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LECTIO 8th International Conference: Polemics, Rivalry &Networking in Greco-Roman Antiquity -12-


Disagreement and scholarly dispute are essential to any intellectual development. This holds true for ancient cultures no less than for us today. Greek philosophy has been agonistic from long before the formal constitution of philosophical ‘schools’ in the Hellenistic age. In the classical period, Athens famously served as an intellectual battlefield between Socrates and the sophists, in which a full armory of eristic and elenctic strategies was developed. This confrontation was to become a paradigm for the opposition between rhetorical and philosophical models of education, from Plato and Isocrates to the Second Sophistic and beyond.


The Hellenistic age saw the rise of schools and other, often more informal types of network which committed its members to a core set of doctrines – not only inphilosophy (Stoicism, Epicureanism, Skepticism), but also in medicine (dogmatists vs. empiricists), science (mathematical astronomy vs. more philosophical cosmologies), historiography (pragmatic vs. rhetorical and tragic approaches; pro-Roman vs. pro-Carthaginian accounts), grammar (allegoricists vs. literalists), rhetoric (asianism vs. atticism), poetry (epos vs. shorter types of poetry), and theology (traditionalist vs. more liberal approaches). An essential ingredient of this phenomenon is the development of stereotypic depictions of rival schools and fixed patterns of refutations. Many of these depictions and tropes survived the actual debates from which they emerged and the schools against which they were directed, as is apparent from the Platonic and Christian texts from late Antiquity.


In the Hellenistic period, we also witness the emergence of new intellectual centers, like Alexandria, and of increasingly text-based scholarly communities and networks. From the early imperial age onwards, authoritative texts became increasingly important vehicles of wisdom, and written commentaries gradually acquired a central place in philosophical, rhetorical and religious education. Both Christians and pagans adopted polemical strategies in distinguishing between orthodox and heterodox interpretations of their founding texts, thus leading to controversy between authors who often had much more in common than they were ready to admit. In this context, polemical strategies not only served to refute one’s opponents, but also contributed to establishing intra-school identity and intellectual alliances.


Confirmed keynote speakers:

Philip van der Eijk (Berlin)

Peter Gemeinhardt (Göttingen)

Pantelis Golitsis (Thessaloniki)

Irmgard Männlein-Robert (Tübingen)

John Marincola (Florida State University)



FECHA CONGRESO/CONGRESS DATE/DATA CONGRESSO: 12-13-14/12/2018


ORGANIZADOR/ORGANIZER/ORGANIZZATORE: Pieter d’Hoine; Gert Partoens ; Geert Roskam ; Stefan Schorn ; Jos Verheyden ; Erika Gielen


INFO: CALL - web - Erika.gielen@kuleuven.be ; lectio@kuleuven.be

INSCRIPCIÓN/REGISTRATION/REGISTRAZIONE: Aquí/here/qui Deadline: 28/11/2018

Participantes de UK Leuven/non - UK Leuven participants/ UK Leuven partecipante: gratis/free/gratuito

No participantes de UK Leuven/UK Leuven participants/ nessun UK Leuven partecipanti: 30 EUR

The registration fee includes access to all conference presentations, conference materials, all coffee breaks, 2 lunches (December 13 and 14, 2018) and the opening reception on Wednesday December 12, 2018. Not included is the conference dinner on Thursday December 13, 2018.

Cena del congreso/conference dinner/ cena della conferenza: 60 EUR

PROGRAMA/PROGRAM/PROGRAMMA:

Wednesday 12 December 2018 | Conference day 1 | Institute of Philosophy


14.30 - 15.00 Registration

15.00 - 15.15 Opening of the Conference Wim DECOCK | Director of Lectio

Session 1

15.15 - 15.45 Marco DONATO (Pisa & Paris), Polemics in the Pseudoplatonica: The Academy’s Agenda and the Renaissance of Socratic Dialogue

15.45 - 16.15 Wim NIJS (Leuven), Graeculus et Adsentor: Philodemus’ Defence of Epicurean Friendship and Frank Speech in Roman Society

16.15 - 16.45 Sharon WEISSER (Tel-Aviv), Plutarch Against Stoic Theology

16.45 - 17.15 Chiara MILITELLO (Catania), Replying to Stoics as the Basis of True Aristotelianism: the Significance of Polemics in Alexander of Aphrodisias’ Commentaries and Treatises

17.15 - 18.00 Coffee

18.00 - 19.00 Keynote Lecture 1

Irmgard MÄNNLEIN-ROBERT (Tübingen), Subtile Battles or Platonic Exegesis as Polemical Strategy in Porphyry

19.00 Reception | Raadzaal Institute of Philosophy | Kardinaal Mercierplein 2, Leuven



Thursday 13 December 2018 | Conference day 2 | Holland College


Session 2

09.00 - 09.30 András HANDL (Leuven), The Influence of Real-Life Encounters on the Treatment of Heterodox Groups in the Refutatio Omnium Haeresium

09.30 - 10.00 Benjamin DE VOS (Gent), The Homilistic Disputes Between Clement and Appion: the Art of Dissimulation and Irony in a Clash Between Judeo-Christianity and Paganism for the ‘True’ Paideia

10.00 - 10.30 Marina DÍAZ BOURGEAL (Madrid), “Oὐ λέξεων μόνον, ἠθῶν δέ”: Julian on the Christian Teachers and Hellenism

10.30 - 11.00 Coffee

11.00 - 12.00 Keynote Lecture 2

Peter GEMEINHARDT (Göttingen), “Against the Avarice of the Melitians and the Impiety of the Ariomanites!” Polemics and Networking in the 4th-Century Trinitarian Debates

12.00 - 13.30 Lunch

Middaggesprek | Danny PRAET (Gent) & Jos VERHEYDEN (Leuven), Vurige tongen of te vuur en te zwaard? Het succes van het christendom in het Romeinse Rijk: spontaan of onder dwang

Session 3

13.30 - 14.00 Bruno MARIEN (Leuven), The Recommendation Activity in Libanius’ Letters Seen Against the Background of Competing Personal Networks

14.00 - 14.30 Olivier DEMERRE (Gent), Philostratus’ Life of Hermogenes: Rhetorical Debates and Circles in the Lives of the Sophists

14.30 - 15.00 Han BALTUSSEN (Adelaide), Polemic, Personality and the Iamblichan Lineage in Eunapius’ VPS

15.00 - 15.30 Coffee

Session 4

15.30 - 16.00 Eva FALASCHI (Pisa), It is not just a Question of Being the Best. Artistic Rivalry and Polemics Among Greek Artists as Seen in the Imperial Age

16.00 - 16.30 Tiberiu POPA (Indianapolis), Can Historians Handle the Truth?

17.00 - 18.00 Keynote Lecture 3

John MARINCOLA (Tallahassee), Polemic, Persona, and Persuasion

19.30 Conference Dinner | Faculty Club | Groot Begijnhof 14, Leuven


Friday 14 December 2018 | Conference day 3 | Holland College


Session 5

09.00 - 09.30 Irini FOTINI-VILTANIOTI (Leuven), Porphyry’s Solution to Plato’s and Aristotle’s Controversy on the Tripartition of the Soul in On the Powers of the Soul Fr. 253 Smith

09.30 - 10.00 Corentin TRESNIE (Brussels & Leuven), Se construire un maître à penser: les Vies de Plotin et Pythagore par Porphyre et Jamblique

10.00 - 11.00 Keynote Lecture 4

Pantelis GOLITSIS (Thessaloniki), Explicit and Implicit Polemics in Late Ancient Commentaries on Aristotle

11.00 - 11.30 Coffee

Session 6

11.30 - 12.00 Thorsten FÖGEN (Durham), Wettbewerb, Kontroverse und Polemik in antiker Fachliteratur

12.00 - 12.30 Argyro LITHARI (Berlin), Platonic Teachings and Astronomers’ Hypotheses in Proclus’ Hypotyposis Astronomicarum Positionum: Between Opposition and Agreement

12.30 - 13.30 Lunch

13.30 - 14.30 Keynote Lecture 5

Philip VAN DER EIJK (Berlin), Polemics and Rivalry in the Ancient Medical Tradition

14.30 - 15.00 Coffee

Session 7

15.00 - 15.30 Ute TISCHER (Leipzig), Comparison and Competition: ‘Cicero’, ‘Virgil’, and the Authority of the Interpreter

15.30 - 16.00 Josh SMITH (Baltimore), (Mis)reading the Poet: A Networking Strategy in Ancient Criticism

16.00 Plenary discussion & Conclusion


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