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Platon

(Athen 428 od. 427-347 od. 348 Athen) : Philosoph

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Plato
Aristokles

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Index of Names : Occident / Philosophy : European Antiquity

Chronology Entries (1)

# Year Text Linked Data
1 1908 Lu, Xun. Mo luo shi li shuo = On the power of Mara poetry. [ID D26228]. [Auszüge].
Lu Xun erwähnt George Byron, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Thomas Carlyle, William Shakespeare, John Milton, Walter Scott, John Keats, Friedrich Nietzsche, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Henrik Ibsen [erste Erwähnung], Nikolai Wassil'evich Gogol, Platon, Dante, Napoleon I., Ernst Moritz Arndt, Friedrich Wilhelm III., Theodor Körner, Edward Dowden, John Stuart Mill, Matthew Arnold, John Locke, Robert Burns, Aleksandr Sergeevich Pushkin, Adam Mickiewicz, Sandor Petöfi, Wladimir Galaktionowitsch Korolenko.

Lu Xun schreibt :
"He who has searched out the ancient wellspring will seek the source of the future, the new wellspring. O my brothers, the works of the new life, the surge from the depths of the new source, is not far off". Nietzsche...
Later the poet Kalidasa achieved fame for his dramas and occasional lyrics ; the German master Goethe revered them as art unmatched on earth or in heaven...
Iran and Egypt are further examples, snapped in midcourse like well-ropes – ancient splendor now gone arid. If Cathay escapes this roll call, it will be the greatest blessing life can offer. The reason ? The Englishman Carlyle said : "The man born to acquire an articulate voice and grandly sing the heart's meaning is his nation's raison d'être. Disjointed Italy was united in essence, having borne Dante, having Italian. The Czar of great Russia, with soldiers, bayonets, and cannon, does a great feat in ruling a great tract of land. Why has he no voice ? Something great in him perhaps, but he is a dumb greatness. When soldiers, bayonets and cannon are corroded, Dante's voice will be as before. With Dante, united ; but the voiceless Russian remains mere fragments".
Nietzsche was not hostile to primitives ; his claim that they embody new forces is irrefutable. A savage wilderness incubates the coming civiliization ; in primitives' teeming forms the light of day is immanent...
Russian silence ; then stirring sound. Russia was like a child, and not a mute ; an underground stream, not an old well. Indeed, the early 19th century produced Gogol, who inspired his countrymen with imperceptible tear-stained grief, compared by some to England's Shakespeare, whom Carlyle praised and idolized. Look around the worls, where each new contending voice has its own eloquence to inspire itself and convey the sublime to the world ; only India and those other ancient lands sit motionless, plunged in silence...
I let the past drop here and seek new voices from abroad, an impulse provoked by concern for the past. I cannot detail each varied voice, but none has such power to inspire and language as gripping as Mara poetry. Borrowed from India, the 'Mara' – celestial demon, or 'Satan' in Europe – first denoted Byron. Now I apply it to those, among all the poets, who were committed to resistance, whose purpose was action but who were little loved by their age ; and I introduce their words, deeds, ideas, and the impact of their circles, from the sovereign Byron to a Magyar (Hungarian) man of letters. Each of the group had distinctive features and made his own nation's qualities splendid, but their general bent was the same : few would create conformist harmonies, but they'd bellow an audience to its feet, these iconoclasts whose spirit struck deep chords in later generations, extending to infinity...
Humanity began with heroism and bravado in wars of resistance : gradually civilization brought culture and changed ways ; in its new weakness, knowing the perils of charging forward, its idea was to revert to the feminine ; but a battle loomed from which it saw no escape, and imagination stirred, creating an ideal state set in a place as yet unattained if not in a time too distant to measure. Numerous Western philosophers have had this idea ever since Plato's "Republic". Although there were never any signs of peace, they still craned toward the future, spirits racing toward the longed-for grace, more committed than ever, perhaps a factor in human evolution...
Plato set up his imaninary "Republic", alleged that poets confuse the polity, and should be exiled ; states fair or foul, ideas high or low – these vary, but tactics are the same...
In August 1806 Napoleon crushed the Prussian army ; the following July Prussia sued for peace and became a dependency. The German nation had been humiliated, and yet the glory of the ancient spirit was not destroyed. E.M. Arndt now emerged to write his "Spirit of the Age" (Geist der Zeit), a grand and eloquent declaration of independence that sparked a blaze of hatred for the enemy ; he was soon a wanted man and went to Switzerland. In 1812 Napoleon, thwarted by the freezing conflagration of Moscow, fled back to Paris, and all of Europe – a brewing storm – jostled to mass its forces of resistance. The following year Prussia's King Friedrich Wilhelm III called the nation to arms in a war for three causes : freedom, justice, and homeland ; strapping young students, poets, and artists flocked to enlist. Arndt himself returned and composed two essays, "What is the people's army" and "The Rhine is a great German river, not its border", to strengthen the morale of the youth. Among the volunteers of the time was Theodor Körner, who dropped his pen, resigned his post as Poet of the Vienne State Theater, parted from parents and beloved, and took up arms. To his parents he wrote : "The Prussian eagle, being fierce and earnest, has aroused the great hope of the German people. My songs without exception are spellbound by the fatherland. I would forgot all joys and blessings to die fighting for it ! Oh, the power of God has enlightened me. What sacrifice could be more worthy than one for our people's freedom and the good of humanity ? Boundless energy surges through me, and I go forth ! " His later collection "Lyre and sword" (Leier und Schwert), also resonates with this same spirit and makes the pulse race when one recites from it. In those days such a fervent awareness was not confined to Körner, for the entire German youth were the same. Körner's voice as the voice of all Germans, Körner's blood was the blood of all Germans. And so it follows that neither State, nor Emperor, nor bayonet, but the nation's people beat Napoleon. The people all had poetry and thus the poets' talents ; so in the end Germany did not perish. This would have been inconceivable to those who would scrap poetry in their devotion to utility, who clutch battered foreign arms in hopes of defending hearth and home. I have, first, compared poetic power with rice and beans only to shock Mammon's disciples into seeing that gold and iron are far from enough to revive a country ; and since our nation has been unable to get beyond the surface of Germany and France, I have shown their essence, which will lead, I hope, to some awareness. Yet this is not the heart of the matter...
England's Edward Dowden once said : "We often encounter world masterpieces of literature or art that seem to do the world no good. Yet we enjoy the encounter, as in swimming titanic waters we behold the vastness, float among waves and come forth transformed in body and soul. The ocean itself is but the heave and swell of insensible seas, nor has it once provided us a single moral sentence or a maxim, yet the swimmer's health and vigor are greatly augmented by it"...
If everything were channeled in one direction, the result would be unfulfilling. If chill winter is always present, the vigor of spring will never appear ; the physical shell lives on, but the soul dies. Such people live on, but hey have lost the meaning of life. Perhaps the use of literaure's uselessness lies here. John Stuart Mill said, "There is no modern civilization that does not make science its measure, reason its criterion, and utility its goal". This is the world trend, but the use of literature is more mysterious. How so ? It can nurture our imagination. Nurturing the human imagination is the task and the use of literature...
Matthew Arnold's view that "Poetry is a criticism of life" has precisely this meaning. Thus reading the great literary works from Homer on, one not only encounters poetry but naturally makes contact with life, becomes aware of personal merits and defects one by one, and naturally strives harder for perfection. This effect of literature has educational value, which is how it enriches life ; unlike ordinary education, it shows concreteley a sense of self, valor, and a drive toward progress. The devline and fall of a state has always begun with is refusal to heed such teaching...
[The middle portion of this essay is a long and detailed description of Lu Xun's exemplary Mara poets, including Byron, Shelley, Pushkin, Lermontov, Michiewicz, Slowacki and Petöfi].
In 18th-century England, when society was accustomed to deceit, and religion at ease with corruption, literature provided whitewash through imitations of antiquity, and the genuine voice of the soul could not he heard. The philosopher Locke was the first to reject the chronic abuses of politics and religion, to promote freedom of speech and thought, and to sow the seeds of change. In literature it was the peasant Burns of Scotland who put all he had into fighting society, declared universal equality, feared no authority, nor bowed to gold and silk, but poured his hot blood into his rhymes ; yet this great man of ideas, not immediately the crowd's proud son, walked a rocky outcast road to early death. Then Byron and Shelley, as we know, took up the fight. With the power of a tidal wave, they smashed into the pillars of the ancien régime. The swell radiated to Russia, giving rise to Pushkin, poet of the nation ; to Poland, creating Mickiewicz, poet of revenge ; to Hungary, waking Petéfi, poet of patriotism ; their followers are too many to name. Although Byron and Shelley acquired the Mara title, they too were simply human. Such a fellowship need not be labeled the "Mara School", for life on earth is bound to produce their kind. Might they not be the ones enlightened by the voice of sincerity, who, embracing that sincerity, share a tacit understanding ? Their lives are strangely alike ; most took up arms and shed their blood, like swordsmen who circle in public view, causing shudders of pleasure at the sight of mortal combat. To lack men who shed their blood in public is a disaster for the people ; yet having them and ignoring them, even proceeding to kill them, is a greater disaster from which the people cannot recover...
"The last ray", a book by the Russian author Korolenko, records how an old man teaches a boy to read in Siberia : “His book talked of the cherry and the oriole, but these didn't exist in frozen Siberia. The old man explained : It's a bird that sits on a cherry branch and carols its fine songs”. The youth reflected. Yes, amid desolation the youth heard the gloss of a man of foresight, although he had not heard the fine song itself. But the voice of foresight does not come to shatter China's desolation. This being so, is there nothing for us but reflection, simply nothing but reflection ?

Ergänzung von Guo Ting :
Byron behaved like violent weaves and winter wind. Sweeping away all false and corrupt customs. He was so direct that he never worried about his own situation too much. He was full of energy, and spirited and would fight to the death without losing his faith. Without defeating his enemy, he would fight till his last breath. And he was a frank and righteous man, hiding nothing, and he spoke of others' criticism of himself as the result of social rites instead of other's evil intent, and he ignored all those bad words. The truth is, at that time in Britain, society was full of hypocrites, who took those traditions and rites as the truth and called anyone who had a true opinion and wanted to explore it a devil.

Ergänzung von Yu Longfa :
Die Bezeichnung Mara stammt aus dem Indischen und bedeutet Himmelsdämon. Die Europäer nennen das Satan. Ursprünglich bezeichnete man damit Byron. Jetzt weist das auf alle jene Dichter hin, die zum Widerstand entschlossen sind und deren Ziel die Aktion ist, ausserdem auf diejenigen Dichter, die von der Welt nicht sehr gemocht werden. Sie alle gehören zu dieser Gruppe. Sie berichten von ihren Taten und Überlegungen, von ihren Schulen und Einflüssen. Das beginnt beim Stammvater dieser Gruppe, Byron, und reicht letztlich hin bis zu dem ungarischen Schriftsteller Petöfi. Alle diese Dichter sind in ihrem äusserlichen Erscheinungsbild sehr unterschiedlich. Jeder bringt entsprechend den Besoderheiten des eigenen Landes Grossartiges hervor, aber in ihrer Hauptrichtung tendieren sie zur Einheitlichkeit. Meistens fungieren sie nicht als Stimme der Anpassung an die Welt und der einträchtigen Freude. Sobald sie aus voller Kehle ihre Stimme erheben, geraten ihre Zuhörer in Begeisterung, bekämpfen das Himmlische und widersetzen sich den gängigen Sitten. Aber ihr Geist rührt auch tief an die Seelen der Menschen nachfolgender Generationen und setzt sich fort bis in die Unendlichkeit. Sie sind ohne Ausnahme vital und unnachgiebig und treten für die Wahrheit ein… Nietzsche lehnt den Wilden nicht ab, da er neue Lebenskraft in sich berge und gar nicht anders könne, als ehrlich zu sein. So stammt die Zivilisation denn auch aus der Unzivilisation. Der Wilde erscheint zwar roh, besitzt aber ein gütmütiges Inneres. Die Zivilisation ist den Blüten vergleichbar und die Unzivilisation den Knospen. Vergleicht man jedoch die Unzivilisation mit den Blüten, so entspricht die Zivilisation den Früchten. Ist die Vorstufe bereits vorhanden, so besteht auch Hoffnung.

Sekundärliteratur
Yu Longfa : Lu Xun befasst sich zwar nicht ausführlich mit Friedrich Nietzsche, aber auf der Suche nach dem 'Kämpfer auf geistigem Gebiet', dessen charakteristische Eigenschaften, besonders die Konfiguration des Übermenschen, macht er ausfindig. Lu Xun ist überzeugt, dass die Selbststärkung eines Menschen und der Geist der Auflehnung kennzeichnend für den Übermenschen sind. In Anlehnung an den Übermenschen zitiert er aus Also sprach Zarathustra : "Diejenigen, die auf der Suche nach den Quellen des Altertums alles ausgeschöpft haben, sind im Begriff, die Quellen der Zukunft, die neuen Quellen zu suchen. Ach, meine Brüder, die Schaffung des neuen Lebens und das Sprudeln der neuen Quellen in der Tiefe, das dürft wohl nicht weit sein !"

Tam Kwok-kan : Earliest reference to Henrik Ibsen. This is the first Chinese article that discusses in a comprehensive manner the literary pursuits of the Byronic poets. Lu Xun ranks Ibsen as one of these poets and compares the rebellious spirit exemplified in Ibsen's drama to Byron's satanic tendency. Lu Xun had a particular liking for the play An enemy of the people, in which Ibsen presented his ideas through the iconoclast Dr. Stockmann, who in upholding truth against the prejudices of society, is attacked by the people. Lu Xun thought that China needed more rebels like Ibsen who dared to challenge accepted social conventions. By introducing Ibsen in the image of Dr. Stockmann, the moral superman, together with the satanic poets, Lu Xun believed that he could bring in new elements of iconoclasm in the construction of a modern Chinese consciousness. As Lu Xun said, he introduced Ibsen's idea of individualism because he was frustrated with the Chinese prejudice toward Western culture and with the selfishness popular among the Chinese.

Chu Chih-yu : Lu Xun adapted for the greater part of Mara poetry his Japanese sources (Kimura Katataro), he also added some of his own comments and speculations.

Guo Ting : Given Lu Xun's leading position in the Chinese literary field at that time, his defense of Byron was powerful and set the overarching tone for the time of Byron when he was first introduced to Chinese readers.

Liu Xiangyu : On the power of Mara poetry itself is an expression of Byronism to 'speak out against the establisment and conventions' and to 'stir the mind'. Lu Xun criticized traditional Chinese culture and literature.
  • Document: Von der Kolonialpolitik zur Kooperation : Studien zur Geschichte der deutsch-chinesischen Beziehungen. Hrsg. von Kuo Heng-yü. (München : Minerva Publikation, 1986). (Berliner China Studien ; 13).
    [Enthält] : Yin, Xuyi. Zur Verbreitung des Marxismus in China. S. 444. (KUH7, Publication)
  • Document: Chu, Chih-yu. Byron's literary fortunes in China. (Hong Kong : University of Hong Kong, 1995). Diss. Univ. of Hong Kong, 1995.
    http://hub.hku.hk/bitstream/10722/34921/1/FullText.pdf. [Accept]. S. 24. (Byr1, Web)
  • Document: Yu, Longfa. Begegnungen mit Nietzsche : ein Beitrag zu Nietzsche-Rezeptionstendenzen im chinesischen Leben und Denken von 1919 bis heute. Diss. Univ. Wuppertal, 2000.
    http://deposit.ddb.de/cgi-bin/dokserv?idn=959811869. S. 43-46. (Yu1, Publication)
  • Document: Tam, Kwok-kan. An unfinished project : Ibsen and the construction of a modern Chinese consciousness. In : East-West dialogue ; vol. 4, noa 2 (2000). (Ibs109, Publication)
  • Document: Liu, Xiangyu ; Ma, Hailiang. Byronism in Lu XunIn : Images of Westerners in Chinese and Japanese literature. Ed. by Hua Meng and Sukehiro Hirakawa. (Amsterdam : Rodopi, 2000). (Proceedings of the XVth Congress of the International Comparative Literature Association ; vol. 10, Leiden 1997). (Byr5, Publication)
  • Document: Tam, Kwok-kan. Ibsen in China 1908-1997 : a critical-annotated bibliography of criticism, translation and performance. (Hong Kong : Chinese Univesity Press, 2001). S. 34. (Ibs1, Publication)
  • Document: Hao, Tianhu. Ku Hung-ming, an early Chinese reader of Milton. In : Milton quarterly ; vol. 39, no 2 (2005). [Gu Hongming]. (Milt1, Publication)
  • Document: Guo, Ting. Translating a foreign writer : a case study of Byron in China. In : Literature compass ; vol. 7, no 9 (2010).
    http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1741-4113.2010.00727.x/full. (Byr3, Publication)
  • Person: Arndt, Ernst Moritz
  • Person: Arnold, Matthew
  • Person: Burns, Robert
  • Person: Byron, George Gordon
  • Person: Carlyle, Thomas
  • Person: Dante, Alighieri
  • Person: Dowden, Edward
  • Person: Friedrich Wilhelm III.
  • Person: Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von
  • Person: Gogol, Nikolai Vasil'evich
  • Person: Ibsen, Henrik
  • Person: Keats, John
  • Person: Korolenko, Vladimir Galaktionovich
  • Person: Körner, Theodor
  • Person: Locke, John
  • Person: Lu, Xun
  • Person: Mickiewicz, Adam
  • Person: Mill, John Stuart
  • Person: Napoleon I.
  • Person: Nietzsche, Friedrich
  • Person: Petöfi, Sándor
  • Person: Pushkin, Aleksandr Sergeevich
  • Person: Scott, Walter
  • Person: Shakespeare, William
  • Person: Shelley, Percy Bysshe

Bibliography (5)

# Year Bibliographical Data Type / Abbreviation Linked Data
1 1954 [Platon]. Bolatu wen yi dui hua ji. Zhu Guangqian yi. (Shanghai : Shanghai wen yi lian he chu ban she, 1954). Übersetzung von Platon. Dialoge.
柏拉圖 文艺 対话 集
Publication / ZhuG6
2 1966 [Nietzsche, Friedrich ; Platon ; Montaigne, Michel de]. Nicai, Bolatu, Mengtian. Yali yi. (Taibei : Zheng wen chu ban she, 1966).
尼采柏拉圖蒙田
Publication / Nie110
3 1998 Bu pei de ling xu : qi ye ling dao li de qi shi : Bolatu, Shashibiya, Jinen, Kelaosaiweizi, Qiujier, Gandi. = The timeless leader : lessons on leadership from : Plato, Shakespeare, Antigone, Melville, Robert Penn Warren, Cleopatra, Churchill, Martin Luther King, von Clausewitz, Castiglione, Gandhi. Yuehan Kelimen [John Clemens] ; Shitifu Aibohete ; Li Wanrong yi.(Taibei : Mai tian chu ban gong si,1998). (Qi hua cong shu ; FP2013).
不朽的领袖 : 企业领导力的启示柏拉图莎士比亚金恩克劳塞维兹邱吉尔甘地
Publication / WarR4
4 2000 [Platon]. Fei duo. Yang Jiang yi. (Shenyang : Liaoning ren min chu ban she, 2000). Übersetzung von Platon. Phaidon.
斐多
Publication / YanJ1
5 2004 [Wartenberg, Thomas E.]. Lun yi shu de ben zhi : ming jia jing xuan ji. Tangmasi Huatengboge bian zhu ; Zhang Shujun, Liu Lanyu, Wu Peien yi zhe. Vol. 1-29. (Taibei : Wu guan yi shu guan li you xian gong si, 2004). Übersetzung von Wartenberg, Thomas E. The nature of art : an anthology. (Fort Worth : Harcourt College, 2002).
論藝術的本質 : 名家精選集
[Enthält] :
Vol. 1. Yi shu ji mo fang : Bolatu = Art as imitation : Plato.
Vol. 2. Yi shu ji ren zhi : Yalisiduode. = Art as cognition : Aristotle.
Vol. 3. Yi shu ji zai xian zi ran : Aboti. = Art as representing nature : Leon Battista Alberti
Vol. 4. Yi shu ji pin wei de dui xiang : Xiumo. = Art as object of taste : David Hume.
Vol. 5. Yi shu ji ke gou tong de yu yue : Kangde. = Art as Communicable pleasure : Immanuel Kant.
Vol. 6. Yi shu ji qi shi : Shubenhua. = Art as revelation : Arthur Schopenhauer.
Vol. 7. Yi shu ji li xiang de dian xing : Heige’er. = Art as the ideal : G.W.F. Hegel.
Vol. 8. Yi shu ji jiu shu : Nicai. = Art as redemption : Friedrich Nietzsche.
Vol. 9. Yi shu ji qing gan jiao liu : Tuoersitai. = Art as communication of feeling : Leo N. Tolstoy.
Vol. 10. Yi shu ji zheng zhuang : Fuluoyide. = Art as symptom : Sigmund Freud.
Vol. 11. Yi shu ji you yi han de xing shi : Beier. = Art as significant form : Clive Bell.
Vol. 12. Yi shu ji biao da : Kelinwu. = Art as expression : R.G. Collingwood.
Vol. 13. Yi shu ji jing yan : Duwei. = Art as experience : John Dewey.
Vol. 14. Yi shu ji zhen li : Haidege. = Art as truth : Martin Heidegger.
Vol. 15. Yi shu ji qi yun : Banyaming. = Art as auratic : Walter Benjamin.
Vol. 16. Yi shu ji zi you : Aduonuo. = Art as liberatory : Theodor Adorno.
Vol. 17. Yi shu ji wu ding yi : Weizi. = Art as indefinable : Morris Weitz.
Vol. 18. Yi shu ji qi shi : Gudeman. = Art as exemplification : Nelson Goodman.
Vol. 19. Yi shu ji li lun : Dantuo. = Art as theory : Arthur Danto.
Vol. 20. Yi shu ji ji gou : Diqi. = Art as institution : George Dickie.
Vol. 21. Yi shu ji mei xue chan wu : Biersili. = Art as aesthetic production : Monroe C. Beardsley.
Vol. 22. Yi shu ji wen ben : Bate. = Art as text : Roland Barthes.
Vol. 23. Yi shu ji lian wu : Paibo. = Art as fetish : Adrian Piper.
Vol. 24. Yi shu ji jie gou : Dexida. = Art as deconstructable : Jacques Derrida.
Vol. 25. Yi shu ji nü xing zhu yi : Han'en. = Art as feminism : Hilde Hein.
Vol. 26. Yi shu ji mai luo : Jiegede. = Art as contextual : Dele Jegede.
Vol. 27. Yi shu ji hou zhi min : Aipiya. = Art as postcolonial : Kwame Anthony Appiah.
Vol. 28. Yi shu ji xu ni : Daiweisi. = Art as virtual : Douglas Davis.
Vol. 29. Dao lun. = About the authors.
Publication / Schop20

Secondary Literature (9)

# Year Bibliographical Data Type / Abbreviation Linked Data
1 1929 [Durant, Will]. Folanxisi Peigen. Dulan zhu ; Zhan Wenhu yi. (Shanghai : Qing nian xie hui shu ju, 1929). Übersetzung von Durant, Will. The story of philosophy : the lives and opinions of the greater philosophers. (New York, N.Y. : Simon and Shuster, 1926). [Abhandlung über Baruch Spinoza, Platon, Aristoteles, Francis Bacon, Voltaire, Immanuel Kant, Herbert Spencer, Friedrich Nietzsche].
斯賓諾莎
Publication / SpiB13
2 1965 Yaoli. Nicai, Bolatu, Mengtian. (Taibei : Wen you shu dian, 1965). [Abhandlung über Menschliches, Allzumenschliches von Friedrich Nietzsche, Platon, Michel de Montaigne].
尼采柏拉圖蒙田
Publication / Nie293
3 1966 [Emerson, Ralph Waldo]. Dai biao xing ren wu. Aimosen zhu ; He Xin yi. (Taibei : Guo li bian yi guan, 1966). Übersetzung von Emerson, Ralph Waldo. Representative men : seven lectures on the uses of great men : Plato, Swedenborg, Montaigne, Shakespeare, Napoleon and Goethe. (Leipzig : B. Tauchnitz, 1907). [Platon, Emanuel Swedenborg, Michel de Montaigne, William Shakespeare, Napoleon, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe].
代 表性人物
Publication / Shak250
4 1989 [Durant, Will]. Xi fang zhe xue shi hua. Wei'er Dulan yuan zhu. (Beijing : Shu mu wen xian chu ban she, 1989). (Wen shi cong shu ; 6). Übersetzung von Durant, Will. The story of philosophy : the lives and opinions of the greater philosophers. (New York, N.Y. : Simon and Shuster, 1926). [Abhandlung über Baruch Spinoza, Platon, Aristoteles, Francis Bacon, Voltaire, Immanuel Kant, Herbert Spencer, Friedrich Nietzsche].
西方哲學史話
Publication / Paco42
5 1992 Cheng, Shiquan [Chen, Shih-chuan]. Bailatu san lun. (Taibei : Dong da tu shu gu fen you xian gong si, 1992). (Cang hai cong kan). [Abhandlung über Platon].
柏拉圖三論
Publication / ChS3
6 1994 Fu, Peirong. Jing jie de xiang wang : Bolatu, Aogusiding, Shubenhua, Kaxile. (Taibei : Hong Jianquan jiao yu wen hua ji jin hui chu ban, 1994). (Ren wen cong shu Xi fang xin ling de pin wei). [Abhandlung über die Ästhetik bei Platon, Augustinus, Schopenhauer und Cassirer].
境界的嚮往 : 柏拉圖奧古斯丁叔本華卡西勒
Publication / Schop97
  • Cited by: Müller, Martin. Schopenhauer-Bibliographie. [Unpubliziert für Schopenhauer-Gesellschaft]. (Schop7, Published)
  • Person: Augustinus
  • Person: Cassirer, Ernst
  • Person: Fu, Peirong
  • Person: Schopenhauer, Arthur
7 1998 [Emerson, Ralph Waldo]. Dai biao ren wu. R. W. Aimosheng zhu ; Pu Long yi. (Beijing : Sheng huo, du shu, xin zhi san lian shu dian, 1998). (San lian jing xuan ; 2). Übersetzung von Emerson, Ralph Waldo. Representative men : seven lectures on the uses of great men : Plato, Swedenborg, Montaigne, Shakespeare, Napoleon and Goethe. (Leipzig : B. Tauchnitz, 1907). [Platon, Emanuel Swedenborg, Michel de Montaigne, William Shakespeare, Napoleon, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe].
代表人物
Publication / Shak249
8 2000 Hou, Shuxiong. Wei ren bai zhuan : Kongzi, Laozi, Yalishiduode, Bolatu, Shubenhua. Vol. 12. (Huhehaote : Yuan fang chu ban she, 2000). [100 Biographien grosser Persönlichkeiten. Confucius, Laozi, Aristoteles, Platon, Arthur Schopenhauer].
伟人百传第十二卷孔子老子亚里士多德柏拉图叔本华
Publication / Schop104
  • Cited by: Müller, Martin. Schopenhauer-Bibliographie. [Unpubliziert für Schopenhauer-Gesellschaft]. (Schop7, Published)
  • Person: Aristoteles
  • Person: Confucius
  • Person: Hou, Shuxiong
  • Person: Laozi
  • Person: Schopenhauer, Arthur
9 2005 Wu, Zengding. Nicai yu Bolatu zhu yi. (Shanghai : Shanghai ren min chu ban she, 2005). (Si xiang yu she hui = ICARUS). [Abhandlung über Friedrich Nietzsche und Platon].
尼采与柏拉图主义
Publication / Nie286