Excerpt from De Veterum Scriptorum Graecorum Ratione Auctores Laudandi
Hanc scriptorum rationem laudandi auctores non accuratam esse merito quispiam dixerit. Nam unoquoque loco disertis verbis versuum laudatorum auctores notare eos taeduisse videtur. Neque tamen hoc reprehendere licet, quia toti scripto rum Graecorum generi scribendi convenit, qua de re postea plura verba faciemus.
Sed haec leviora, illa vero gravia, quod quo modo versus a scriptoribus Graecis ipsi [andati sint, quaerimus. Qua de ratione veteres scriptores ipsos nihil dicere facile intelle gitur, nisi quod verba quaedam, quae Lysiae attribueuda esse videntur, quorum postea mentionem faciemus, huc pertinent. Itaque et e versibus laudatis ipsis ratio exscribendi haurienda et fides habenda esthermogenifi) qui est inter rhetoresillos clarissimos, quorum in iudicio, si de veterum scriptorum genere dicendi nobis iudicandum est, nos stare Oportet. Nam eos ut homines Graecos talia melius nobis intellexisse consentaneum - est. Hermogenes et in libro, qui nepì pe3òèou 55wofi inscribitur, et in eo, quem supra commemoravimus, de versibus orationi pedestri inserendis prae cepta dat, quae exemplis e libris scriptorum Atticorum, ad quos haec quaestio ipsa quoque pertinet, haustis illustrat. Illo libro (rhet. Graee. II, p. 450) versus xarà xòllvgow orationi inditos, id quod Blass sic interpretatur: mit ganz engem Anschluss an das vom Redner Gesagte, ab eis, qui mrà napmèiav adferantur, dis cernit. Quae ratio eadem fere est atque napanloxv'q (thes. Grace. Ling. VI quam cognituri sumus.
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Paperback. Condizione: New. Print on Demand. This book explores the complex ways in which Greek authors cited and quoted other writers from the sixth to the fourth centuries BCE. These writers primarily relied on memory, as opposed to written notes, to recall and incorporate the works of others into their own. The author first examines how Herodotus and Thucydides, the first Greek historians, each developed unique approaches to citing earlier sources. The author then moves on to explore how these methods were further developed by Plato and his contemporaries. Through careful analysis of specific examples, the book reveals the subtle ways in which the practice of citation evolved in its earliest stages, from simple references to more complex and creative forms of engagement with source material. This book is a reproduction of an important historical work, digitally reconstructed using state-of-the-art technology to preserve the original format. In rare cases, an imperfection in the original, such as a blemish or missing page, may be replicated in the book. print-on-demand item. Codice articolo 9781332496310_0
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PAP. Condizione: New. New Book. Shipped from UK. Established seller since 2000. Codice articolo LW-9781332496310
Quantità: 15 disponibili