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From the Beginning to Plato

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xxii<br />

Censorinus. Roman grammarian; 3rd c. AD. Work cited: On <strong>the</strong> Day of Birth<br />

ed. N.Sallman, Leipzig, Teubner, 1983.<br />

Cicero. Roman statesman and philosopher; 1st c. BC. Works cited;<br />

Academica, On <strong>the</strong> Nature of <strong>the</strong> Gods, Tusculan Disputations (L).<br />

Clement. Bishop of Alexandria; 3rd c. AD. Works cited: Protrepticus,<br />

Miscellanies (L).<br />

Columella. Roman writer on agriculture; 1st c. AD. Work cited: On<br />

Agriculture (L).<br />

Diogenes Laertius. Biographer; 3rd c. AD(?). Work cited: Lives of <strong>the</strong><br />

Philosophers (L).<br />

Epicurus. Philosopher, founder of Epicurean school; 4th–3rd c. BC. Works<br />

cited: Letter <strong>to</strong> Menoeceus, On Nature. Ed. G.Arrighetti, Epicure, Opere, Turin,<br />

Giulio Einandi, 1960. Trans. in C.Bailey, Epicurus, Oxford, Clarendon Press,<br />

1926, repr. Hildesheim and New York, Georg Olms Verlag, 1970, and in<br />

A.A.Long andD. N.Sedley, The Hellenistic Philosophers, Cambridge:<br />

Cambridge University Press, 1987, Vol. 1.<br />

Etymologicum Magnum. 12th c. AD Greek dictionary.<br />

Eusebius. His<strong>to</strong>rian and chronologist; 3rd–4th c. AD. Works cited:<br />

Preparation for <strong>the</strong> Gospel, Chronicles.<br />

Eu<strong>to</strong>cius. Ma<strong>the</strong>matician; 6th c. AD. See [8.44].<br />

Heraclitus. Interpreter of Homer; 1st c. AD.<br />

Hesychius. Lexicographer; 5th c. AD(?).<br />

Hippolytus. Bishop of Rome; 3rd c. AD. Work cited: Refutation of All<br />

Heresies (see [3.13]).<br />

Iamblichus. Neopla<strong>to</strong>nist philosopher; 4th c. AD. See [8.52].<br />

Lactantius. Ecclesiastical writer; 3rd–4th c. AD. Work cited: Divine<br />

Institutions, (in Corpus Scrip<strong>to</strong>rum Ecclesiasticorum Latinorum, Vol. 19).<br />

Lucretius. Epicurean philosopher and poet; 1st c. BC. Work cited: De Rerum<br />

Natura (L).<br />

Marcus Auretius. Roman emperor and S<strong>to</strong>ic philosopher; 2nd c. AD. Work<br />

cited: Meditations (L).<br />

Maximus of Tyre. Moralist and lecturer; 2nd c. AD.<br />

Nicomachus of Gerasa. Ma<strong>the</strong>matician; 1st–2nd c. AD. See [8.55–8].<br />

Olympiodorus. Neopla<strong>to</strong>nist philosopher; 6th c. AD. Work cited:<br />

commentary on Aris<strong>to</strong>tle’s Categories.<br />

Origen. Theologian; 2nd–3rd c. AD. Work cited: Against Celsus, trans.<br />

H.Chadwick, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1953.<br />

Pappus. Ma<strong>the</strong>matician; 4th c. AD. See [8.60].<br />

Pausanias. Geographer and antiquarian; 2nd c. AD. Work cited: Description<br />

of Greece (L).<br />

Philoponus (John). Aris<strong>to</strong>telian commenta<strong>to</strong>r; 6th c. AD. Works cited:<br />

commentaries on Physics and on On Generation and Corruption.<br />

Philostratus. Biographer; 2nd–3rd c. AD. Work cited: Lives of <strong>the</strong> Sophists<br />

(L).

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