5 articles in this issue
Harold Zellner
Fr.16 employs an argument for the relativity of aesthetic evaluations that is most fruitfully interpreted as an example of "Inference to the Best Explanation," a non-deductive form of reasoning of which many ancient and modern arguments for relativism are... see more
Mogens Herman Hansen
The evidence of the inscriptions and orators shows (a) that an ekklesia synkletos could address questions other than those that occasioned the meeting, (b) that it need not have been an extra meeting but only summoned by extraordinary procedures.
James A. Kelhoffer
The letters of Paul and the Deutero-Paulines, when analyzed in terms of Harris's levels of anger suppression, can be seen to exhibit different levels, and this reflects their diverse authors and dates.
George W. Houston
Excavation records reveal that Grenfell/Hunt's papyri of "find 2" are not part of Breccia's find of 1932, but their "find 3" may be; tabulation of the contents of Breccia's find suggests a book owner who was a serious reader but not a professional scholar... see more
Anthony Kaldellis
Stressing that the statues require explication, the poet emphasizes Homeric themes and the Roman origins of Byzantium; his themes and inventions compromise modern attempts to reconstruct the collection.