'All major schools are fairly represented: the opening chapters focus on the influence of medical theories on Peripatetic and Stoic philosophy, the middle part examines certain problematic aspects of Epicurean and Stoic psychology, while the concluding chapters explore psychological issues relating to the Hellenistic Academy and Cicero.' Orestis Karatzoglou, Bryn Mawr Classical Review
Introduction Brad Inwood and James Warren; 1. Hellenistic medicine, Strato of Lampsacus, and Aristotle's theory of soul Sylvia Berryman; 2. Herophilus and Erasistratus on the hēgemonikon David Leith; 3. Galen on soul, mixture and Pneuma Philip van der Eijk; 4. The partition of the soul: Epicurus, Demetrius Lacon, and Diogenes of Oinoanda Francesco Verde; 5. Cosmic and individual soul in early Stoicism Francesco Ademollo; 6. Soul, Pneuma and blood: the Stoic conception of the soul Christelle Veillard; 7. The Platonic soul, from the Early Academy to the first century CE Jan Opsomer; 8. Cicero on the soul's sensation of itself: Tusculans 1.49-76 J. P. F. Wynne; Bibliography; Indices.