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From the Beginning to Plato

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The A<strong>to</strong>mists<br />

Texts<br />

6.20 DK [2.2] II, sect. 67 (Leucippus), 68 (Democritus).<br />

6.21 Luria, S. Democritea, Leningrad, Soviet Academy of Sciences, 1970. Original texts<br />

of fragments and testimonia with Russian translation and commentary.<br />

Collections of articles<br />

6.22 Benakis, L. (ed.) Proceedings of <strong>the</strong> First International Conference on Democritus,<br />

Xanthi, International Democritean Federation, 1984.<br />

6.23 Romano, F. (ed.) Democri<strong>to</strong> e I’a<strong>to</strong>mismo antico. Atti del convegno intemazionale,<br />

(Siculorum Gymnasium 33.1), Catania, University of Catania, 1980.<br />

Studies<br />

FROM THE BEGINNING TO PLATO 223<br />

6.24 Barnes [2.8], ch. 17, 19(b), 20, 21(c), 23(d), 24(e).<br />

6.25 ——‘Reason and necessity in Leucippus’, in Benakis [6.22] I: 141–58.<br />

6.26 Bicknell, P. ‘The seat of <strong>the</strong> mind in Democritus’, Eranos 66 (1968): 10–23.<br />

6.27 ——‘Democritus on precognition’, Revue des Études Grecques 82 (1969): 318–26.<br />

6.28 Burkert, W. ‘Air-imprints or eidōla: Democritus’ aetiology of vision’, Illinois<br />

Classical Studies 2 (1977): 97–109.<br />

6.29 Furley [4.63] Study 1 ‘Indivisible magnitudes’; ch. 6 ‘The a<strong>to</strong>mists’ reply <strong>to</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

Eleatics’, repr. with emendations in Mourela<strong>to</strong>s [2.19]: 504–26.<br />

6.30 —— ‘Aris<strong>to</strong>tle and <strong>the</strong> a<strong>to</strong>mists on infinity’, in I. Düring (ed.) Naturphilosophie bei<br />

Aris<strong>to</strong>teles und Theophrast, Proceedings of <strong>the</strong> Fourth Symposium Aris<strong>to</strong>telicum,<br />

Heidelberg, Lothar Stiehm Verlag, 1969:85–96, repr. in Furley [2.29]: 103–14.<br />

6.31 ——‘Aris<strong>to</strong>tle and <strong>the</strong> a<strong>to</strong>mists on motion in a void’, in P.K.Machamer and J.Turnbull<br />

(eds) Motion and Time, Space and Matter, Columbus, Ohio, Ohio State University<br />

Press, 1976; 83–100, repr. in Furley [2.29]: 77–90.<br />

6.32 ——[2.31], ch. 9–11.<br />

6.33 ——‘Democritus and Epicurus on sensible qualities’, in J.Brunschwig and<br />

M.C.Nussbaum (eds) Passions and Perceptions, Proceedings of <strong>the</strong> Fifth Symposium<br />

Hellenisticum, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1993: 72–94.<br />

6.34 Guthrie [2.13] II, ch. 8.<br />

6.35 Hussey, E. ‘Thucididean his<strong>to</strong>ry and Democritean <strong>the</strong>ory’, in P.Cartledge and<br />

F.Harvey (eds) Crux, Essays in Greek His<strong>to</strong>ry presented <strong>to</strong> G.E.M. de Ste. Croix,<br />

London, Duckworth, 1985:118–38.<br />

6.36 Kahn, C.H. ‘Democritus and <strong>the</strong> origins of moral psychology’, American Journal of<br />

Philology 106 (1985); 1–31.<br />

6.37 Kline, A.D. and Ma<strong>the</strong>son, C.A. ‘The logical impossibility of collision’, Philosophy<br />

62 (1987): 509–15. Discussion by R.Godfrey ‘Democritus and <strong>the</strong> impossibility of<br />

collision’, Philosophy 65 (1990): 212–17.

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