Abstract
The philosophy of mind is an especially flourishing plot of philosophical terrain these days. In part this activity derives from the quality of the work and in part from the topic's location, at the intersection of science--computer science, mathematics, biology, and cognitive psychology--and metaphysics and epistemology, even ethics. If recent developments date from Ryle and his iconoclasm, the modern study of mind has an older provenance in the writings of Descartes, Hobbes, Spinoza, Locke, Hume, and other figures whose work coincided with the rise of the new science, the fragmentation of religious hegemony, and the recovery of ancient traditions. In this period, of special importance to the treatment of human experience and mental phenomena was the retrieval of Epicurean and Stoic texts and ideas. It is, therefore, an opportune moment to have a sophisticated and comprehensive introduction to the philosophy of mind of the ancient Stoics and Epicureans. In this book, Julia Annas has provided just that.