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Dictionary of the History of Ideas

Studies of Selected Pivotal Ideas
  
  

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BIBLIOGRAPHY

The major sources: Epicuro, Opere, a cura di G. Arrighetti
(Turin, 1960) has the Greek text of all Epicurus' works and
fragments, with an Italian translation; C. Diano, Epicuri
ethica
(Florence, 1946) has all the ethical works and frag-
ments; C. Bailey, Epicurus (Oxford, 1926) has a text (omit-
ting the Herculaneum fragments) with English translation
and commentary; Lucretius, De rerum natura has been
edited and translated many times. C. Bailey's edition
(Oxford, 1947) has text, English translation and commentary.
See also, G. D. Hadzsits, Lucretius and His Influence (New
York, 1963).

Modern commentary includes: C. Bailey, The Greek
Atomists and Epicurus
(Oxford, 1928), Part II, Chs. V and
VIII; C. Diano, “La psicologia d'Epicuro e la teoria delle
passioni,” Giornale Critico della Filosofia Italiana (1939),
105-45; (1940), 151-65; (1941), 5-34; (1942), 5-49, 121-50;
D. J. Furley, Two Studies in the Greek Atomists (Princeton,
1967), Study II, “Aristotle and Epicurus on Voluntary Ac-
tion”; M. Hadas, A History of Greek Literature (New York,
1950), and idem, A History of Latin Literature (New York,
1952); P. M. Huby, “The First Discovery of the Freewill
Problem,” Philosophy, 42 (1967), 353-62, and idem, “The
Epicureans, Animals, and Freewill,” Apeiron, 3 (1969),
17-19.

PAMELA M. HUBY

[See also Atomism; Causation; Free Will; Stoicism.]