Telecles
Telecles (Greek: Τηλεκλῆς), of Phocis or Phocaea,[1] was the pupil and successor of Lacydes, and was joint leader (scholarch) of the Academy at Athens together with Evander.
In the final ten years of Lacydes' life (c. 215 – c. 205), Evander and Telecles had helped run the Academy due to Lacydes being seriously ill. They continued running the Academy after the death of Lacydes, without formally being elected scholarchs. On Telecles' death in 167/6 BC, Evander remained scholarch for a few more years. Evander himself was succeeded by his pupil Hegesinus.[2] Concerning the opinions and writings of this philosopher nothing is known.
Notes
- Diogenes Laërtius, iv. 60: Phocis in older texts, but emended to Phocaea in the Loeb Classical Library edition.
- Diogenes Laërtius, The Lives and Opinions of Eminent Philosophers, iv. 60; Cicero, Academica, ii. 6.
gollark: Idea: hack dictionaries somehow to add wordson demand for raps... um, curds?
gollark: English is loosely definedThis doesn't really rhymed.
gollark: In that case, we need a Rap Bot Battle.
gollark: Maybe machine-learning algorithms™would be able to procedurally generate raps more effectively... something something logarithm.
gollark: Wrimes sounds like rhymesand also like Vimes
References
- K. Algra, J. Barnes, J. Mansfeld, M. Schofield, (2005), The Cambridge History of Hellenistic Philosophy. Pages 32-33. Cambridge University Press.
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