Academic literature on the topic 'Typhon (Greek mythology)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Typhon (Greek mythology)"

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De Chiara-Quenzer, Deborah. "Commentary on Pappas." Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium of Ancient Philosophy 32, no. 1 (2017): 59–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22134417-00321p06.

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This commentary on Nicholas Pappas’s paper, “Telling Good Love from Bad in Plato’s Phaedrus,” reflects on a number of Pappas’s thoughtful observations and interpretations of features woven into the drama of the discussion (for example, Typho and Boreas, wings, left and right). However, unlike Pappas, who refrains from claiming that divinely inspired human love (good love) can be discerned by turning to the earthly, this commentary suggests that Pappas’s contrasts of wings which conceal versus wings which elevate, of left and right, and my added contrast of traditional Greek mythology versus Platonic mythology, lay the groundwork to discern the divine in the earthly, and to distinguish concomitantly bad from good human love. Additionally, the commentary discusses how Plato’s use of collection and division is used to distinguish good and bad human love.
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Books on the topic "Typhon (Greek mythology)"

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Riordan, Rick. The Last Olympian. Edited by Nemo Hoverd and Leonardo Damal Havy. Disney Hyperion Books, 2009.

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Riordan, Rick. The Last Olympian. Disney-Hyperion Books, 2009.

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Riordan, Rick. The Last Olympian. Penguin Group UK, 2009.

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Riordan, Rick. The last Olympian: Percy Jackson. 2nd ed. Scholastic Inc., 2009.

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Riordan, Rick. Boxi Jiekesen: Zhong ji tian shen. Yuan liu chu ban shi ye gu fen you xian gong si, 2010.

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Riordan, Rick. The last Olympian. Disney Hyperion Books, 2009.

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Riordan, Rick. The Last Olympian. Scholastic Inc., 2010.

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Holub, Joan. Typhon and the winds of destruction. Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing, 2013.

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Jahwes Aufstieg vom Eselgott zum Herrn der Welt. Orpheus-Verlag, 2001.

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Riordan, Rick. Last Olympian: The Graphic Novel. Penguin Books, Limited, 2019.

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Book chapters on the topic "Typhon (Greek mythology)"

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Litwa, M. David. "The Donkey Deity." In The Evil Creator. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197566428.003.0002.

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This chapter argues that the notion of the evil (Judean) creator had existed for centuries in native Egyptian revisionary mythology. The notion was thus already prepared for its early Christian application to the Judeo-catholic creator. Since the second century BCE, Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans had identified the evil god Seth-Typhon (often depicted as a donkey-like creature) with the Jewish god Yahweh. The Seth-Yahweh tradition, with all its negative valence, was then applied to the creator worshiped by Christians as well. Evidence for this view comes from the early Christian depiction of the creator and his sons in donkey (Typhonian) form. In addition to material culture (gems, amulets, and graffiti), four texts are analyzed in this chapter: The Birth of Mary, the Secret Book of John, the so-called Ophite diagram, and the Phibionites described by Epiphanius.
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