Philo of Larissa

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Philo (or Philon) of Larissa (159/158-84/83 BC) was a Greek philosopher of the first half of the 1st century BC.

During the Mithradatic wars he left Athens and took up his residence in Rome. He was a pupil of Clitomachus, whom he succeeded as head of the Third or New Academy. According to Sextus Empiricus, he was the founder of the Fourth Academy, but other writers refuse to admit the separate existence of more than three academies. In Rome he lectured on rhetoric and philosophy, and collected around him many eminent pupils, amongst whom Cicero was the most famous and the most enthusiastic. None of his works is extant; our knowledge of his views is derived from Numenius, Sextus Empiricus and Cicero. In general, his philosophy was a reaction against the sceptic or agnostic position of the Middle and New Academy in favor of the dogmatism of Plato.

Brittain, Charles, Philo of Larissa (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001) ISBN 0198152981


Hermann, De Philone Larissaeo (Gottingen, 1851 and 1855). Grysar, Die Akademiker Philo und Antiochus (1849);

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