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Proclus’ Commentary on the First Alcibiades

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Edited by L.G. Westerink. Translated by William O'Neill.

This edition is the first publication of a parallel text and translation of Proclus’ extensive and profound Commentary on the Alcibiades.  It combines the Greek text edited by Westerink, first published in 1962, with the English translation of O’Neill, originally published in 1965.

The late Platonists considered the First Alcibiades to be the best starting point for the new student of philosophy, because its primary theme is an exploration of the Delphic exhortation, “know thyself.”  And since all human knowledge is shaped by our particular nature, unless we understand the nature of our self all further knowledge is dubious.  This Commentary is an extensive examination of this theme, and its most important implications.  It draws not only on Plato's text, but also upon the Chaldean Oracles, Orphic mythology, and the writings of Proclus’ predecessors in the late Platonic tradition.

528 pages. Hardcover.

ISBN 9781898910497.

  • About the Series

    The Platonic Texts & Translations series from the Prometheus Trust makes essential late Platonic
    texts and translations—the fruit of exceptional scholarship from the last 50 years—available to a wide readership.

    Each volume is a revised version of its original, and presents parallel Greek texts and English translations, together with extensive notes and indices.

    The eight volumes of series are bound in matching red hardcover.

    See all volumes