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Jacob the Cynic: Philosophers and Philosophy in Jacob Burckhardt’s Griechische Culturgeschichte Get access Arrow
Journal
Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Date Issued
2020
Author(s)
Type
Resource Types::text::Non-primary product
Abstract
Jacob Burckhardt, the famous historian of Renaissance and Greek culture that Nietzsche highly appreciated, famously said that ‘What is of interest to [him] is not so much to see how far the Greeks took philosophy as to see how far philosophy took them.’ The phrase encapsulates the fascinating tension that pervades Burckhardt’s attitude towards Greek philosophy: whereas he was fundamentally hostile to philosophical doctrines, in particular because philosophers were themselves doctrinally hostiles to art, he also highly praised philosophy in as much as the embodiment of one of the great achievements of Greek culture, the development of the ‘free personality’. This explains why the Cynics, with little doctrine and much life, were his preferred philosophers. ©The author ©Oxford University Press
License
Acceso Restringido
How to cite
Laks, A. (2020). Jacob the Cynic. In Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy, Volume 57 (pp. 369–382). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198850847.003.0012
