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Search results for eta,475 in Adler number:
Headword:
Hêraklês
Adler number: eta,475
Translated headword: Herakles, Heracles, Hercules
Vetting Status: high
Translation: Alcmene's son. They give an account of him as a philosopher and they depict him wearing the skin of a lion, carrying a cudgel, and possessing three apples;[1] which are the three apples the mythology says he took when he conquered the multifaceted argument of his base appetite with his cudgel of philosophy, having his spirit as a covering, like the skin of the lion. And thus having killed the dragon of his appetite with his club, he took the three apples, which are the three virtues: not to be angry, not to love money, not to be wanton. For through the cudgel of his enduring soul and the skin of most courageous and sound-minded argument, he conquered the offspring of his base appetite and was a philosopher until death.
Greek Original:Hêraklês, Alkmênês huios. touton philosophon historousi kai graphousi doran leontos phorounta kai rhopalon pheronta kai tria mêla kratounta: haper tria mêla nikêsanta ton polupoikilon tês ponêras epithumias logismon dia tou rhopalou tês philosophias aphelesthai emuthologêsan, echonta peribolaion phronêma, hôs doran leontos. kai houtôs phoneusas tôi rhopalôi ton drakonta tês epithumias apheileto ta tria mêla, ho esti tas treis aretas: to mê orgizesthai, to mê philargurein kai to mê philêdonein. dia gar tou rhopalou tês karterikês psuchês kai tês doras tou thrasutatou kai sôphronos logismou enikêse ton huion tês phaulês epithumias, philosophêsas achri thanatou.
Notes:
John of
Antioch fr.6.6 FHG (4.453), now 6.2 Roberto. The substance of this allegorical interpretation is attributed to Herodoros (FGrH 31 F14), probably early 4th century BCE, who along with
Prodicus and
Antisthenes is one of the earliest authors to depict Herakles as a philosophical
exemplum virtutis.
See also
eta 454,
eta 458,
eta 464,
eta 467,
eta 474,
eta 476,
eta 477.
[1] Herakles' eleventh Labor was to get the Apples of the Hesperides, whose tree was guarded by a dragon.
Keywords: art history; clothing; definition; ethics; historiography; imagery; mythology; philosophy; women; zoology
Translated by: Jennifer Benedict on 19 November 2000@00:44:41.
Vetted by:
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