Alexandrian$2159$ - translation to greek
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Alexandrian$2159$ - translation to greek

PHILOSOPHICAL SCHOOL
Alexandrian School; Alexandrianism; Alexandrian philosophy

Alexandrian      
adj. αλεξανδρινός
Gordian knot         
  • ''Alexander the Great cuts the Gordian Knot'' by [[Jean-Simon Berthélemy]] (1743–1811)
  • ''Alexander the Great Cutting the Gordian Knot'' by [[André Castaigne]] (1898–1899)
  • ''Alexander the Great Cutting the Gordian Knot'' (1767) by Jean-François Godefroy
KNOT IN GREEK MYTHOLOGY, USED AS A METAPHOR FOR DIFFICULT PROBLEMS WITH LITTLE OR NO SOLUTION
Gordian knot; Cut the Gordian Knot; Alexandrian solution; Gordian Knots; Phrygian Knot; Cutting the Gordian Knot; Gordic knot; GORDIAN KNOT; The gordian knot; Gordian's knot; The Gordian Knot; Gordian knots
n. γόρδιος δεσμός

Definition

Alexandrian
¦ adjective relating to Alexandria in Egypt.
?belonging to or characteristic of the schools of literature and philosophy of ancient Alexandria, especially in being allusive or imitative.

Wikipedia

Alexandrian school

The Alexandrian school is a collective designation for certain tendencies in literature, philosophy, medicine, and the sciences that developed in the Hellenistic cultural center of Alexandria, Egypt during the Hellenistic and Roman periods.

Alexandria was a remarkable center of learning due to the blending of Greek and Oriental influences, its favorable situation and commercial resources, and the enlightened energy of some of the Macedonian Dynasty of the Ptolemies ruling over Egypt, in the final centuries BC. Much scholarly work was collected in the great Library of Alexandria during this time. Large amounts of epic poetry and works on geography, history, mathematics, astronomy, philosophy, and medicine were composed in Alexandria during this period.

Alexandrian school is also used to describe the religious and philosophical developments in Alexandria after the 1st century. The mix of Jewish theology and Greek philosophy led to a syncretic mix and much mystical speculation. The Neoplatonists devoted themselves to examining the nature of the soul, and sought communion with God. The two great schools of biblical interpretation in the early Christian church incorporated Neoplatonism and philosophical beliefs from Plato's teachings into Christianity, and interpreted much of the Bible allegorically. The founders of the Alexandrian school of Christian theology were Clement of Alexandria and Origen.