Resumen
Many texts from the ClassicalAntiquity mention the "Seven Greek learned men". However, the real number oflearned wise accepted as such was much larger.
This article proves that there always existed, at a given moment, a list of seven which changed according to place and epoch.• The lists also varied for posterity depending on the source and on the degree of distance in time. The author defines a small number of names found-in most lists and, tnerefore, considered the basic of all of them.
Citas
Pausanias, Graeciae descriptio, ed. Federico Spiro (Stuttgart: Teubner, 1967), r, 23,1
Diógenes Laercio, VIdas, doctrinas y sentencias de los filósofos ilustres, t, 13-14.
Grand Larousse Encyclopédique (Paris, 1964), IX, 487.
Aristóteles, Metafísica, A3, 9836,20.
Plutarch, The Lives of the Noble Grecians and Romans, ed. Robert M. Hutchins, "Great Books of the Western World", 14 (Chicago: Encyclopaedia Britannica, lnc., 1952), pág. 65.
A. Andrewes, The Greek Tyrants (New York: Harper & Row, 1963), pág. 52.