1: Eudemus in the Arabic Tradition 1; 2: Eudemus and the Peripatos; 3: Qualche Aspetto Controverso della Biografia di Eudemo di Rodi; 4: Eudemus’ Work On Expression; 5: Did Aristotle Reply to Eudemus and Theophrastus on Some Logical Issues?; 6: Eudemus’ Physics: Change, Place and Time; 7: Wehrli’s Edition of Eudemus of Rhodes: The Physical Fragments from Simplicius ‘Commentary On Aristotle’s Physics; 8: Continuity and Coherence in Early Peripatetic Texts; 9: Eudemus’ Unmoved Movers: Fragments 121–123b Wehrli; 10: Phantasia, Thought and Science in Eudemus; 11: Eudemus the Naturalist; 12: Eudemus and the History of Science; 13: Eudemus’ History of Mathematics; 14: Eudemus’ History of Early Greek Astronomy: Two Hypotheses; 15: Eudemus Fr. 145 Wehrli and the Ancient Theories of Lunar Light; 16: On Eudemus Fr. 150 (Wehrli)
Istvan Bodnar is a member of the philosophy department at the University of Budapest, where he teaches and does research on ancient philosophy. He has been a junior fellow at the Center for Hellenic Studies and most recently has been an Alexander von Humboldt Stipendiat at the Max Plank Institut fur Wissenschaftsgeschichte. William W. Fortenbaugh is professor of classics at Rutgers University. In addition to editing several books in this series, he has written Aristotle on Emotion and Quellen zur Ethik Theophrastus. New is his edition of Theophrastus's treatise On Sweat.
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