Abstract
This book translates the fourth volume of Giovanni Reale's Storia della filosofia antica. The importance of the volume lies in its careful coverage of an era that previously had not received satisfactory attention. The period is the first five centuries of the Christian epoch, the period immediately succeeding the Hellenistic age. It was a period in which on the one hand the culture was dominated by imperial Rome, and on the other hand Christian thought was born and diffused. The reasons for the comparative neglect of such an important and intensely interesting period in western philosophy is explained by Reale in a "Preface to the American Edition." Scholarship in ancient philosophy has tended to focus on the classic and Hellenistic periods. Because of this historiographical situation, overall views of the later era have been scarce as well as too narrow in perspective, while detailed and specialized studies have separated the pagan thought of the epoch from early Christian thought as though these belonged to two different worlds. Reale states his intention of concentrating on the pagan thought in the present volume while leaving the Christian thought for a future work. In point of fact, however, he keeps his eye continually on the Christian development that was going on at the time and was exercising its influence on the philosophical thinking of the epoch. Precisely here is the special merit of his study to be found.