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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Joe_SachsJoe Sachs - Wikipedia

    Joe Mister Sachs is an American television writer and producer. He has worked extensively on ER in both capacities. Career. Sachs first became involved with ER as a technical advisor midway through the first season. He had a guest starring role as an Emergency Medical Technician in the first season episode "Motherhood".

  2. Joe Sachs is the author of The Odyssey (3.81 avg rating, 1089318 ratings, 19556 reviews, published -700), The Iliad (3.91 avg rating, 459378 ratings, 123...

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  3. Showing 17 distinct works. sort by. * Note: these are all the books on Goodreads for this author. To add more books, click here . Joe Sachs has 17 books on Goodreads with 49635 ratings. Joe Sachss most popular book is The Odyssey.

  4. Several of these writers and producers had background in healthcare: Joe Sachs was an emergency physician, while Lisa Zwerling and Neal Baer were both pediatricians. The series' crew was recognized with awards for writing, directing, producing, film editing, sound editing, casting, and music.

  5. Joe Sachs’s translation of Plato’s Republic conceives of itself as part of what must be an ongoing effort to recover and present the meaning of classical texts in light of the vicissitudes of English and modern sensibilities. For the reasons presented above, no apology need be given for being one in a field of such attempts, though Sachs ...

  6. thegreatthinkers.org › aristotle › major-worksDe Anima - Aristotle

    De Anima: On the Soul and On Memory and Recollection trans. Joe Sachs Green Lion Press, 2001. from Joe Sachs’s introduction to On the Soul: “The inner life of the animal presents itself to us in its outer activity, and teaches us that we too dwell innately in our bodies. When the bird flies away, and doesn’t bump into the branches and ...

  7. The “Odyssey” is a wondrous poem. Joe Sachs’ Afterword to his translation is a thought-inducing meditation on wonder, on Homer’s imaginatively and artfully conceived wonders and on Homer’s people, who are—above all, Odysseus—open to wondering and to its ensuing wisdom.

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