Epicureanism Additional Reading

Additional Reading

The first complete collection of the extant works and fragments of Epicurus is H. Usener (ed.), Epicurea (1887, reprinted 1966). A smaller selection, with Eng. trans. and commentary, is Cyril Bailey (ed.), Epicurus: The Extant Remains (1926), a very useful book that includes the “Vatican Fragments.” All of the ethical fragments (and several other items) are published in Carlo Diano (ed.), Epicuri Ethica (1946), with extensive Latin commentaries. Carlo Diano (ed. and trans.), Lettere di Epicuro e dei suoi (1946), contains 14 letters of Epicurus and his friends taken from Pap. Herc. 1418. G. Arrighetti (ed.), Epicuro, Opere, 2nd ed. (1967), contains all of the works and fragments (including the Peri Physeos), with notes and an index verborum; to be used with caution. Lucretius can be read in the three volumes prepared, with introduction, translations, and comments, by Cyril Bailey, Lucreti, De Rerum Natura (1947).

English translations of Epicurus and Lucretius include Whitney J. Oates (ed.), The Stoic and Epicurean Philosophers (1940), which contains translations by Cyril Bailey and by H.A.J. Munro. See also The Philosophy of Epicurus: Letters, Doctrines, and Parallel Passages from Lucretius, trans. by George K. Strodach (1963); Diogenes Laertius, Lives of Eminent Philosophers, bk. 10 on Epicurus, trans. by R.D. Hicks (1925); and Lucretius, On the Nature of the Universe, trans. by R.E. Latham (1964).

Valuable for its breadth and richness of detail, Cyril Bailey, The Greek Atomists and Epicurus (1928; new ed., 1964), is a fundamental work. For Epicurus’ psychology and his relation to Aristotle, see Carlo Diano, “La psicologia d’Epicuro e la teoria delle passioni,” in Giornale critico della filosofia italiana (1939–42). A book that stresses Epicurus’ anti-Platonism is N.W. De Witt, Epicurus and His Philosophy (1954). Also important for its perceptive study of Epicurus’ religiosity and ethics is A.J. Festugiere, Épicure et ses dieux (1946; Eng. trans., Epicurus and His Gods, 1956). See also the article “Epikur,” by W. Schmid in the Reallexikon für Antike und Christentum, 5:681–819 (1961); L.L. Whyte, Essay on Atomism: From Democritus to 1960 (1961); and Benjamin Farrington, The Faith of Epicurus (1967). G.D. Hadzsits, Lucretius and His Influence (1935), traces the influence of Epicurean ideas, especially since Roman times, in a broad perspective. For further bibliography, see Phillip De Lacy, “Some Recent Publications on Epicurus and Epicureanism (1937–1954),” in Classical Weekly, 48:169–177 (1955). Bernard Frischer, The Sculpted Word: Epicureanism and Philosophical Recruitment in Ancient Greece (1982), provides a discussion of the school’s success.

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