The city and man
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The city and man
(Phoenix books)
University of Chicago Press, 1978, c1964
Related Bibliography 1 items
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The city and man / Leo Strauss
BB19372012
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The city and man / Leo Strauss
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Note
Enlarged version of the Page-Barbour lectures delivered by the author at the University of Virginia in the spring of 1962
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The City and Man consists of provocative essays by the late Leo Strauss on Aristotle's Politics, Plato's Republic, and Thucydides' Peloponnesian Wars. Together, the essays constitute a brilliant attempt to use classical political philosophy as a means of liberating modern political philosophy from the stranglehold of ideology. The essays are based on a long and intimate familiarity with the works, but the essay on Aristotle is especially important as one of Strauss's few writings on the philosopher who largely shaped Strauss's conception of antiquity. The essay on Plato is a full-scale discussion of Platonic political philosophy, wide in scope yet compact in execution. When discussing Thucydides, Strauss succeeds not only in presenting the historian as a moral thinker of high rank, but in drawing his thought into the orbit of philosophy, and thus indicating a relation of history and philosophy that does not presuppose the absorption of philosophy by history.
by "Nielsen BookData"