Arthur Eckstein
Arthur Eckstein is an American historian and Distinguished Professor of History at the University of Maryland-College Park,[1][2] as well as a published author.[3]
Bibliography
- Senate and General: Individual Decision-Making and Roman Foreign Relations, 264-194 B.C. (1987)
- Mediterranean Anarchy, Interstate War, and the Rise of Rome. University of California Press, 2006.
- Rome Enters the Greek East: From Anarchy to Hierarchy in the Hellenistic Mediterranean, 230-188 B.C. (2008)
- Bad Moon Rising: How the Weather Underground Beat the FBI and Lost the Revolution. 2016.
gollark: Distributing punishment based on that would make things like advertisements for charities horrible infohazards.
gollark: If you want to know about what *you* should do, then it's more reasonable to ask about the morality of actions, not people, because the people way runs into accursed counterfactuals very fast.
gollark: For that the purpose is probably something like "should you be eternally tortured", which I think the answer to is literally always "no".
gollark: First, consider for what purpose you want to know whether it's "evil" or not to have been that person.
gollark: I don't believe in objective evil and I subscribe to the view that asking whether something is "evil" or not is not very useful because it's a very fuzzy word/category.
References
- "Arthur Eckstein". umd.edu. Retrieved November 27, 2016.
- "Arthur Eckstein Named Distinguished University Professor". umd.edu. Retrieved November 27, 2016.
- "Eckstein, Arthur M." worldcat.org. Retrieved November 27, 2016.
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