RT Book T1 The Sentences of Sextus: a contribution to the history of early Christian ethics A2 Sextus Pythagoreus ca. 2. Jh. A2 Chadwick, Henry 1920-2008 LA English PP Cambridge PB Cambridge University Press YR 1959 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/883492377 AB Sextus's Sentences are a collection of ethical aphorisms which for centuries were read in Latin, Greek, Syriac and Armenian, by Christians from Britain to Mesopotamia. Who 'Sextus' was, and whether he was a Christian, is not certain; Dr Chadwick discusses the evidence, including some he has discovered himself. But the Sentences, probably written in the second century, were widely read in Jerome's time, and were still treated as authoritative in the Middle Ages. They are an important strand in the history of the development of Christian ethics, and are yet another example of that dialogue between the Greek and the Jewish which so profoundly affected the development of the young religion. Dr Chadwick first provides a critical edition of the Greek and Latin texts. There follow studies of the moral teaching of Sextus, the evidence of Origen, the testimony of Rufinus and Jerome, and the internal evidence provided by the texts. AB Part I: Texts -- The manuscript tradition and the versions of Sextus -- The Greek text of Sextus and Rufinus' translation -- The Greek appendices to Sextus -- Clitarchus -- The Pythagorean sentences -- Part II: Studies -- The moral teaching of Sextus -- The evidence of Origen -- Rufinus and Jerome -- Internal evidence -- Notes on Sextus I-451 -- Bibliography -- Index of Greek words in Sextus -- Index of names and subjects OP 193 NO Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015) CN BV4500 SN 978-0-511-47052-3 K1 Sentences of Sextus K1 Geschichte 150-325 K1 Aphorisms and apothegms K1 Maxims K1 Christian Ethics K1 Christliche Ethik K1 Quelle DO 10.1017/CBO9780511470523