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(Bellum Civile, cum libris incertorum auctorum de Bello Alexandrino, Africo, Hispaniensi.) Edited by R. L. A. Du Pontet.
This is an English translation of arguably the first systematic treatment of issues in the philosophy of mind, and one of the greatest works on the subject.
Oxford Classical Texts (forming the series formerly known as Scriptorum Classicorum Bibliotheca Oxoniensis), are renowned for their scholarly reliability and clear presentation. Each volume in the series contains a text which has been rigorously edited to the highest standards of scholarship with original work on the manuscripts, accompanied by a critical apparatus at the foot of the page which provides concise information on manuscript and textual variants, and anintroduction which discusses the textual tradition. Oxford Classical Texts (or OCTs) are a key choice for scholars and students looking for definitive critical editions of classical literature.
A selection from the two volumes of Iambi et Elegi Graeci.
This is the first of four volumes - intended to replace the previous OCT - of the great Athenian orator Demosthenes (fourth century BC); it is based on fresh and thorough study of the evidence by Professor Dilts, an accomplished Greek scholar.
A revised critical edition of books 21 to 25 of Livy's history of Rome (Titi Livi ab urbe condita)-which cover the first eight years (218-211 BC) of Rome's war with Hannibal-drawing on a large body of research and utilizing a broad range of manuscripts, many unknown to previous editors of the text.
A critical edition of Philostratus' Lives of the Sophists based on a comprehensive study of manuscript tradition which takes into account all major scholarly work on the text and features a detailed preface and critical apparatus, as well as an appendix containing the text of Polemon.
A revised critical edition of all three books of Caesar's Bellum civile, an account of his civil war against Pompey during 49-48 BC, based on a new collation of the ancient manuscripts and featuring an expanded and up-to-date critical apparatus.
A new critical edition (the first since 1864) of Proclus' Commentary on Plato's Parmenides. Proclus' work is the most important document on the interpretation of this enigmatic dialogue in antiquity, and has had a crucial influence on all subsequent readings.
(Tristia, Ibis, Epistulae ex Ponto, Halieutica, Fragmenta.) Edited by S. G. Owen.
Cicero Epistulae. Vol II. Part ii (ad Att. 9-16)
Menander was the greatest writer of Attic New Comedy. The plots of his plays are set in contemporary Athens and the surrounding countryside, and are concerned with the private lives of middle-class families. Menander's work is characterized by his sympathetic attitude to his characters. This text contains the extant fragments of Menander's works.
The lost plays of the Greek tragic poets are preserved in fragmentary form only. This volume presents the texts of their most interesting and substantial parts, and is a valuable textbook for students of Greek literature, in particular Greek tragedy.
The "Silvae" of Statius have been preserved in one corrupt 15th century manuscript. This work takes the view that this manuscript was identical with that seen by Politian, and surveys the scholarly literature of the "Silvae" in its entirely.
Aulus Gellius lived in Rome during the mid-second century AD and wrote his "Noctes Atticae" in 20 books. It includes philosophy, history, law, grammar and literary criticism. This two volume edition of his work is the first re-examination of the manuscripts since the mid-19th century.
Cicero Epistulae. Vol. II. Part i (ad Att. 1-8)
Plautus Comoediae Vol. II: Miles Gloriosus - Fragmenta
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