
- The Character of the Individual and the Character of the State, in Plato's Republic
- Platonism in Hooker
- Atomic Isotacheia in Epicurus
- The Unmoved Mover and the Motion of the Heavens in Alexander of Aphrodisias
- Book Reviews
Articles in the same Issue
- CONTENTS
- Was Rapid Scientific and Technical Progress Possible in Antiquity?
- Plato and the Irrationals — Part 2
- Euthyphro 6D-9B and its Misinterpretations
- The Concept of Παπάδειγμα in Plato's Theory of Forms
- The Character of the Individual and the Character of the State, in Plato's Republic
- Platonism in Hooker
- Atomic Isotacheia in Epicurus
- The Unmoved Mover and the Motion of the Heavens in Alexander of Aphrodisias
- Book Reviews