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  2. Aug 6, 2014 · Much of what is known about his life in Athens and Corinth comes from the work The Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers by Diogenes Laertius (3rd century CE). Some of the most amusing anecdotes are those relating his continual feud with Plato whom he considered a pretentious, prattling, snob.

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    Diogenes Laertius wrote in Greek, compiling his material from hundreds of sources that he often names. Most of these sources are no longer in existence. The philosophers are divided, unscientifically, into two 'successions' or sections: 'Ionian' from Anaximander to Theophrastus and Chrysippus, including the Socratic schools; and 'Italian' from Pyth...

    Diogenes Laertius. 1938. Lives of Eminent Philosophers trans. R. D. Hicks. Loeb Classic, Harvard University Press. ISBN 0674992032

    All links retrieved January 29, 2024. 1. Diogenes Laertius: the Manuscripts of "The Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosphers" (notes on the publication history of Diogenes Laertius, from R.D. Hicks' edition of the "Lives," 1925)

  3. This chapter addresses Diogenes Laertius’ Lives of Eminent Philosophers, which recounts the doings, sayings, and writings of the leading figures of ancient Greek philosophy from its origins down to its rapid efflorescence and institutionalization in the fourth and third centuries bc, with occasional glimpses of its continuing vitality in the ...

  4. Why did he fall in the midst of his disciples? A bean-field there was he durst not cross; sooner than trample on it, he endured to be slain at the cross-roads by the men of Acragas. He flourished in the 60th Olympiad 38 and his school lasted until the ninth or tenth generation.

  5. Oct 28, 2022 · Laertius” was a common nickname for the learned in post-classical times, referring to Odysseus son of Laertes, though a phrase in Stephanus of Byzantium, “Διογένης ὁ Λαερτιεύς” suggests that Diogenes might have come from a town called Laerte, perhaps in Caria and Cilicia.

  6. The Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers by Diogenes Laertius (third century AD) are transmitted (entirely, partially, or in the form of excerpts) by a hundred or so manuscripts.

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