• Hegesias may refer to: Hegesias of Sinope, Cynic philosopher, c. 325 BC Hegesias of Cyrene, Cyrenaic philosopher, c. 300 BC Hegesias of Magnesia, Greek...
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    Hegesias wrote a book called ἀποκαρτερῶν (Death by Starvation), which persuaded so many people that death is more desirable than life that Hegesias was...
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    the school broke up into different factions, represented by Anniceris, Hegesias, and Theodorus, who all developed rival interpretations of Cyrenaic doctrines...
    14 KB (1,797 words) - 21:03, 25 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Euptoieta hegesia
    Euptoieta hegesia, the Mexican fritillary, is a North and South American butterfly in the family Nymphalidae. The upperside of the wings is bright orange...
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  • Cypria (redirect from Hegesias of Salamis)
    Homer and by others to Stasinus. Others, however, ascribed the poem to Hegesias (or Hegesinus) of Salamis in Cyprus or to Cyprias of Halicarnassus (see...
    14 KB (1,809 words) - 20:27, 7 August 2024
  • Hegesias of Magnesia (Greek: Ἡγησίας ὁ Μάγνης, Hēgēsias ho Magnēs), Greek rhetorician, and historian, flourished about 300 BC. Strabo (xiv. 648), speaks...
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  • Hegesias of Sinope was an ancient Greek philosopher of the Cynic school and a student of Diogenes, said to have been once scolded for asking to borrow...
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  • Laërtius first lends to Hegesias the explicit affirmation of the impossibility of happiness: like later philosophical pessimists, Hegesias argued that lasting...
    109 KB (13,483 words) - 14:51, 15 August 2024
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    Brill, 2009, pp. 1005–06. Hesiod, Theogony 223. Stasinus of Cyprus or Hegesias of Aegina, Cypria Fragment 8 Pausanias, Description of Greece 1.33.7–8...
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  • of Anshan dies and is succeeded by his son Cyrus II the Great. 558 BC: Hegesias removed as Archon of Athens. 558 BC: The Chinese state of Jin defeats its...
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