Demiurge (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Demiurge" in English language version.

refsWebsite
Global rank English rank
471st place
409th place
2nd place
2nd place
3rd place
3rd place
1,865th place
1,260th place
6th place
6th place
1st place
1st place
8,722nd place
6,706th place
26th place
20th place
11th place
8th place
low place
low place
487th place
842nd place
low place
low place
27th place
51st place
121st place
142nd place
826th place
452nd place
654th place
542nd place

academia.edu

archive.org

biblegateway.com

books.google.com

  • Fontenrose, Joseph (1974). Python: A Study of Delphic Myth and Its Origin. Biblo & Tannen Publishers. p. 226. ISBN 978-0-8196-0285-5.
  • Sallis, John (1999). Chorology: On Beginning in Plato's Timaeus. Indiana University Press. p. 86. ISBN 0-253-21308-8.
  • Wallis, Richard T.; Bregman, Jay, eds. (1992). Neoplatonism and Gnosticism. International Society for Neoplatonic Studies. SUNY Press. ISBN 978-0-7914-1337-1.
  • Evangeliou, "Plotinus's Anti-Gnostic Polemic and Porphyry's Against the Christians", in Wallis & Bregman, p. 111.

doi.org

doi.org

dx.doi.org

earlyjewishwritings.com

  • It is on this account that Moses says, at the creation of man alone that God said, "Let us make man," which expression shows an assumption of other beings to himself as assistants, in order that God, the governor of all things, might have all the blameless intentions and actions of man, when he does right attributed to him; and that his other assistants might bear the imputation of his contrary actions.

    — "Philo: On the Creation, XXIV". www.earlyjewishwritings.com.

gnosis.org

jstor.org

newadvent.org

oremus.org

bible.oremus.org

philpapers.org

  • See Thomas K. Johansen. 2014. "Why the Cosmos Needs a Craftsman: Plato, Timaeus 27d5-29b1," Phronesis 59 (4): 297-320.[1]
  • Thomas Johansen. 2020. “Crafting the Cosmos: Plato on the Limitations of Divine Craftsmanship,” in T.K. Johansen (ed.), Productive Knowledge in Ancient Philosophy: The Concept of Technē, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 86-108.[2]

sacred-texts.com

  • "For, in sum, a part of their doctrine comes from Plato; all the novelties through which they seek to establish a philosophy of their own have been picked up outside of the truth." Plotinus, "Against the Gnostics", Ennead II, 9, 6.

semanticscholar.org

api.semanticscholar.org

theandros.com

web.archive.org

wikisource.org

en.wikisource.org